Liam Gallagher has appeared to hit out at the manager of Oasis’ claims that the band will not release new music in the future.
Alec McKinlay, the co-director of management company Ignition who have managed Oasis since 1993, ruled out any chance of the group dropping new tracks or going on another tour further down the line.
“This is very much the last time around, as Noel’s made clear in the press,” he told Music Week on Tuesday on the topic of Oasis’ global reunion tour later this summer.
“It’s a chance for fans who haven’t seen the band to see them, or at least for some of them to.”
McKinlay, who is also the director of Oasis’s label Big Brother Recordings, added: “No, there’s no plan for any new music.”
Gallagher, 52, shared his disapproval at McKinlay’s claims about the “future” of Oasis in a post on X on Wednesday morning.

A fan said to him on the social media platform: “Liam I don't know who the manager of Oasis is, but his attitude of telling us that after this tour there will be nothing more was not very biblical.”
The rocker replied: “Neither do I and the only people that will be making any kind of decisions on the future of OASIS will be ME n RKID so let’s just take it 1 day at a time.”
Another user questioned if his brother Noel Gallagher, 57, shares the same outlook, asking: “But what if Noel doesn’t think the same as you?”
The Britpop star posted: “I’m sure he doesn’t but that’s ok.”
He also kept things vague when one fan asked: “Are you still gonna do any solo stuff after this tour?”
The musician said: “I might do another album with John [Squire] who knows I might join the spiritual space invaders I might do nothing that’s the groovy thing about the future nobody knows.”

The rocker released the album Liam Gallagher John Squire in collaboration with guitarist John Squire in March 2024.
The Standard has contacted McKinlay for comment.
The Gallagher brothers’ hotly-anticipated Live ‘25 tour kicks off in Cardiff in July with multiple stops around the UK, before going global with shows in Japan, Argentina, the US, and Brazil.
The duo has 41 dates booked for 2025 and will be joined onstage by acts like Richard Ashcroft, Cast, Cage The Elephant, and Ball Park Music.
The tour will mark the first time the siblings have played together since the band split in 2009 following a backstage row at the Rock en Seine festival in France.
Noel quit the rock group on August 28, 2009, saying he “simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer”.