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Artikel mit "Alan White" getagged

19.03.2007 - 08:07
Drummer: Definitely pay me

OASIS coughed up £348,000 to sacked drummer ALAN WHITE.

NOEL and LIAM told the sticksman to beat it in 2004, after nine years with the band.

The huge pay-off, revealed in newly released accounts, was made to keep the furious drummer sweet and buy him out of the lads’ company Definitely Maybe.

At the time, frontman Liam said the axe fell because Alan chose his missus over the band.

He said: “Turns out he’s hanging out with his bird in Spain. Once the word bird and Spain are mentioned together it’s like, OK, Oasis vs girlfriend.”

Some Might Say that sounds a tad hypocritical from the bloke who cancelled a gig after a tiff with his brother!

Still, it’s not like the Gallaghers can’t afford huge pay-offs to sacked band members every now and then.

And it looked like Liam was spending big on Friday too, when he went shopping in London’s Bond Street with girlfriend NICOLE APPLETON. The pair visited posh jewellers Tiffany & Co. Do I sense a wedding in the air? They are not saying. Or maybe Liam bought a Mother’s Day trinket for Nic. Whatever, I bet it cost a pretty penny.

Alan may consider he’s got a few quid now too ? but he may Look Back In Anger . . .

That £348,000 doesn’t come close to the amount previous drummer TONY McCARROLL was paid when axed in 1995.

Tony had threatened to sue the band for ?18 MILLION in lost royalties. He eventually walked away with £550,000.

The recently released company accounts show Alan’s pay-off and payments of £300,000 to Liam and Noel meant Definitely Maybe, their touring and merchandising company, made a loss of £948,383 in 2005.

Fortunately Liam and Noel’s company Big Brother Recordings is the main cash cow.

They’re still rolling in it, as well as with it.

Quelle: thesun.co.uk

19.06.2004 - 13:08
Not here now

To lose one band member is unfortunate, to lose three… The name remains the same, but the people around Oasis seem to just slide away. John Robinson surveys the casualty list.

Two out of five aint bad: Whitey, Bonehead and Guigsy line up with the Gallaghers in 1996. Photo: David Sillitoe/Guardian

Two out of five ain't bad: Whitey, Bonehead and Guigsy line up with the Gallaghers in 1996. Photo: David Sillitoe/Guardian

  • Tony McCarroll

    Who? The band’s first drummer, apparently expelled for a combination of the following reasons: his shoddy drumming; his often-referenced “punch-up in Paris” with Liam Gallagher; his arguable resemblance to someone from the Merseyside area.
    What’s the story? The ousted McCarroll, buried by his bandmates in the Live Forever video, came back to haunt them. In 1999, after the departure of Guigsy and Bonehead, he even offered to rejoin as bass player. More seriously, that same year he was awarded ?550,000 in a one-off payment against future royalties, prompting one tabloid to ask, “Is this the most stupid man in showbiz?”
    And then? In 2000, he debuted a new band, Raika, formed with his brothers. “I’m not interested in all that being-seen-on-a-yacht-with-Kate-Moss-business,” he remarked. Which is probably just as well. Last sighted at the helm of another unsuccessful legal action.

  • Alan McGee

    Who? Creation Records boss, who legendarily signed Oasis after seeing them at a gig in Glasgow.
    What’s the story? Escort to Noel when Britpop drinks were held at 10 Downing Street, the public image of McGee and Oasis was as a very tight unit indeed. By 1999, though, he was moving in less grand circles, hearing the playback of the Go Let It Out single in the company of the Belgian licensee. “I thought, ‘Fuck this for a game of soldiers’,” said McGee. Liam countered by accusing McGee of spending the label’s money signing “a load of dickheads”.
    And then? McGee sets up the Poptones label which, initial losses aside, had the prescience to license the Hives. Now manages the Libertines. Well, someone’s got to.

