When Liam was on the show, he he claimed that you had been offered £100 million to perform together again as Oasis. Yeah. Which sounds extraordinary. I don't think it's necessarily untrue, but is that true? How... Why do you say it's not necessarily untrue? Because it is untrue! Well, I'm saying it's not necessarily 'cause I could understand that someone could— - Nobody! There is £100 million in the music business. Right? Between all of us! Right? So the fact that any one band, or me... I wouldn't. If anybody wants to offer me £100 million now I'll say it, now I'll do it. I’d do it for 100 million. It’s ludicrous. What is funny though is that I think Liam actually believes it, which is, which is the funny thing. - But Liam, I've known him a little bit better now I don't, I wouldn't say I know either of you terribly well, but I think I know you slightly better than I know him. And, but I thought he was this, sort of wild character and he's definitely mellowed. He has definitely changed, and you must have seen that. It’s nearly 50 years. Yeah, exactly. So he's getting older. And, I wonder, therefore, if there is even if, just for the sake you know, would you not want to perform again because you must miss him onstage sometimes. Not particularly, no. ‘Cause it's a different band. Yeah, I know, but... It’s a different thing. Alright, but put High Flying Birds to one side, say they're still there. You'd still be doing High Flying Birds. Of course you will, but would you not want to be with him on stage again? Well, as I was saying to the guy in the Oasis documentary yesterday I I find it a bit sad that that there's a whole generation of kids working class kids, Who have got nothing of their own. To buy into and they're projecting all that onto a couple of 50 year old fellas. Where's the new Oasis? Where is that? Where is that? Where are those guys? - Maybe it's not in rock and roll, maybe it's in like the grime scene now, if you look at guys like Headie One— - But, listen, the thing about bands is they’re hard work. They are hard work, it's hard work to do what we did is hard work. You know, a band with five other geezers. You might not like two of them, definitely won't like two their wives, but all that kind of thing. It’s graft! You’ve gotta graft it out, and it takes years! And now it now it's easy to buy a laptop and make it in your bedroom. Yeah that's easy and people people do tend to take the easy option. - But no, I'm asking you as a person I’m not asking you about what you think about a generation, an audience might, what I'm just asking you as a person - I know, but I'm trying to deflect that question. This is why I'm persistent. What, do you not miss being on stage with him? Because, I’ll tell you why I’m curious, ‘cause I believe in the in the last documentary that was made about you guys. - ’Supersonic.’ I think your mum talked in that. And she says ‘I wish they could just sort it out, I wish they could just—’ - OK, what— - And she says ‘I wish it hadn’t ended the way it had.’ We all do. We all do, but the fact of the matter is it did and everybody's moved on and on that subject. I talk to my mum. Every other day and she's never mentioned it to me once. Once. - She went behind your back in a documentary. That's right, she did. - So, what you do on your own is amazing, and what he does on his own, is great as well. But together there is something extraordinary. Yeah but it was all wrapped up in youth, and camaraderie, and all that, and once that is gone. You cannot put that genie back in the bottle, and if and it would just be showbiz and it would just be for a mere poultry, £100 million, for nothing! You know what? I promise, I promise you now then that is the last time I will ask you about it. OK, thank you very much.