Entertainment Music Rock Music Pete Townshend Is 'Disappointed' Oasis Has Reunited. Find Out the Surprising Reason Why The Gallagher brothers both supported The Who on separate occasions — perhaps why Townshend prefers their solo work By Jade Gomez Jade Gomez Jade Gomez is a Digital Music Writer at PEOPLE since 2024. Her work has been featured in PAPER Magazine, Paste Magazine, Complex, Highsnobiety, Playboy, Stereogum, Byline, and more. People Editorial Guidelines Published on October 29, 2024 02:35PM EDT Comments Pete Townshend in New York City on June 16, 2024, Oasis in London on March 26, 2003. Photo: Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty; Dave Hogan/Getty The Who's Pete Townshend didn't snag a ticket for the Oasis reunion either, but it's not for the reason you think. Townshend sat down with The Standard after the guitar virtuoso permanently lent his synth collection to the University of West London in Ealing for their newly built Townshend Studio. Amid musings of his thoughts on arts education funding, the 79-year-old was asked about his thoughts on Oasis' massive 2025 reunion. “Well, I’m disappointed,” Townshend said. When asked if it's because he couldn't get a ticket due to the demand, he replied, "No, because I really like their solo albums." Townshend's opinion differs from The Who bandmate Roger Daltrey, who told Rolling Stone "I wish [Oasis] would just get back together" in 2022. The Gallagher brothers, Liam, 52, and Noel, 57, split off into solo careers after Oasis' intense breakup in 2009, and both of them would go on to perform with The Who on separate occasions. Noel supported the band at a benefit gig for the Teenage Cancer Trust at London’s Royal Albert Hall in 2017, and Liam supported The Who on tour in 2019. Oasis in Tokyo in September 1994. Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty All the Ups and Downs of Oasis' Turbulent Career, from Topping the Charts and Breaking Up to a Reunion Tour The Gallaghers regularly made headlines throughout Oasis' tenure for their disputes both public and private, some of which were physical. The brothers came to blows regularly well into their final days as a band and resorted to traveling separately to avoid conflict. Ahead of their set at Rock en Seine in Paris in 2009, it was abruptly announced that they would not be performing. Shortly after, Noel announced via the band's website that he'd quit the band. In a later recollection of the night, Noel said, "[Liam] goes out the dressing room, for whatever reason, he went to his own dressing room, and he came back with a guitar, and he started wielding it like an axe, and I’m not f---ing kidding,” Noel said in a 2015 interview with Esquire. "And I’m making light of it because it’s kind of what I do, but it was a real unnecessary violent act, and he’s swinging this guitar around; he nearly took my face off with it.” In August, the band announced a 2025 world tour in stadiums across North America and Europe, over a decade since their explosive split. The Who's Pete Townshend Shuts Down Possibility of a Farewell Tour Pete Townshend performing in Indio, California in October 2016. Kevin Mazur/Getty Speaking of reunions, Townshend was also asked about the future of The Who and provided a hopeful update. "I met with Roger for lunch a couple of weeks ago. We’re in good form. We love each other. We’re both getting a bit creaky, but we will definitely do something next year," he said. The former bandmates appear to have made significant strides after Townshend told The Daily Beast in August, "Roger and I don’t converse. We don’t talk." The tentative plans aren't shaping up into an album as of now, as Townshend says Daltrey isn't "keen" on recording new material, "but I would love to do another album and I may try to bully him on that." Close