Liam Gallagher Edinburgh Concert — Next Date & Ticket Alerts
Liam Gallagher hasn't announced a Edinburgh date yet
Tour routing can change late, and Edinburghdates are often added after the first on-sale. Here's how to be first in line — plus everything worth checking while you wait.
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About Liam Gallagher
William John Paul Gallagher was born on 21 September 1972 in Longsight, Manchester, the youngest of three brothers raised by Peggy Gallagher after their father walked out. He joined an existing local band called the Rain in 1991, talked his older brother Noel into taking over the songwriting, and within three years Oasis had released Definitely Maybe (1994) — the fastest-selling UK debut album of all time at the time of release — and then (What's the Story) Morning Glory? (1995), one of the best-selling British albums in history. Knebworth in August 1996, two nights, a quarter of a million tickets sold against 2.6 million applications, remains the defining live moment of the entire Britpop era. Oasis went on through five more studio albums and the rolling brother-on-brother drama that defined the band's public image until the final implosion at the Rock en Seine festival outside Paris on 28 August 2009, when Noel walked out for good.
Liam took the remaining Oasis members and turned them into Beady Eye, releasing Different Gear, Still Speeding (2011) and BE (2013) before that project quietly folded in 2014. The first proper solo era arrived with As You Were in October 2017 — a record built with songwriters Greg Kurstin and Andrew Wyatt that debuted at number one in the UK and went platinum, with singles Wall of Glass, For What It's Worth and Chinatown re-establishing him as a viable solo concern. Why Me? Why Not. (2019) repeated the trick at number one and produced Shockwave, One of Us and Once. C'mon You Know (2022) leaned more psychedelic and ambitious, debuting at number one and producing Better Days and Everything's Electric (the latter co-written with Dave Grohl).
The Definitely Maybe 30th-anniversary UK and Ireland tour, announced for summer 2024, became the defining solo-era live moment: four nights at Manchester's Heaton Park, two at Knebworth, the Principality Stadium in Cardiff, Dublin's Malahide Castle, all of them six-figure outdoor shows playing the debut album front to back. Then, on 27 August 2024, the announcement landed: Oasis reformed for the Live '25 stadium tour, the brothers reconciled (publicly, at least), and the British rock-press cycle had its biggest story since the original split. The solo work is not going anywhere — Liam's catalogue stands on its own — but the reunion has reshaped how the back half of his career will be read.
