Oasis – Be Here Now

$55.80

One of the most anticipated album releases of all time, Be Here Now was recorded with producer Owen Morris at Abbey Road Studios, Ridge Farm Studios, and Air Studios between October 1996 and May 1997. Originally released in August 1997, it has sold over 8 million copies worldwide. Remastered from the original tapes. Double heavyweight vinyl in gatefold sleeve.

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Record Details

LabelBIG BROTHER
Catalog NoRKIDLP 85
FormatVinyl LP
Release DateOctober 2016
ConditionNew / Sealed
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This Oasis Be Here Now vinyl pressing brings back one of the most hyped album releases of the 1990s in a format that genuinely does it justice: double heavyweight vinyl, remastered from the original tapes, housed in a gatefold sleeve on Big Brother Records (catalog RKIDLP 85).

The Album and Why It Still Matters

When Be Here Now dropped in August 1997, it arrived under a weight of expectation that few records have ever carried. Oasis had spent two years as the biggest band in Britain, and the world was watching. Recorded with producer Owen Morris across three studios, Abbey Road, Ridge Farm, and Air Studios, between October 1996 and May 1997, the album is a document of a band operating at maximum ambition and maximum volume. Over 8 million copies sold worldwide tells you something about the reach it had. Whether you came to it then or later, it is a record with real scale to it, and that scale is something a proper vinyl pressing can convey in a way streaming simply cannot.

The Oasis Be Here Now Vinyl Format and Pressing Details

This is a double LP pressing on heavyweight vinyl, which is the right call for an album that was always meant to be loud and wide. The audio has been remastered from the original tapes, so what you are hearing is not a compromised dub of a dub but a clean transfer that respects the source material. Owen Morris is a producer who cares about sound, and the remaster reflects that. The gatefold sleeve gives the artwork room to breathe and adds a physical heft that a single-sleeve edition never quite achieves. Big Brother Records, the label Oasis called home, handles this release under catalog number RKIDLP 85.

Why This Copy Belongs in Your Collection

Collectors who already own an original 1997 pressing will notice the difference a proper remaster makes, particularly in the low end, which on heavyweight vinyl has genuine presence. For anyone building a serious Oasis catalogue, this is the edition to own rather than track down a worn original and hope for the best. The gatefold format means you get the full visual experience alongside the audio, and double heavyweight vinyl holds up to repeat plays in a way that standard pressings do not always manage. This is a straightforward case of the right format for the right record.