Noel Gallagher got high and wrote a song about 'Moby-Dick'.

Noel Gallagher has revealed the inspiration behind 'There She Blows'

Noel Gallagher has revealed the inspiration behind 'There She Blows'

The former Oasis rocker has revealed how new song 'There She Blows' - which he wrote under the influence in Los Angeles - was inspired by Herman Melville's classic 1851 novel about Captain Ahab's quest for revenge on a giant sperm whale which bit off his leg on a previous voyage.

He's quoted by The Sun newspaper's Bizarre column as saying: "There was a book in the hotel and it was 'Moby-Dick'.

"So I went into MedMen, the shop that sells weed, and I bought a load of f****** weed and wrote some f****** mad, nautical nonsense for this tune."

The 54-year-old star revealed the track will feature on his upcoming album, but even he and his bandmates are having a hard time figuring out what the song is actually about.

He added: "It's ended up on my album, it's f****** great.

"I listened to the lyrics and even my band have been going, 'What's all that about?' I'm like, 'F*** knows'.

"It's a great tune, it sounds like The Beatles. It's sort of nautical bulls***."

Meanwhile, the 'Don't Look Back In Anger' hitmaker has promised the record - the follow-up to 2017 High Flying Birds LP 'Who Built The Moon?' - will feature a lot of strings reminiscent to some classic Oasis tracks like 'Wonderwall'.

He said: "There is a track on the album called 'Dead To The World', which is one of the best songs I have ever written.

"It gives people goosebumps. It's quite orchestral and a bit like 'Midnight Cowboy.' "

Noel admitted there is a "vibe" running through the entire collection, and it was a "conscious decision" to go in this direction.

He explained: "The whole album has got a vibe. There's 10 songs and six of them have got strings.

"It was a conscious decision after 'Who Built The Moon?', which was quite electronic and psychedelic and beats and all that kind of things.

"When I was writing these songs, I just heard strings and choirs."


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