For American audiences, the phenomenal worldwide success of
Oasis was a little puzzling. That's because they only had part of the picture -- unless they were hardcore fans, they didn't hear nearly three albums of material released on B-sides and non-LP singles. Critics and fans alike claimed that the best of these B-sides were as strong as the best moments on the albums, and they were right. None of the albums had a song that rocked as hard as
"Fade Away" (cleverly built on a stolen melody from
Wham!'s
"Freedom"),
"Headshrinker," or
"Acquiesce." There was nothing as charming as the lite
psychedelic pastiche
"Underneath the Sky" or the
Bacharach tribute
"Going Nowhere"; there was nothing as affecting as
Noel Gallagher's acoustic plea
"Talk Tonight" or the minor-key,
McCartney-esque "Rockin' Chair," nothing as epic as
"The Masterplan." Most bands wouldn't throw songs of this caliber away on B-sides, but
Noel Gallagher followed the example of his heroes
the Jam and
the Smiths, who released singles where the B-sides rivaled the A-sides. This meant many American fans missed these songs, so to remedy this situation,
Oasis released the B-sides compilation
The Masterplan.
Oasis unfortunately chose to opt for a single disc of highlights instead of a complete double-disc set, which means a wealth of great songs --
"Take Me Away," "Whatever," "D'Yer Wanna Be a Spaceman?," "Round Are Way," "It's Better People," "Step Out," a raging cover of
"Cum on Feel the Noize" -- are missing. But
The Masterplan winds up quite enjoyable anyway. Apart from the sludgy instrumental
"The Swamp Song," there isn't a weak track here, and the brilliant moments are essential not only for
Oasis fans, but any casual follower of
Britpop or
post-grunge rock & roll. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine