Haven't heard that one, Cetti, but such stories do get bandied about. I should have mentioned, anyway, that what may be possible, though I'm sure not officially authorised, is for some aircraft to do a barrel roll. In that the nose is pulled up to (typically) about 30 degrees while rolling, reaching that angle as the wings reach 90 degrees, continuing to be inverted as the nose comes back down level, then continuing the roll to 30 degrees nose down with wings at 90 degrees again, and back up to straight and level. That's a kind of extruded loop and requires far lower g forces. I could believe that Concorde was barrel-rolled.
Negative g, though, as in flying level inverted, means the wings have to provide lift "downwards", which they're not designed for. Aerodynamically they can do it, but their strength is perhaps not up to it. It doesn't half make a mess of fuel and oil systems too, not to mention other equipment coming adrift. Aerobatic aircraft have to be built like brick chicken-houses!