Liam Gallagher has told fans to "get off his case" as thousands of Oasis ticket orders were cancelled. Last year, the legendary rocker revealed that he and his brother Noel had put their differences aside and were reuniting as Oasis for the first time in almost two decades. The brothers, who last performed together in 2009 had been at logger heads ever since Noel dramatically quit the band in 2009. But after celebrating the 30th anniversary of their debut album, Definitely Maybe, they left fans gobsmacked over the August Bank Holiday weekend when the news broke about their plans to hit the road again. But as apart of their plans, Oasis announced that for those who had to sell their tickets could only do so on one authorised website, Twickets.
After the tickets sold out almost instantly, thousands of tickets emerged on resale sites for extortionate prices. At the time, show bosses revealed that any tickets being sold anywhere other than Twickets would be cancelled. Now, around 50,000 ticket orders have been cancelled. One fan asked Liam on X, formerly known as Twitter: "Liam what do you think of the ticket situation? Thinking fans are bots and getting their money returned?" In response, the 52-year-old rocker said: "I don't make the rules. We're trying to do the right thing. It is what it is, I'm the singer. Get off my case.".
Taking to social media last week, one fan said: "If 2025 could actually get any worse - now I don't even have this to look forward to any more Denying legit fans their tickets??" while sharing a screenshot of a message from Ticketmaster noting that their order had been cancelled. A second went on to tweet: "@TicketmasterCS @TicketmasterUK @oasis my tickets got cancelled. I purchased it on my computer on the pre-sale with the pre-sale code I received. I’m trying to submit the form but it won’t work. How can I do it?" "@TicketmasterCS can you advise what to do about legitimate Oasis tickets being cancelled for being a bot - wife bought on her laptop after waiting hours and hours in your queue system. Further, the form you have sent for raising a query will not submit. Appalling customer svc," commented a third.
Meanwhile, one fan told The Guardian: "At first we thought this email was fake or a spam email, but no, it was true. We usually use Ticketmaster to buy our tickets … But now, how can I trust this page, which is supposed to be the official page? I really can't believe what has happened." The fan had purchased four premium tickets for more than £1,000 at the time of official sale. She had also spent around £2000 on flights from Spain and accommodation which is likely be not eligible for a refund.
In response, Ticketmaster said: "Anyone who has been contacted and believes a refund was made in error has been sent a form to fill in for the tour's promoters to review." When tickets went on sale last year, promoters SJM and Live Nation said that any orders cancelled would be made reavailable via Ticketmaster. They said: "Ticket resale is permitted at no more than the price you paid (face value + booking fees). Please only use the official resale partners Twickets and Ticketmaster. Selling tickets through unauthorised resale platforms will breach these T&Cs and those tickets may be cancelled.".