Latest Release
- 15 NOV 2024
- 10 Songs
- The Sweet Escape · 2006
- You Make It Feel Like Christmas (Deluxe Edition - 2020) · 2017
- Love. Angel. Music. Baby (Deluxe Version) · 2004
- Scorpion · 2001
- Love. Angel. Music. Baby (Deluxe Version) · 2004
- Love. Angel. Music. Baby (Deluxe Version) · 2004
- Love. Angel. Music. Baby (Deluxe Version) · 2004
- You Make It Feel Like Christmas · 2017
- You Make It Feel Like Christmas · 2017
- Love. Angel. Music. Baby (Deluxe Version) · 2004
Essential Albums
- It’s hard to believe Love. Angel. Music. Baby. is Gwen Stefani’s first solo album. For many artists, perfecting a sound so niche requires years of experimentation and a handful of projects. But for Stefani, all it took was a push from Interscope co-founder Jimmy Iovine—and an all-star production and songwriting team—to piece together the avant-garde pop album that catapulted the Orange County native to solo superstardom. Released in 2004, and recorded not long after Stefani’s band No Doubt went on hiatus, Love. Angel. Music. Baby. found the singer searching for new sounds. While No Doubt thrived on a mix of ska and punk, Stefani was now turning to hip-hop, rock and electronic music for inspiration. And she leaned on collaborators from across the pop spectrum, including André 3000, The Neptunes, Dr. Dre, Jimmy Jam and songwriter Linda Perry. The resulting album was admirably experimental and wildly accessible. The Neptunes-produced “Hollaback Girl” was inspired in part by a session with Pharrell. Stefani felt she needed an “attitude” song for the album, and recalled how grunge artist Courtney Love had once referred to her as a “cheerleader”. According to a 2005 interview, the comment proved to be inspirational: “You want me to be a cheerleader?” Stefani remembered thinking. “Well, I will be one then. And I’ll rule the whole world, just you watch me.” (A bold claim, but an accurate one: “Hollaback Girl” topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart for a month.) Elsewhere on the album, Stefani and Eve collaborate on the ragga cut “Rich Girl”, a cover of British reggae duo Louchie Lou & Michie One’s “Rich Girl” (Stefani and Eve’s version interpolates “If I Were a Rich Man” from the 1964 musical Fiddler on the Roof). “Luxurious”, meanwhile, is also drawn from the past, sampling The Isley Brothers’ “Between the Sheets”. And while the ska and punk sounds of No Doubt are absent on Love. Angel. Music. Baby., the band’s bassist—and Stefani’s former beau—Tony Kanal can be found on “Cool”, which chronicles the pair’s break-up and subsequent friendship, and the Salt-N-Pepa-inspired “Crash”, which the two co-wrote. Shiny and gaudy in the best ways, Love. Angel. Music. Baby. is a lesson in expertly fusing together unlikely influences and eras, in a manner that’s both refreshingly cohesive and enduring.
Albums
Artist Playlists
- The first woman of ska who took on pop and won.
- Ska, sass and style painted with vibrant pops of colour.
- Pop’s sassiest, silliest and most sophisticated eccentrics.
Appears On
More To Hear
- The hitmaker reflects on her career to date.
- A remake of a dancehall classic that remade a Broadway classic.
- Bree takes us to the rodeo.
- Jayde Donovan celebrates 20 years of No Doubt’s Rock Steady.
- Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani dedicate this special to the holidays and share their Christmas traditions.
- The singer chats with Zane about creating "Slow Clap."
- Gwen shares her favorite holiday songs.
More To See
About Gwen Stefani
Though she was a product of the ‘90s SoCal ska-punk scene, it was clear early on that Gwen Stefani—born in 1969 in the L.A. suburb of Fullerton—possessed a star power that would not be confined to the underground. Her band, No Doubt, became a multi-platinum phenomenon with their third album, 1995’s Tragic Kingdom, thanks in large part to Stefani’s engaging mix of alt-rock spunk and old-school glamour. But if feisty self-empowerment anthems like “Just a Girl” presented young women with a bubblier, cheekier alternative to Courtney Love’s raw feminist rage, the aching ballad “Don’t Speak” revealed a singer more beholden to Madonna’s blonde ambition. After gradually drifting from the mosh pit to the dance floor with each subsequent record, No Doubt went on hiatus in 2004, freeing up Stefani to pursue her own maximalist vision of pop music as a solo artist/fashion mogul/one-woman multimedia enterprise. Whether giving traditional cheerleader chants a steroid boost on “Hollaback Girl”, putting a 21st-century spin on streetwise soul with “The Sweet Escape”, or slinking into the after-hours club on “Make Me Like You”, Stefani’s songs go off like confetti cannons—colourful explosions of discotheque euphoria and irreverent theatricality that have encouraged next-gen entertainers like Miley Cyrus and Charli XCX to be as brash as they wanna be.
- FROM
- Fullerton, CA, United States
- BORN
- 3 October 1969
- GENRE
- Pop