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No Doubt after a live performance for Today in 2009. American band No Doubt has recorded over 100 songs for six studio albums, various compilations and soundtracks, and has been featured on songs on other artists' albums. After forming in 1986, the band released a series of demo tapes at their concerts and live shows.
No Doubt's follow-up, Return of Saturn, was released nearly five years later and was quickly certified Platinum in the US, but failed to match the success of Tragic Kingdom. The band collaborated with many producers and other artists to record Rock Steady in under a year, mixing the band's new wave and pop sounds with ragga music. [3]
The music video for "Settle Down" was directed by Sophie Muller (who has previously directed numerous music videos for No Doubt). [ 40 ] [ 41 ] "Settle Down" peaked at #34 on the Billboard Hot 100 with the album peaking at #3.
Gwen Stefani's career-defining hit "Don't Speak" impacted more than just her music career.. The former No Doubt frontwoman opened up to People on Monday about how she "wouldn't be here" without ...
It should only contain pages that are No Doubt songs or lists of No Doubt songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about No Doubt songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
It failed to achieve status on any chart. In 2003 the song was released on No Doubt's greatest hits compilation album The Singles 1992-2003 and the video was released on the companion DVD of music videos, The Videos 1992-2003. Within the booklet from The Singles 1992–2003 is a blurb on each song. The short paragraph on "Trapped in a Box" states:
He would stay up all night and smoke cigarettes and eat burritos and write," Stefani, 55, says of the career-making hit, which appeared on No Doubt's 1995 album Tragic Kingdom. "It was completely ...
"Just a Girl" is a song by American band No Doubt from their third studio album, Tragic Kingdom (1995). Released as the record's lead single in the United States on September 21, 1995, it was written by Gwen Stefani and Tom Dumont, and produced by Matthew Wilder.