
Oasis fans have already started queuing for the first of their five sold-out reunion gigs at Heaton Park.
The band are set to play in front of 80,000 people in their home city of Manchester on Friday after kicking off their world tour in Cardiff last week.
The shows at Heaton Park – a 600-acre public park in Bury and Manchester – are the only UK shows held outside a stadium, with the others taking place at the Principality Stadium, Wembley and Murrayfield.
And eager fans of the brothers have already secured their place in line ahead of the show to get a good view.
People were seen camped out as the queue formed by the side of the road, with a sea of camp chairs and bucket hats.
With temperatures of 28 degrees in Manchester, roasting hot revellers were seen fanning themselves or sheltering from the sun under umbrellas.

Oasis fans have already started queuing for the first of their five sold-out reunion gigs at Heaton Park (Liam and Noel Gallagher seen in Cardiff last week)

Eager fans of the brothers have already secured their place in line ahead of the show to get a good view
The brothers announced the Oasis Live ’25 tour last August, starting with two dates in Cardiff, before heading across the UK and Ireland.
While fans were excited at the reunion, some were left outraged after some standard tickets in the UK and Ireland jumped from £148 to £355.
The controversy prompted the Government and the UK’s competition watchdog to pledge to look at the use of dynamic pricing.
After their Manchester gigs Oasis will visit London’s Wembley Stadium, Edinburgh’s Murrayfield Stadium and Dublin’s Croke Park throughout July, August and September.
The group will then head to Japan, South Korea, South America, Australia and North America.
A movie produced by Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight is being made in conjunction with the reunion tour.
But there have been fears Oasis’ homecoming gig in Manchester could be overrun by ticketless fans as ‘irresponsible’ TikTokers share advice on how to break in to the venue.
With demand far outstripping supply for the concerts – their first in Manchester for 16 years – TikTok users have begun sharing tips about how to evade security.

With temperatures of 28 degrees in Manchester, roasting hot revellers were seen fanning themselves or sheltering from the sun under umbrellas

People were seen camped out as the queue formed by the side of the road, with a sea of camp chairs and bucket hats

The band are set to play in front of 80,000 people in their home city of Manchester on Friday after kicking off their world tour in Cardiff last week (Pictured)
One suggested climbing trees to scale the double fence or attempting to swim across the park’s boating lake.
‘We’ve got to climb over this fence here… and then you’re just in there for Oasis,’ one TikToker told his followers.
Another said: ‘You get in the water, you’ve got to swim and then you’ll get in.’
Manchester City Council has condemned the videos and urged fans without tickets to enjoy the ‘brilliant’ atmosphere in the city centre instead.
Greater Manchester Police has promised a ‘large and highly visible policing operation’ to deter wrongdoers.
The 600-acre open space hosts the annual Parklife festival and was the venue for Oasis’s last concert in the city on June 7, 2009.
Last year, police imposed a dispersal order on the park to prevent ticketless fans from gathering outside.

The brothers announced the Oasis Live ’25 tour last August, starting with two dates in Cardiff , before heading across the UK and Ireland (Seen last week)

There have been fears Oasis’ homecoming gig in Manchester could be overrun by ticketless fans as ‘irresponsible’ TikTokers share advice on how to break in to the venue
SJM Concerts, which is organising the events said that 2,000 stewards and a ‘significant number’ of police officers would be patrolling the event.
‘We have been working for more than a year alongside the various councils and emergency services to ensure these Oasis shows in Heaton Park are safe for all ticket holders.
‘Anyone without a ticket should not travel to Heaton Park,’ Rob Ballantine, the director of SJM Concerts, told the Guardian.
‘We are aware of the TikTok videos but what they don’t show is the 2,000 stewards, plus a significant number of police who will be patrolling the area, and the double fence line around the entire site with mobile security in between the fences.’