Greener Pastures: a No Doubt fan site

Archive for July, 2012

gallery update

Friday, July 27th, 2012

Hello!  I’ve added some photos from Jimmy Fallon, and GMA to the gallery.

GMA videos uploading

Friday, July 27th, 2012

Hello!  The GMA videos are uploading right now.  There is an interview video, and Settle Down, It’s My Life, Underneath it All, and Spiderwebs (partial) performances.  The first three are up now, and last two are uploading right now.

Jimmy Fallon video download

Friday, July 27th, 2012

Hello! You can download the Settle Down on Jimmy Fallon video here! (right click-save as on the download button on the page).  I guess YouTube has blocked the video I uploaded there last night.  :/

Jimmy Fallon video including end of show

Friday, July 27th, 2012

Hello!  I’ve uploaded my video capture of No Doubt on Fallon, including the end of the show to YouTube.  I’ll add it to the downloads section of the site tomorrow with the GMA videos.  Hope all of you No Doubters are having fun down there!  I so wish I could be there hanging out with you all!  DWADN!!!!  xxxooo

vote for your favorite Song of the Summer, Oyster interview part 2, etc.

Thursday, July 26th, 2012

Hello!  Click here to go vote for “Settle Down” in VH1’s “Song of the Summer” poll!  You can currently find them on the third page of artists to choose from.

MYHABIT is having a sale on Dr. Martens right now if anyone is interested!  I was pretty excited about it, so thought I’d share.

Alan Cross, one of the journalists No Doubt was interviewed by yesterday, posted a preview of the interview on his site:

“Yesterday was a bit rushed.  Up early, drive to the airport, fly to NYC, cab to West 26th Street, 20 minute No Doubt interview.  Repeat in reverse.

The new album, Push and Shove, comes out September 25th and is the first full album of No Doubt material in 11 years.  I had a chance to talk to everyone in the band and the full interview (audio and video) will be available before the new record comes out.

I can, however, offer these highlights:

1. Gwen Stefani is as gorgeous as you think she might be.  I was taken by her fingernails, each of which featured perfect tiny black-and-white checkerboards in the ska tradition.

2. The band is a little freaked out by everything that’s happened in technology since the last record. When Rock Steady came out in December 2001, iTunes wasn’t even a year old.  The iPod had just been released six weeks earlier.  YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Myspace and Wikipedia were yet to be invented.

3. There was a long, difficult period of writer’s block in 2005.  It took going on tour to break through.

I had a chance to listen to the album.  If you’re a No Doubt fan, you’ll be pleased.  I really liked the title track.  Other song titles include “Undercover,” “Busy Signal,” “One More Summer”, “Looking Hot” and “Take It Easy” as well as the first single, “Settle Down.”

Much, much more as we get closer to the release date.”

Part two of the Oyster interview is now online:

“Last week, we were pretty stoked to bring you part one of our exclusive interview with No Doubt. Having one of our favourite writers The Coquette (of advice column Dear Coquette and Notes to My Future Husband) talk to the ever-amazing Gwen Stefani and the guys about topics like having kids, performing post–September 11 and re-uniting after a ten-year hiatus led to enlightening and funny results. In the final installment of the interview we talk group dynamics, signature sounds and having balls.

The Coquette: Okay, back to the music. You’ve said that the inspiration for Return to Saturn was more to probe your serious musical ability, and then with Rock Steady you wanted to make something fun that people can dance to. Was there an inspiration behind this album?
Adrian: I think that collectively, we’ve all gotten better at our craft as musicians. Just by doing it longer. There was definitely less, “hey, let’s show our musical chops” on this record. It was more about, “let’s do something really cool that’s not like anything else on the radio right now.”

I loved it. I felt like it was a return to your roots. The horn hooks were amazing.
Adrian: Cool. I don’t think we’re gonna be getting any awards for our individual instrumentation, but that’s okay.

You don’t need awards.
Tom: The whole thing about being in a band is it’s a collective effort. What’s great for the song, and what makes the song touch people isn’t showing off. It’s about supporting the emotion of what’s happening in the lyrics, and I think that’s something we’ve gotten better at as the years go on. The idea at the end of the day is to touch people in here. [He points to his heart.]

You mentioned that being in a band is a collective effort. Do you feel that each one of you brings something different to the table?
Tony: Hmm…
Gwen: That’s interesting. You know, it’s always evolving, and everybody definitely has roles that they play and everybody brings something special.
Tom: We have common ground, and different influences. Adrian is like the energy, you know? I don’t want to pigeon hole you as being, like, a punk rocker or rock dude, but Adrian’s got… spunk. Spunk? Is that the right word? You have, like, balls.
Adrian: I do have balls. This is true. Not just one. I have two.

Two balls?
Tom: I have a friend who had cancer and lost one. [Tom blinks a few times, then realises he’s actually speaking out loud.] Sorry. We don’t have to talk about that.

Okay. [The room erupts in nervous laughter]
Tom: But Adrian’s got balls, and without him it wouldn’t be right. We’re so lucky that the four of us are still the core group that we’ve always been.

So, Adrian has the balls. You? [to Tom]
Tom: What do I have?
Adrian: He has a vagina. [More laughter] Just kidding. You served that up.

I set ’em up, you knock ’em down.
Tom: We do all have really different personalities. Tony is a really thoughtful, conscientious person, you know, and Gwen is hyper-creative. Not hyper. Hyper-creative. She has amazing instincts. I don’t know what I have. Ask them.

Adrian, what does he have?
Adrian: He’s our dad.
Tom: I’m the dad. “Hey you kids!”

You’re the responsible one?
Adrian: He’s the real musician in the band.

Real musician?
Adrian: He knows the most.
Gwen: He knows how to break down a song and why it works and what’s happening. We have no idea what’s going on.
Tony: He’ll go, “Okay, that note right there is the perfect note over a G diminished 7th chord,” and we’ll be like, “What?” and he’ll be like, “That’s why it sounds really good. That’s why it feels so good.” and we’ll be like, “Okay!”
Gwen: Or he’ll be like, “There’s something off right there,” and it’s technically wrong, but we’re like, “but it feels really good, so it can’t be off,” even though we don’t know what’s actually technically wrong with it, so it’s kind of a nice balance, and at the end of the day once the songs are written, Adrian comes in and he always sounds like himself, so him sounding like himself makes us sound like ourselves, and so it all kind of comes together. I thought there’d be a lot more fighting at the end of this whole process, but it’s weird, we were all on the same page about how we wanted it to sound, and it just was really weird. That’s actually blowing my mind. I was actually looking forward to —
Tony: — maybe we were just so busy?
Gwen: Fighting?
Tony: No, with everything else, that there wasn’t time to fight about it.
Gwen: Yeah.
Tony: It was just like, “Okay. Sounds great. Let’s go!”
Gwen: I think by that point we’d kind of forgotten about what was going on. There’s so much in the tracks, so I feel like that’s sort of the way worked. I mean, it’s different nowadays, because my roll, I think in the past, was always creative. I’d get the first idea for something, but this time, Tony came up with the idea for the video, which hasn’t happened that many times before. Everything’s kind of changing, and it’s rad how everyone contributes.

Of course. If anything you guys are eclectic. That’s the one word I’d use to describe you. 
Tom: It’s true. That’s really true.

And this new record is so cohesive. I think that’s a very difficult thing to accomplish, so congratulations.
Gwen: Thank you.
Adrian: That’s interesting that you say cohesive, because stylistically the record is so broad.

It is broad, but listening to it all the way through, the elements all blend together.
Adrian: I’m glad to hear you say that.
Tony: No matter how fucked up, whatever we end up doing always ends up sounding like No Doubt.

Always, right?
Tony: If you put the four of us on a song, whatever kind of song we’re trying to do, it always sounds like us.
Gwen: We try to be everyone else the whole time. We’re like, “can’t we just be The Cure today? Depeche Mode?” But we can’t get away from ourselves. [Everyone laughs.]
Tom: The hard part is writing and recording the songs. It’s coming up with something from nothing. I’m proud to be in a band with folks who really want it to be great. Everybody’s been so awesome about working so hard to get there, not trying to rush it just to get an album out. Everybody had the same goal, which was let’s make something we’re proud of, and not half-ass it, and not mail it in. Now that we’ve done that, this is the easy part. The reward is to go out and perform. We just started rehearsing this week, and it feels so fun to be in that mode, and let’s get these songs rockin’ live.

The hard part’s over now.
Tom: Yeah.”

