Alan Mcgee
Occupation
Actor
Supersonic - Trailer and Clips
There were a number of defining bands of the 90's but Oasis were indisputably one of the biggest. Having formed in 1991, brothers Liam and Noel both had a great desire to be in the biggest band in the world, but the thought behind that was perhaps a little more basic; they wanted to make music. Though Noel was a relatively late member of Oasis, after he joined he became the main songwriter and the band focussed on recording the songs he'd previously written.
Touring the county with little money, the boys were offered a gig in Glasgow at King Tut's Wah Wah and made the journey from Manchester up to the Scottish town. Upon arrival, it was touch and go as to if the Mancunian's would even get to play but eventually they managed to get an opening slot for the night's proceedings and they immediately caught the attention of Alan Mcgee who asked them to sign to his label there and then. McGee's deal with the band would come to fruition some months later when he secured the UK rights to releasing the group's music.
By 1994 Oasis would have recorded a number of demos and they were finally ready to release their official debut single 'Supersonic' which would reach the dizzying heights of number 31 in the UK Singles Chart - which for a group yet to make names for themselves was actually pretty good!
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Alan McGee - Creation Stories; Riots, Raves, and Running a Label Book Review
By Jim Pusey in Music Reviews on 05 December 2013
Alan Mcgee is a divisive and notoriously outspoken character. Indeed Alan McGee the writer tells us as much in his new memoir Creation Stories McGee admits that the public persona the music press helped to create in the eighties and nineties is a character he played for many years. Ultimately by getting lost in the hype, the drugs and drink, he found that character was part of his own personal downfall. Creation Stories is a warts and all tale, but while many of the key players and events are described in great detail, it's also a cautionary tale. That elevates it above the usual stories of after parties and bust up's in these kinds of books, McGee's introspection and self analysis may come as a shock for those readers expecting tall tales of chart domination, but then you always need to expect the unexpected with McGee.
Throughout we get untold tales of The House of Love, The Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, Primal Scream, Oasis, and The Libertines. In many ways McGee uses his book to set the record straight on a number of common myths that surround the label and himself. He also distances his story somewhat from Britpop. Understandably so, as his breakdown happened at around the same time as Oasis were getting ready to release Definitely Maybe. However you do sometimes feel that McGee glosses over certain aspects of his story that are worth exploring. Setting up Creation in the first place, and his subsequent dealings with Sony, are presented with a confident swagger and ease that sweeps under the carpet some of the essential mechanics of securing some of the phenomenal record sales he's masterminded. Perhaps understandably some bands get mentioned, some don't. The likes of 3 Colours Red and Bernard Butler in the latter days of Creation are some of the reasons why McGee is an important figure to younger readers, yet they're notable by they're absence here.
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