(London) Ex-Oasis singer Liam Gallagher announced on Monday a tour next year for the 30th anniversary of Definitely Maybe, the album that launched the legendary Britpop group, remaining silent on a possible reconciliation with his brother Noel.

On his Instagram account, the musician was pleased to celebrate “the most important album of the 1990s” during this series of concerts in the United Kingdom and Ireland. It will begin in Sheffield, in the north of England, on June 1, 2024, and end on June 27 in Manchester, the group’s hometown, after visits to London and Dublin.

According to the tour description, this will be the first time 51-year-old Liam Gallagher will sing the entire album. In addition to his successes like Rock ‘n’Roll Star, Live Forever, Supersonic and Cigarettes

After years of bickering, yet another altercation in the summer of 2009 between Liam Gallagher and his brother Noel, guitarist and composer of Oasis, at the Parisian Rock en Seine festival, led to the separation of the group formed in 1991 in Manchester.

Since then, the enemy brothers have long exchanged acidities via social networks or the press, before a relative lull in recent times, giving fans hope for a reconciliation.

“You should never say never,” Noel told the BBC last January upon the release of his album High Flying Birds. “It would take extraordinary circumstances,” he warned.

After the dazzling success of Definitely Maybe, Oasis had reached the peak of their popularity with (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? released in 1995, which includes his hits like Wonderwall or Don’t look back in Anger.