 

TCA AccessHollywood interview, Oyster interview

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

Hello!  AccessHollywood has posted an interview with No Doubt from the red carpet of the Teen Choice Awards:

Also, there’s a great new interview on oystermag.com:

“To celebrate the return of one of our favourite bands, we asked one of our favourite writers The Coquette — the mysterious lady behind the Dear Coquette advice column and brilliant Notes To My Future Husband — to interview them in LA. The interview was so long that we’ve decided to split it into two halves, so stay tuned for Part Two next week. We’ll let her take it away:

This was all a last-minute thing. Oyster magazine sent me an email the day before asking if I knew anyone in Los Angeles who might be interested in interviewing No Doubt. I thought, “What the hell? Why not cut out early from work and shoot the shit with some rock stars?” The next afternoon I found myself sitting down with the band on the rooftop of Siren Studios in Hollywood to talk about their upcoming album, Push and Shove. It had been a long day of press interviews, and by the time I got to them, everyone was a bit slaphappy. It felt like I’d walked into a classroom of high-schoolers waiting for the bell to ring, and when I told them I was from Oyster, I think they were a little disappointed I didn’t have an Australian accent.

Gwen looked drop-dead gorgeous, and Adrian, Tom and Tony, well… they all still looked like boys. They were all filled with a kind of nervous, foot-tapping excitement, and to hear them talk about their music you’d think they were sharing a garage recording with their friends for the very first time. It blew my mind to realise they’d been playing music together since the 80s.

Coquette: It’s been a decade since your last album. What took so long?
Adrian: OK, so Rock Steady came out in 2001. We toured in 2002. In 2003 we released the singles collection with ‘It’s My Life’ as one new track. We toured in 2004. From 2005 through 2007, Gwen put out and toured two records. In 2008 there was some writing going on for No Doubt. That was halted, and we went on tour in 2009, and in 2010 writing resumed, and we eventually got to here.

Got it. So you’ve been working on some of these songs since 2008?
Tom: We got the first one at the end of 2009. In 2008, Gwen was pregnant with Zuma, and we tried really hard to write. We thought we were gonna write an album that year, and it just kinda wasn’t coming out. We weren’t coming up with stuff that was great, and so rather than keep trying, we turned around and decided to play. Playing live was always the thing that came most naturally to us, what we were naturally best at, and it really worked, so by the end of 2009, we had written the first song for this album, which was ‘Undercover’, and then, throughout the next year wrote the rest of the album and recorded it in 2011. So I mean, really, most of our albums have taken about that long. Not a ten year gap — as far as the actual writing and recording, it took about two years, which is pretty much on track for us.

Was there a particular song that was more fun for you guys to come up with than the other ones. Were there any standouts?
Tony: Oh, man…
Gwen: There were some. Each song has its own journey, and we had a such a hard time getting started because of my whole situation with having the baby, trying not to burn out, and trying to write again. We finally broke through our first song, ‘Undercover’. That one for me was such a joy, because it was like, “We did it! We wrote a song!” It was the pathway to making an album, and then they just started to happen. There was a point where we had a couple going at one time. [Tony giggles knowingly to himself.] It was such a journey. We were only writing together three days a week, because being a mom, there’s only so much time. I’d roll in at four o’clock and try to make things happen. Sit on a couch and be like, “This is your time to be creative,” knowing that I had to get home and go to sleep because the baby was gonna get up, and I was like, “Aaagh!” You know, it’s impossible the way we did it. It was just really, really, really, really hard, so that’s what made it that much more rewarding, and I think the struggle made the record that much greater, because we really had to fight for it.

That’s what you mentioned yesterday [at the album listening session], you said that you had picked ‘Push and Shove’ as the title track because it was such a struggle to come together. Do you think that it was worth it? Are you happy with the results?
Gwen: I feel like, yeah. We’ve done all these things before. We’ve put records out. We had nine years of underground, really great success in a small pond, and then we had commercial success, and we traveled the world and we had Grammys. We’ve had all these amazing things. We couldn’t even dream it up. We would never even have dreamt it, you know? So we’re repeating ourselves in a sense. For us it’s more about the journey, proving to ourselves that we can write the best songs that we can write before we die. Like, this is what defines who we are as songwriters. We were open to maybe collaborate on the record, and we did the one collaboration — with Diplo.

That track was so good.
Gwen: It was so hard, trying to write a chorus on somebody else’s song that was already started. Somehow it’s easier to start it, but I feel super proud of it.
Tony: It’s so surreal to be sitting here talking about it, because we spent the last almost three years working on this record, either writing or recording, and to be sitting here with an almost finished record is pretty exciting.

