Oasis teased a ticket announcement on Monday
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'Here we go': Oasis tease further dates for 2025 tour

by · Manchester Evening News

Oasis have sent fans wild by teasing an upcoming announcement ahead of their world tour next year.

Brothers Noel Gallagher, 57, and Liam Gallagher, 51, who last performed together in 2009, have reunited for the Oasis Live '25 world tour next year. Tickets for the UK and Ireland gigs - include massive homecoming shows at Heaton Park - sold out on the day they were released.

But while the locations for the rest of the tour have been revealed, no other details have yet been revealed. On Saturday night the band posted on X that they will be sharing some news on Monday. It comes following speculation of the potential additional locations the band will visit on the world tour.

READ MORE: The massive job at Heaton Park before Oasis even set foot on stage

The post included photos of billboards up in locations including Times Square in New York for the upcoming tour. Another photo is thought to show a billboard on Yonge Street in Toronto. The tweet read: "MONDAY, 8AM ET #OasisLive25." The billboards read: "Be careful what you wish for."

One person responded: "Getting super excited for you to announce your US shows." Another speculation ahead of the news on Monday: "US dates announcement." A third reacted to the tweet: "Yasssssss finally!" Whilst another fan wrote: "Here we go." Someone else said: "We are waiting."

Ahead of any announcement, it was reported earlier this week that sources told NME that the tour is set to visit Toronto in Canada, as well as Chicago, East Rutherford, Boston and Los Angeles in the US. The tour will reportedly also visit Mexico, South Korea, Japan, Australia, Brazil, Chile and Argentina.

It was confirmed last month that the band will be touring the UK and Ireland next year for their reunion. Tickets went on sale shortly afterwards and it was announced later that same day that tickets for the UK and Ireland shows had sold out, with some fans left disappointed in the process.

As previously reported, some fans were said to have been met with an error message when they had tried to buy tickets. A spokesperson for Ticketmaster, one of the official ticket sites for the tour, denied the website had crashed and urged fans to "to hold their place in line" at one point.