Friday, March 13, 2020
music to be heard essays
music to be heard essays    I believe that it is the music of our time that will be remembered long after     we are gone, and it is bands like Oasis that led the revolution which took     place recently.  Oasis, headed by brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher was     the  first band after The Beatles to lash out against what had become the     normal way a band should be, and that is why they will be known for years     to come as the band who changed rock music.     Noel Gallagher was born on May 29, 1967 in Manchester, he was the     second son of Thomas and Margaret Gallagher. Thomas, Tommy to the     boys at the pub, was a construction worker. He and his wife, known to her     pals as Peggy, resided in the working-class Manchester suburb called     Burnage with their  first boy, Paul.     "God was playing a joke when He made me," Noel Gallagher once said.     "You know, 'Let's make this guy a writer and a guitar player, but let's make     him write with his left hand but play with his right, and let's have him born     in the middle of May and give him a Christmas name like Noel. Little did     Noel know that when he grew up he was to become the frontman of one of     the most influential rock bands in music history at a time when music was     the most influential form of speech on the planet.     Little Liam arrived in the Gallagher household five years later, on     September 21, 1972. He and Noel were forced to share a bedroom,     something that always bothered Noel to no end, seeing how Paul, just a     year-and-a-half older than him, had his own room. But Liam and Noel     made the best of it, and the bedroom saw the beginnings of the somewhat     loving, often heated relationship between the brothers. The boys kept a     running record of their childhood by scrawling on their wall, later     described by Tommy as their "wonderwall", later to become the title of     one of their biggest selling singles. Bits of songs, poems, favourite bands,     football teams and the like were all immortalised on their bedro...     
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