‘It’s made my day’: Liam Gallagher gives Bring Me The Horizon’s heavy cover of Oasis classic Wonderwall his seal of approval

Liam Gallagher has supported a new charity cover of Oasis classic ‘Wonderwall’ by heavy metal band Bring Me The Horizon.

Liam Gallagher has given heavy metallers Bring Me The Horizon’s cover of Oasis classic ‘Wonderwall’ his seal of approval.

On Wednesday (29.01.25), Oli Sykes and co dropped an unexpected heavy rendition of the 1995 Britpop hit exclusively on Spotify, and the Oasis frontman’s fans quickly descended on X to ask Liam his opinion of the cover.

Much to their surprise, the 52-year-old singer loved it.

When one fan suggested he would be offended, Liam replied: “I’m not it’s absolutely incredible made my day I’m of out on my skateboard f*** y’all.”

Commenting underneath fan site Oasis Mania’s post about the cover, Liam wrote: “I f****** LOVE it.”

All money raised from streams of the cover – which was released as part of the streaming giant’s Spotify Singles series – will go to the Teenage Cancer Trust.

The ‘Kool Aid’ rockers – who previously teamed up with Ed Sheeran on a heavy version of his pop hit ‘Bad Habits in 2022 – have also recreated the ‘Wonderwall’ music video and promo shot.

The surprise release, which also included a new version of ‘YOUtopia’ from BMTH’s 2024 LP ‘POST HUMAN: NeX Gen’, comes after frontman Oli admitted the group plan to take a considerable break to “recharge our batteries”.

Oli says it’s important that they take a “significant amount of time off” so their art doesn’t suffer.

The 38-year-old rocker admits he feels “fried” from working non-stop on the group’s ‘Post Human’ series, having released ‘Post Human: Survival Horror’ in 2020 and ‘Post Human: Nex Gen’ last May, and he needs to step away before creating a “new era” in “every respect” for the next instalment.

Speaking to NME, Oli replied when asked if a break is needed: “I think so. We need time to recharge our batteries and have that time away, because we haven’t. The last time we stopped was when we were forced to for lockdown. Even then, we were still going and making stuff. It doesn’t feel like the band has had a significant amount of time off. It’s going to get to a point where it starts to effect the band and its creativity.

“I went off and worked with some producers on some stuff for the new record, and I’m just so fried from ‘Nex Gen’ and that world that I really need to have a proper cut-off point to let the dust settle a bit. Now it’s not just about the music: the story and the lore have become so integral and meaningful. If I don’t stop to try and zoom out and get the bigger picture, then it will effect all of that stuff.

“These records need to be very clear and separate records, otherwise there’s a risk of each bleeding into one another too much. To me, ‘Nex Gen’ has a very different sound to ‘Survival Horror’ [2020] and I want the next one to be a completely new era aesthetically, sonically, and in every respect. It’s important that we let Bring Me The Horizon go away for a bit.”

Oli confessed fans might have a while to wait before the next album.

Asked if it could be released in 2026, he replied: “Yeah, I dunno. We haven’t really figured it out yet. It could be a bit longer than that. It’s hard to say at this point.”

The group – also comprising drummer Matt Nicholls, guitarist Lee Malia and bassist Matt Kean – saw the departure of longtime programmer, keyboardist and producer Jordan Fish last year, who was instrumental in the metalcore outfit’s transition to a more mainstream sound.

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