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"Don't Speak" is a song by American rock band No Doubt, featured on their third studio album, Tragic Kingdom (1995). Released as an album track in April 1996 [ dubious – discuss ] by Interscope Records , the song was initially written as a love song by lead singer Gwen Stefani and her brother, former band member Eric Stefani . [ 2 ]
Lyrically, the songs featured on Return of Saturn are complex and have Stefani singing about her personal romances. [ 6 ] No Doubt's fifth album – Rock Steady (2001) – features contributions from a wide variety of high-profile musicians, including William Orbit , Prince , David Stewart , and Pharrell Williams .
Following the self-released The Beacon Street Collection, Tragic Kingdom was released in 1995 and rode the surge of ska punk to become one of the best-selling albums, largely due to the international success of its third single "Don't Speak". [2]
In 1996, the second single, "Spiderwebs", was successful, and "Don't Speak", a ballad written by Gwen and Eric Stefani about Gwen and Kanal's break-up, [15] was released as the third single and broke the previous record when it topped the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay for sixteen non-consecutive weeks.
"Don't Talk to Strangers" is a song written and performed by Australian musician Rick Springfield. It was released as a single in 1982, from the album Success Hasn't Spoiled Me Yet. The song reached number two on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks, making it his second biggest hit in the US after the number-one hit, "Jessie's Girl".
The upcoming album, titled Speak Now (Taylor’s Version), drops on July 7, and on Saturday, the “Lavender Haze” singer took to social media to share a clip from a brand-new version of her ...
"Spiderwebs" was the fourth consecutive top 40 entry from Tragic Kingdom to appear on the Official Singles Chart, succeeding "Don't Speak" and the original and reissued versions of "Just a Girl". According to the Official Charts Company, "Spiderwebs" is No Doubt's sixth-biggest song and Gwen Stefani's 14th-biggest selling combined. [32]
The song starts with Gaga saying, "I don't speak German, but I can if you like", then immediately launches into a spoken verse in faux-German. [14] She then moves to the hook of the song, "I’ll take you out tonight, say whatever you like, scheiße be mine". [ 13 ]