  • Ian ‘Robbo’ Robertson

    Who? Ex-paratrooper bodyguard to the band. Wrote one of the first biographies of Oasis, called, as it would almost have to be, What’s The Story? It is weirdly filled with quotes from Proust and the like.
    What’s the story? Said eldest Gallagher brother, Paul: “Liam hated him after several incidents including being dragged out of bed one morning when he was entertaining, and being pushed up against the wall with no clothes on.”
    Who? Excuse me Liam, since you’re enjoying your evening out, would you mind if I took a… Ow! Not in the… OW!
    What’s the story? Liam Gallagher has enjoyed a turbulent relationship with the gang of long-lensed money-printers that comprise the professional photography community. In March 1998, he cut his teeth on an amateur, clouting a backpacker with a camera in Brisbane. By November he was brawling with snapper Mel Bouzad in London. After a quiet couple of years, in 2001 there was a tussle at a Black Crowes aftershow in New York, and an altercation with photographer John Lillington in London.
    And then? In the main the scales of justice have weighed Liam’s aggro leniently. It’s worth mentioning, though, that in 2001 he was voted Madame Tussaud’s “Most Hated And Feared Waxwork”, romping home ahead of Saddam Hussein.

  • Scott McLeod

    Who? Former member of Oldham band the Ya Ya’s, fleetingly fancied in NME in 1993.
    What’s the story? The Oasis life had taken its toll on Paul McGuigan by 1995, resulting in a bout of nervous exhaustion. Or as the ever-sensitive Bonehead called it, his throwing “a crispy”. McLeod was drafted in, found it tough, then one morning, after a gig in Pittsburgh, left without warning on a plane back to England.
    And then? A couple of weeks later he phoned Noel to say he thought he’d made the wrong decision. “I think you have too,” said Noel. “Good luck signing on.”

  • Alan White

    Who? Younger brother of Steve White, the longtime drummer with Paul Weller’s band, “Whitey” was Oasis drummer from (What’s The Story) Morning Glory? until the beginning of this year.
    What’s the story? At present, it’s hard to tell, with both parties tight-lipped about his departure. Whatever, the official explanation – White’s ongoing hand problems, which surfaced as early as 1999 – seems a bit insubstantial. Or as White has deemed it, “bullshit”.
    And then? One would imagine a lengthy legal wrangle. Always one to enjoy a drink on the town with Liam, White’s involvement in last year’s “German fiasco” (he was also detained by police) may be at the root of all this.

  • Paul ‘Guigsy’ Guigan/ Paul ‘Bonehead’ Arthurs

    Who? In a band led by two fighter aces, Guigsy and Bonehead were, as Peter Stringfellow memorably called them, “the tailgunners”. One a deadpan football fan and pothead. One a man who chased two souvenir hunters down the street in his wife’s nightie when they stole his doorknocker.
    What’s the story? The making of Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants seems to have been the final straw for these two. Recorded under a Noel-imposed, Liam-calming prohibition, the strains start to show. One night Bonehead gets extremely drunk, breaks down a door and then leaves. Guigs is not far behind.
    And then? Noel is unmoved. “It’s hardly Paul McCartney leaving the Beatles,” he says. Bonehead (singer/songwriterly stylings) and Guigsy (dub-influenced noodling) have since been looking for deals.

  • Noel and Liam Gallagher

    Who? To the newspaper-reading public, “The Battling Gallagher Brothers”. To the rightly-enthused record-buying public, “the heart and soul of Oasis”.
    What’s the story? What began as the tale of a band’s breathtaking ascent to greatness quickly became the soap opera of this two. Fights. Some storming off-stage. Some ruined American tours. Two broken marriages. Though the pair have come through the last 10 years reasonably unscathed physically (until Liam’s altercation with some German estate agents, during which he lost two front teeth), they have their scars. The sole original members of the group, they are, as Noel has often said, “chained to each other”.
    And then? The saga continues. Having quickly become the rock’n'roll stars they aspired in their best songs to be, the appetite for greatness quickly evaporated, but Noel and Liam retain a magnetic power for audiences. Sometimes it’s like a car crash. Sometimes, though, it can still be magnificent.

