The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Liam Gallagher struts his stuff on ‘As You Were’

- BY JILL LAWLESS

Liam Gallagher, “As Were’’ (Warner Bros.)

As swaggering frontman of 1990s British titans Oasis, Liam Gallagher understood that rock stardom is three-quarters attitude — and, in his case, one quarter love of The Beatles.

Gallagher’s burning bravado fuels his solo debut “As You Were,’’ an invigorati­ng rock ‘n’ roll record that shows he remains cheerfully in thrall to the Fab Four.

Oasis’ songs were largely written by older brother Noel Gallagher and Liam’s solo effort is missing that input, as well as the volatile sibling rivalry that gave Oasis performanc­es a distinct frisson.

But the album, written by Gallagher with in-demand songwriter­s including Adele collaborat­or Greg Kurstin, makes sharp use of his strengths. The strut, the sneer and the softcentre­d love of a good tune are all on prominent display.

Gallagher’s nasal voice is still among the most distinctiv­e in music and it’s deployed on hooky tracks produced with robust sizzle, crunch and thump. There are fuzzy guitars, woozy harmonies, horns, handclaps — even a “Sgt. Pepper’’-style fanfare on “When I’m in Need.’’

Lyrically, Gallagher offers plenty of aggressive attitude (“You think I’m giving up/I gotta rhino hide’’) alongside hints of a new maturity for the 45-yearold singer. “For what it’s worth, I’m sorry for the hurt’’ he sings on “For What it’s Worth.’’

He also indulges in some cringe-inducing rhyming couplets, though the punchy single “Wall of Glass’’ pleasingly rhymes “one direction’’ with “resurrecti­on.’’ You

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