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Roll with It (Oasis song)

"Roll with It" is a song by the English rock band Oasis. Written by lead guitarist Noel Gallagher, it was released on 14 August 1995 as the second single from their second studio album, (What's the Story) Morning Glory? (1995).

The release date of "Roll With It" coincided with that of Blur's "Country House". The synchronicity—amplified by weeks of media focus on the bands' rivalry—framed the singles as a head-to-head for number one in the UK. Official Charts Company later characterised the contest as one of the most prominent in chart history, with Blur ultimately outselling Oasis by around 50,000 copies in the first week.

'Battle' with Blur

"Roll with It" received a great deal of attention when Food Records, the label of Britpop rivals Blur, moved the original release date of the single "Country House" to beat it on the charts, sparking what came to be known as "The Battle of Britpop". The British media had already reported an intense rivalry between the two bands and this clash of releases was seen as a battle for the number one spot. The media sensation was spurred on by verbal attacks from the respective camps (in particular the Gallagher brothers, Damon Albarn and Alex James), that extended beyond the music industry to the point where the two bands were regularly mentioned on the evening news. In particular, public imagination was sparked by the contrast between the "working class" Oasis and the "middle class" Blur. In the end, Blur's "Country House" single sold 274,000 copies to Oasis' 216,000 copies of "Roll with It". The singles charted at number 1 and number 2 respectively.

In 2019, Noel Gallagher reflected on the battle on Dermot O'Leary's Reel Stories, dismissing both songs as "shit". He suggested that a chart race between Oasis's "Cigarettes & Alcohol" and Blur's "Girls & Boys" would have had greater merit: "'Roll With It' has never been played by anybody since the band split up".

Background

In a 1995 interview with Addicted To Noise, Noel Gallagher said that "Roll with It" had taken him much longer to write than songs such as "Live Forever" or "Slide Away", explaining that it was harder to complete because it was about the idea of becoming a rock and roll star rather than describing direct personal experience. Later that year, Gallagher described it in NME as "just a simple rock 'n' roll tune". In the 2025 Radio X track-by-track feature on (What's the Story) Morning Glory?, the song was again characterised in Gallagher's terms as a straightforward rock number whose appeal lay more in its attitude and sentiment than in lyrical complexity.

Critical reception

The AllMusic editor Stephen Thomas Erlewine described 'Roll with It' as "an assured stadium rocker that unabashedly steals the crown from Status Quo". David Stubbs from Melody Maker wrote, "This isn't the mounting cascade of manna and adrenalin that was 'Some Might Say' or 'Acquiesce'. It's subdued by comparison, a light shower after that musical thunderstorm, something for us to kick through the puddles to until their next mighty moment of precipitous pop. Rolling along, marking time, fair enough." A reviewer from Music & Media said, "When was it that dance fans predicted the end of rock? By going two steps back to the '60s Oasis takes it six steps forward. So roll over you sceptics, "my my, hey hey, rock 'n' roll is to stay."" Mark Sutherland from NME wrote, "Have no fear, you will la-la-la-like it. It is, after all, a pretty good record." Andrew Harrison from Select named it "Oasis' weakest single, but still far from the Quo travesty of legend, even if the song might conjure visions of flying wetlook perms." Leesa Daniels from Smash Hits gave it two out of five and named it "the weakest track" of the album, "and Liam sounds like he's got a sore throat."

Legacy and retrospective views

In a 2019 BBC programme, Noel Gallagher looked back on the 1995 chart race and dismissed both "Roll with It" and Blur's "Country House", suggesting that an earlier pairing ("Cigarettes & Alcohol" versus "Girls & Boys") would have been a fairer contest. The Official Charts Company has since described the Blur–Oasis showdown as one of the most famous chart battles in its history, emblematic of the mid-1990s Britpop era.

Live performances

"Roll with It" quickly became a regular part of Oasis's live set. In a December 1995 Oasisinet webchat, Noel Gallagher and Bonehead listed it among the songs the band were due to play that night in San Jose, and official releases later documented live versions from Knebworth 1996 and Familiar to Millions. The song also remained in the band's set during their last year before the split: reviewing Oasis's June 2009 Heaton Park homecoming shows, The Guardian noted the group "whipping through" "Roll With It" among the early crowd-pleasers, and it was included in the band's final pre-split set at V Festival on 22 August 2009. Although Gallagher later dismissed the song when discussing the Battle of Britpop, a 2025 reunion-tour setlist again included "Roll with It", underlining its continued place in the band's concert repertoire.

Top of the Pops performance

When Oasis played "Roll with It" on chart show Top of the Pops on 17 August 1995, they were required to mime the song, and in doing so the Gallagher brothers switched roles with Liam pretending to play guitar and Noel pretending to sing (equipped with Liam's tambourine).

Marketing

The single artwork features a photograph of the band on the beach at Weston-super-Mare. Many potential locations were examined along the Somerset and Avon coastline (Oasis were playing Glastonbury that weekend, so a beach within striking distance of the festival site had to be found).

Track listing

  • UK CD single
  1. "Roll with It"
  2. "It's Better People"
  3. "Rockin' Chair"
  4. "Live Forever" (Live at Glastonbury '95)
  • UK 7-inch single
A. "Roll with It"
B. "It's Better People"
  • UK 12-inch single
A1. "Roll with It"
B1. "It's Better People"
B2. "Rockin' Chair"
  • UK cassette single
  1. "Roll with It"
  2. "It's Better People"
  • Australian CD single
  1. "Roll with It"
  2. "Talk Tonight"
  3. "Acquiesce"
  4. "Headshrinker"

<small>Note 1: "Headshrinker" was a B-side of the band's previous UK single "Some Might Say" and was one of the last tracks to feature original Oasis drummer Tony McCarroll.<br> Note 2: "Live Forever" was recorded live at the Glastonbury Festival on 23 June 1995.</small>

Personnel

Charts

Weekly charts

Year-end charts

Certifications

Release history

References