If you didn’t live through it it is hard to understand, but the thing you need to know about people that hated Oasis in the 1990s is that we were right.
@mielcarz have you seen Fishman's opinions about them?
@chris are they different from when they called Champagne Supernova the song you hear when you get to hell?
@mielcarz pretty much that, but in more detail
@chris If you can track it down I'd love to see it!
PHILM on Instagram: "FISH IS MAD FER IT INNIT 💦 ◼️ thnx for sending in @griffins_pickins #phish #oasis"

phishonphilm on August 28, 2024: "FISH IS MAD FER IT INNIT 💦 ◼️ thnx for sending in @griffins_pickins #phish #oasis".

Instagram
@chris That's great! Don't like to see Pearl Jam catching strays at the end though.
@mielcarz @chris I am beyond fine with Fishman not liking Pearl Jam and feel no need to defend them, but calling them "formulated riffs" is a good way to say you haven't listened to them much because their output is all over the fucking map - way more than almost any other rock band of the last 35 years that has attained their level of success (which admittedly is a very short list)
@drewphish @mielcarz @chris I think Fish might change his tune on some of this with a more recent interview. Like most of us, the band (or at least Trey) has taken a broader view of what is good music. Trashing someone like Madonna who resonates on such a grand scale and created a soundtrack for so many people’s lives just seems silly. Same with Pearl Jam. This isn’t to say popular = great. Some pop might as well be manufactured in a lab. That doesn’t apply here.
@chopaganda @mielcarz @chris Fair point about the possibility of changing his tune more recently. And yes, poplar does not equal good and popular also does not equal bad. There is so much formulaic bullshit art that was essentially created in a lab to feed capitalism and Madonna and Pearl Jam ain't it! Finally, formulaic is not always bad. AC/DC wrote one song 90 times. I adore that song and that song has directly affected my musicianship.

@drewphish @mielcarz @chris Bringing this full circle, I’ll argue to the end that the first two Oasis albums are fantastic and worthy of accolades. They took that late 80s shoegazey alternative sound and made it pop accessible. Other bands might have been doing similar things, but none as well.

Then the press made them out to be bigger than they were, like they were the only great British pop/rock band since the Beatles, and every subsequent album was a retread of the first two.

@chopaganda @drewphish @mielcarz I actually love those Oasis albums as well