Noel Gallagher has said that he would “absolutely” write the theme song for the next James Bond film if asked, saying that doing so would be an honour.
Speaking to TalkSport, the Oasis songwriter revealed that while there had not been any contact between himself and the producers of the franchise, he would leap at the opportunity to contribute music for the film, adding that he thought the theme songs the series was known for should be made by British artists.
Asked if he would want to write a song for the series, Gallagher, a long-time Bond fan who has previously said he would record a song for it “in a heartbeat”, responded “absolutely, yeah, of course. It’d be an absolute honour”, before adding: “I think, those kinds of things should be done by Brits not Yanks.”
The questions came after rumours that Oasis had been courted for the role, with Gallagher’s brother, frontman Liam, responding to a fan on X asking about the rumours in December with: “It’s happening you wait till you hear it it’s the best BOND tune ever.”
The singer-songwriter, who alongside his previously estranged brother completed Oasis’s highly anticipated Live 25 tour last year with 41 shows across 13 countries, also said he would be interested in portraying a “Mancunian villain” in the next instalment.
The history of Bond theme songs stretches back to the first Bond film, Dr No in 1962, with every film since having its own unique song. The artist chosen to contribute the song tends to change from film to film, although some, such as English composer John Barry and Welsh singer Shirley Bassey, have had the job more than once.
Despite the film franchise being a British institution, the official Bond theme is often sung by foreigners, with only 10 British bands, composers or artists having provided songs for the 25 films produced to date: Barry in 1962, 1963 and 1969, Bassey in 1964, 1971 and 1979, Tom Jones in 1965, Paul McCartney and Wings in 1973, Lulu in 1974, Sheena Easton in 1981, Duran Duran in 1985, Adele in 2012 and Sam Smith in 2015. American band Garbage, fronted by Scot Shirley Manson, also provided the music in 1999. Reaction to each song has been mixed, but the three most recent ballads from Adele, Smith and Billie Eilish each took home the Academy Award for Best Original Song.
Little is currently known about any prospective future Bond films, with a replacement for long-time lead Daniel Craig, who exited the role after No Time to Die in 2021, still undecided and creative control now in the hands of Amazon MGM Studios, meaning that the next film in the series will be the first without the creative input of Eon Productions, the long-time stewards of the franchise who had a hand in deciding who created each film’s theme song.