Product Details
Love. Angel. Music. Baby.

Love. Angel. Music. Baby.
Gwen Stefani

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Track Listing

  1. What You Waiting For?
  2. Rich Girl - Eve, Gwen Stefani
  3. Hollaback Girl
  4. Cool
  5. Bubble Pop Electric - Gwen Stefani, Johnny Vulture,
  6. Luxurious
  7. Harajuku Girls
  8. Crash
  9. Real Thing
  10. Serious
  11. Danger Zone
  12. Long Way to Go - Andr� 3000, Andr� 3000, Gwen Stefani

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #4242 in Music
  • Released on: 2004-11-23
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .23 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
In her own unique way, Gwen Stefani has managed to shift our culture since coming onto the scene as the lead singer of No Doubt. With years of defining style and 30 million in record sales under her belt, she will again turn heads with this debut record that is as fresh as it is retro and as progressive as it is feel-good familiar.

With this project, she has enlisted some of the biggest names in music (Dr. Dre, Eve, The Neptunes, Andre 3000, Nellee Hooper, Dallas Austin, Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, Linda Perry and Tony Kanal) to create a genre bending masterpiece that is guaranteed to be one of the most talked about records of this year (2004) and beyond.

Amazon.com
On No Doubt's great Rock Steady, Gwen Stefani was a "girl that hangs with the boys... just sippin' on chamomile." Three years and a KROQ-nerd Talk Talk cover later, she presents a solo debut that wants it all--Vivienne Westwood and John Galliano, backseat love and lifetime devotion, '70s pop throwbacks and hip-hop beats as well as Clash adoration (she continues to be managed by the firm of Rebel Waltz, named for a mournful Sandinista! cut). Among the standout tracks are the stomping, Neptunes-driven "Hollaback Girl," the tongue-in-cheek Eve/Dr. Dre collaboration "Rich Girl," and the girl-power manifesto "What You Waiting For?"; another tune, "The Real Thing," nods toward role-model Madonna's "Holiday." Though it can't match Rock Steady's inexorable track-by-track flow, Love, Angel, Music, Baby is such state-of-the-art pop that the description almost feels like damning it with faint praise. --Rickey Wright


Customer Reviews

why?... dear god why1
This album is amazingly awful. The most tolerable track, and the first single, was "whatcha waiting for"... I didn't care for it especially, but it wasn't all bad; I could shrug it off as an experimental phase for which we cant fault gwen.

After that we have "rich girl". The lyrics to this song seem like they were written in a different language then translated to three or four other languages before being translated to english. Of course I know that this is not the case. But generally you pick a decent song to cover, you can put all the seasonings you want on a piece of crap... but it's still a piece of crap.

Now we have "hollaback girl"... I've convinced myself that the only reason it gets any video play is because it has gwen in skimpy outfits that so excite 14-year-old boys. The lyrics of this song leave much to be desired. I like comparing it to the rap portion of blondie's "rapture"... but at least the rest of rapture was catchy. I mean... in the middle of this song, gwen repeatedly spells 'bananas'... it hurts it hurts.

Having said that, if you like the songs above you will like the album as a whole. But if that's the case, I fear for the future of popular music.

New Twist on New Wave3
Let me just say first of all, that I'm not a No Doubt fan. I grew up in Orange County in the '90s when they were starting to get popular. As a teenager with a serious case of oppositional identity I found them grating and annoying.

However, I absolutely love New Wave so when I heard this album, some of the tracks instantly called to me. This stuff is nothing like No Doubt.

A few songs are just cringe-worthy bad..."Harajuku Girls" being most representative.

But a few just might get stuck in your head for good--my personal favorite is "Serious" which has every '80s nuance that you've heard before but can't quite remember from where.

The single "What You Waiting For" gets less interesting over time, unfortunately, but is still a strong track.

"The Real Thing" features Bernard Sumner and Peter Hook. For that reason, it sounds like Gwen Stefani singing a New Order song. Expect no surprises here but the emotion in her voice saves it from banality. (If you are looking to hear New Order then just pick up a New Order album...but if you REALLY want something new and you're tired of all your old '80s CDs then this might get your blood pumping again).

Basically, one shouldn't take this album too seriously. If you long for a little nostalgia and something to lift your spirits, then listen to tunes like "Bubble Pop Electric" or the Depeche Mode-sounding "Danger Zone" and remember the time when it was cool to spray Aquanet over your hair gel...

If you're looking for something deep and profound then you just might hate this. Some of the lyrics are so astonishingly bad that its tempting to throw this album in the wastebasket right away. When Gwen misses, she misses badly ("Hollaback Girl" makes me want to run for the hills), but as a serious student of New Wave, she hits every note perfectly.

Where's the soul of this music?1
Albums are meant as a total experience. Stefani's album is merely a collection of songs. Not very good songs too, I may add.

My main grouse with this is 'Where's the heart?' The album just doesn't have a soul to it at all, it's just mass produced garbage. Don't get me wrong, I'm not opposed to mainstream music. It's the fact that soulless and pointless works like these hog the limelight away from music that truly touches lives.

Let's see. If you concur with me, click yes. If not, click no.