John Lydon: “I Hate Oasis Music, Gigs Are Difficult”

John Lydon: “I Hate Oasis Music, Gigs Are Difficult”

John Lydon has revealed he ‘hates’ Oasis’ music and finds it difficult to enjoy himself at other people’s gigs.  

The legendary rocker, 69, best known as the lead vocalist of the punk band the Sex Pistols, said he’s likely one of the only British music stars who won’t be attending the highly anticipated Oasis reunion shows. 

When asked if he would be going to see Noel, 58, and Liam Gallagher, 52, perform, he told The Sun: ‘No. They’re my mates but I hate their music.

He added: ‘It’s very difficult for me to go to other people’s gigs. People don’t leave me alone and let me enjoy myself.

‘I knocked it on the head a few years ago. I love dancing, you’re enjoying yourself and some a*****e will stand right in front of you and waffle banal nonsense which is distracting you from the point and purpose.’ 

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John Lydon: “I Hate Oasis Music, Gigs Are Difficult”

John Lydon has revealed he ‘hates’ Oasis’ music and finds it difficult to enjoy himself at other people’s gigs (pictured last month)

The legendary rocker, 69, best known as the lead vocalist of the punk band the Sex Pistols, said he's likely one of the only British music stars who won't be attending Oasis' reunion shows (Liam and Noel Gallagher pictured)

The legendary rocker, 69, best known as the lead vocalist of the punk band the Sex Pistols, said he’s likely one of the only British music stars who won’t be attending Oasis’ reunion shows (Liam and Noel Gallagher pictured)

Speaking to the publication from his UK tour with his band Public Image Ltd, John added that he loves Noel because he just ‘says it like it is’. 

He also said that the Gallagher brothers make him laugh during interviews, describing them as ‘witty’ and ‘on it in a working-class, quick-as-you-can way’. 

The interview comes after he opened up on the loss of his wife last month. 

The singer lost his beloved spouse of 44 years Nora Foster in April 2023 after a five-year battle with Alzheimer’s disease.

John, who was known as Johnny Rotten during his Sex Pistols days, had drawn an incredible amount of public sympathy following her death having selflessly cared for Nora full-time until her final hours. 

Now over two years after she passed, the extravagant singer has opened up on the ‘agony’ he felt as Nora suffered a painful death. 

In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, the 69-year-old said: ‘The pain will never go away. She died painfully, suffocating. They call it the death rattle.’ 

Recalling the moment doctors asked him whether they should prolong Nora’s life, he added: ‘I couldn’t say “yes, stop”. No, I fought for her life as hard as she fought for it.

When asked if he would be going to see Noel, 58, and Liam Gallagher, 52, perform, he told The Sun: 'No. They're my mates but I hate their music'

When asked if he would be going to see Noel, 58, and Liam Gallagher, 52, perform, he told The Sun: ‘No. They’re my mates but I hate their music’  

He added: 'It's very difficult for me to go to other people's gigs. People don't leave me alone and let me enjoy myself'

He added: ‘It’s very difficult for me to go to other people’s gigs. People don’t leave me alone and let me enjoy myself’ 

‘It’s insane, and you don’t know how to handle it (the death of a partner). And you can end up being really aggressive with people mollycoddling you. But you have to be full of rage to break out of it, or you’ll end up as that sympathetic doddering old idiot that you know you would hate yourself.’

The singer had previously admitted he ‘always loved’ Nora having met her in 1975 at a Vivienne Westwood clothes shop – ‘there was an instant attraction,’ he said. 

Following her death, John had ‘wallowed in alcohol and sadness and self-pity,’ he told Metro, but the singer has since come out of that struggle.

He insists however that the agony of losing Nora will never go away. 

John is currently on his Not The Last Tour with his post-Sex Pistols band PiL (Public Image Ltd). 

Despite his grief, the artist insisted that the 28-date tour isn’t a farewell but more a tongue-in-cheek dig at bands who falsely claim they’re bowing out. 

‘The industry is riddled with artists claiming they’re on their final tour but have already booked themselves for five years after,’ he quipped. 

But while John is on his tour, his old band – consisting of Steve Jones, Paul Cook and Glen Matlock – are enjoying their own with new frontman Frank Carter.

The interview comes after John opened up on his wife Nora's 'painful' death two years after she passed away following a five-year battle with Alzheimer's (Pictured in April 2005)

The interview comes after John opened up on his wife Nora’s ‘painful’ death two years after she passed away following a five-year battle with Alzheimer’s (Pictured in April 2005)

John said there was an 'instant attraction' between him and Nora when they met at a Vivienne Westwood store in 1975 (Pictured in October 2001)

John said there was an ‘instant attraction’ between him and Nora when they met at a Vivienne Westwood store in 1975 (Pictured in October 2001)

John previously blasted the Sex Pistols recent tour as ‘karaoke’, branding the group ‘impossible to deal with’.

The singer revealed he is indeed no longer on speaking terms with his old bandmates after they fell out over a Disney+ TV series he opposed.

The dispute resulted in a High Court battle between John and the Sex Pistols over the use of the band’s music in the series – which Rotten ultimately lost. 

John said he ‘won’t forget’ that his old bandmates ‘dragged him through the courts’ while Nora was seriously ill. 

The Sex Pistols shot to fame after forming in 1975, but just three years later they had split up. 

Johnny Rotten, as he was then known, shot to fame during the 1970s as the Sex Pistols' lead vocalist

Johnny Rotten, as he was then known, shot to fame during the 1970s as the Sex Pistols’ lead vocalist

Their only album together, Never Mind the B******s* – a UK number one – is now a staple of punk rock.  

The band – whose controversial legacy rests upon their anti-establishment values – famously called the Royal family ‘fascists’ in 1977’s God Save The Queen.

But in 1978, John formed Public Image Ltd, with the first line-up of the band including bassist Jah Wobble and former Clash guitarist Keith Levene.

The group’s lineup has changed several times over the last 40-plus-years with John remaining a constant member. 

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