How did it feel to be back in the recording studio together again?
Tom: It was good. Thing is, before when Gwen did her solo albums and we took a break, before that we had worked so hard for so many years. You know, we lived together in buses on the road for months on end, and it was really healthy to take a break. And by taking a break when came back together to make this record we were kind of reinvigorated. It was exciting again. Burnout is something that’s never helpful when you’re trying to be creative. We really learned that when we were making this record. In the old days we would work twelve hour days, five days a week. We’d work so hard. On this album it was more like six to eight hour days, three days a week. It was easier to be more creative, you know?
Adrian: And this was the first record we’ve done with children.

All of you have children now?
Adrian: Yeah, there are eight.
Tom: Eight kids.
Adrian: All the other records are with zero.

That’s gotta be a huge difference. You mentioned that touring and performing is what you guys really love to do, so are you gonna do a tour with this album?
Gwen: We’re gonna do promoting this year, because I have my children, so we can’t do the tour yet, but we were thinking maybe next year. We would ultimately love to tour, it just depends on how everything comes together.
Adrian: The goal is to go out next year.

With the kids?
Tom: With the kids.
Adrian: Yeah, with the kids.

I have to say, one of the most memorable concerts I’ve ever been to was when you opened up for U2 at the Staples Center a couple of days after 9/11. Everyone was still walking around in shock, but you guys brought so much energy that night. It was actually pretty cathartic. I’ll never forget, you were just jumping all over the stage. So much energy. You could tell you guys really loved what you were doing.
Tony: Wow. Yeah. That was an amazing time.
Gwen: Mindblowing. I can’t believe we did that.
Tom: That was such a fun time for us. It was hard, because it was after 9/11, but growing up I was a huge U2 fan. You know, probably of the group I was the biggest U2 fan. It was huge to open for them. It was really fun to get to know those guys. We got to fly on their chartered private jet with them. We would hub into shows, so we would drive from home to Van Nuys at three in the afternoon, fly to Sacramento, do a show, police escort back to the plane, fly home, and be in bed by three in the morning. We did that for, like, fourteen shows, right? [Adrian nods]

Are there still artists like that on your wishlist that you would want to tour with or work with?
Gwen: The idea of pressure and writing with someone that I admire would be too much for me. I don’t feel like I need to do that anymore. I did it, and I learned a lot from it, but I don’t think I have the energy for that right now, and I was real eager to do that when I was doing my solo records, and it was really hard and hurt a lot, and he [she indicates to Tony] did it a lot as well, and I think by us doing that is what helped us write this record together, and make a record that we’re excited about. I do feel a excited about writing still. If I had more time I would do it.

Yeah, I mean, you have your clothing lines, too, that you’re still doing.
Gwen: Yeah, you know. I have three clothing lines. [Everyone laughs]

Three!
Gwen: It’s ridiculous. I got myself in way too deep [more laughter]. I’ve just been trying my best. I started those lines ten years ago, because I didn’t think ten years later I’d still be doing this. I was trying to plan something that I could do creatively. You know, start a line. That just seemed like a really good idea, and it was, except for now I’m doing three of them, and now this album, so I pray that I can just keep it going where I’m super involved still, but I’m not flying out and doing it.

Of course. Are you still doing the trade shows?
Gwen: I haven’t been able to do fashion week for two seasons because school starts in September. I have a girl that’s really involved. She’s always styled the shows anyway, and so she’s in New York. She reports back, and I’m involved, but there’s only so much I can do at one time. The music has been the priority this year. I did Harajuku Mini, but I had worked on that already for three years, so by the time it came out it was rolling. But with L.A.M.B. it’s a lot. Every season is big. I love doing it, but it’s a business. I like that.

Stay tuned for Part II next week!

 

Teen Choice awards photos added to gallery

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

Hello!  I’ve added a bunch of photos from the Teen Choice Awards to the gallery.

Edit: I also found a couple short videos of the band being photographed on the “red carpet”, and added them to the videos section.

Settle Down performance on TCA video up

Sunday, July 22nd, 2012

Here it is!!

Teen Choice Awards photos starting to pop up!

Sunday, July 22nd, 2012

vote for Settle Down on VH1’s Top 20 Countdown

Saturday, July 21st, 2012

Click here to go vote for Settle Down on VH1’s Top 20 Countdown!!  You can vote up to 20 times per day,  and perhaps 20 more from your phone….?  :D

© 2001-2015 heather@greenerpastures.us / Privacy Info. / Header graphic by Lyndsy.
rss feed
Green Web Hosting! This site hosted by DreamHost.