Details of Oasis Knebworth 1996 unveiled

Oasis have unveiled their eagerly anticipated Knebworth cinematic documentary, Oasis Knebworth 1996 which is set to hit theaters on September 23rd via Sony Music Entertainment and Trafalgar Releasing. After almost two years without significant live events anywhere in the world, the cinematic release of Oasis Knebworth 1996 will serve as a timely reminder to fans new and old of the euphoria and togetherness that only a great concert can bring.

Oasis Knebworth 1996 is the story of the special relationship between Oasis and their fans that made the largest concert of the ‘90’s possible. It is told entirely in the moment through the eyes of the fans who were there, built around extensive, and never before seen archive concert and backstage footage from the event, with additional interviews with the band and concert organizers. Directed by Grammy Award-winner Jake Scott, this is a joyful and at times poignant cinematic celebration of one of the most iconic live concert events of the last 25 years, driven entirely by the music, and the fans’ own experiences of that monumental weekend.

“Knebworth fo​r me was the Woodstock of the 90’s. It was all about the music and the people. I can’t remember much about it, but I’ll never forget it. It was Biblical,” shares Liam Gallagher.

“I can’t believe we never played Rock ‘n’ Roll Star!” Noel Gallagher adds.

Tickets for Oasis Knebworth 1996 go on sale on Tuesday, August 10th, marking 25 years to the day since the first night of the concerts.

Oasis’ two record breaking nights at Knebworth took place on August 10-11, 1996, with over a quarter of a million young music fans from all over the world converging on Knebworth Park, Hertfordshire to see the legendary sets. Tickets went on sale on May 11, 1996. Queues formed outside local record shops and ticket offices overnight, and fans around the world spent the day on their landline phones trying to get through to constantly engaged booking lines. All tickets sold out in less than 24 hours, breaking every UK box office record in the process. Organizers estimated the band could have sold two or three times as many tickets. Over two percent of the population of the UK had attempted to buy tickets.

The monumental shows were set against a backdrop of the UK slowly recovering from a decade of recession. Emerging from the ‘80s, the mood of the nation was changing. A cultural resurgence in arts and culture was giving rise to Cool Britannia and, in their meteoric rise, Oasis embodied that new found optimism and swagger. Two short years had taken the band from their council estate in Manchester to becoming one of the biggest bands in the world and for the congregated masses, seeing themselves in the five men on stage in front of them, anything felt possible. Featuring a setlist absolutely packed from beginning to end with stone cold classics, from the opening salvo of “Columbia” and “Acquiesce,” all the way to “Champagne Supernova,” “Don’t Look Back In Anger,” “Live Forever,” a triumphant, orchestra backed “I Am The Walrus,” and the first song from the 1990s to cross one billion streams on Spotify, “Wonderwall,” the Knebworth concerts were both the pinnacle of the band’s success and the landmark gathering for a generation.

The film will be produced by Black Dog Films with Noel Gallagher and Liam Gallagher serving as executive producers.