Cast no shadow

A few did get out of the Oasis wars unscathed

  • Richard Ashcroft
    Verve frontman, band chum, and inspiration for Cast No Shadow. Now writes songs about the missus, and lives happily ever after.
  • Robbie Williams
    Feuds aside, “Robster” remains unharmed, not to mention the bigger draw. Sensibly moved to another country, mind.
  • Matt Deighton
    Stand-in for Noel during brief fit of pique. In quick. Out quick. Sound judgment there from the former Acid Jazzer.
  • Paul Weller
    Spiritual leader, guest artist, man of fine footwear. Still plays grumpily to large devotional assemblies of bellowing dads.
  • Damon Albarn
    Didn’t like him much, did they? However, unlike other people we could mention, he still makes good records.

Oasis play Glastonbury on Friday

Quelle: guardian.co.uk

08.04.2004 - 22:59
Gerüchte um Album und Tour

Die folgenden Angaben stammen von dem CNS-Forum-Mitglied, welches den Abgang von Alan verkündete, bevor die Presse davon Wind bekam:

Terry Kirkbride stieß zu Oasis um das neue Material zu testen und spielte die Drums auf den Demos, als Alans Abschied feststand. Nachdem sie wieder ins Studio zurückkehrten, wurde Zak Starkey gerufen um Noels Schlagzeug-Parts zu beenden. Die Aufnahmen werden noch einige Monate dauern.
Jedoch wird es keine Veröffentlichung vor Glastonbury geben, aber einige Gigs in der Woche vor dem Festival sind geplant. Noch steht kein Live-Drummer fest, wenn gleich Terry Kirkbride die naheliegendste Lösung wäre.

Quelle: oasisforum.com

02.02.2004 - 19:56
Statements von Steve White

Steve White wurde auf seiner Webseite gefragt, wann Alan wohl ein öffentliches Statement zu seinem Weggang abgeben werde. Hier sind Auszüge aus seiner Antwort:

“… Oasis sind nur eine Rock & Roll Band (oder waren eine) …”

“… Liam und Noel are once important Rock stars … I don’t give a flying f*ck what happens to them two.”

“… vielleicht würden wir nicht soviel Bedeutung einer so trivialen Sache wie dem nächsten Oasis Album beimessen …”

“Al ist cool, war er schon, bevor er bei der Band war … und wird er noch lange bleiben, nachdem Oasis in 5 Jahren auf dem Level einer “remember the 90′s tour”-Band sind, kapiert?”

Quelle: whiteydrums.com

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23.01.2004 - 14:31
Rausschmiss bei Oasis

Oasis

Oasis

Drummer Alan White musste auf ausdrücklichen Wunsch der übrigen Bandmitglieder das Quartett verlassen

London – Nach mehr als acht Jahren hat Oasis-Drummer Alan White die Band verlassen müssen, und zwar auf ausdrücklichen Wunsch der übrigen Mitglieder. Zu den Gründen schwiegen sich die Gallagher-Brüder Liam und Noel auf ihrer Homepage aus. Offiziell hieß es lediglich, dass kein Ersatz gesucht werde und die laufenden Aufnahme-Sessions für das neue Album nicht berührt seien.

Nach Informationen des “NME” sitzt bis auf weiteres Noel Gallagher im Studio am Schlagzeug. In der britischen Tagespresse wurde darüber spekuliert, dass eine chronische Sehnenscheidenentzündung für Whites Abgang verantwortlich ist. In anderen Berichten war von wiederholten Streitereien mit Noel Gallagher die Rede. So soll White im Jahr 2002 die noch unveröffentlichte CD “Heathen Chemistry” an Unbefugte weitergereicht haben, so dass das Album Monate vor Veröffentlichung komplett im Internet auftauchte. (APA/AP)

Quelle: derstandard.at

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