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The benefit event featured appearances by Tom Morello, Specials members Horace Panter and Lynval Golding, the non-singing members of No Doubt (Tony Kanal, Tom Dumont, and Adrian Young), Rancid’s ...
"Sunday Morning" is a song by American band No Doubt for their third studio album, Tragic Kingdom (1995). It was written by Gwen Stefani, Eric Stefani, and Tony Kanal, produced by Matthew Wilder, and released as the record's fifth single on May 27, 1997.
No Doubt recorded a cover of the Christmas song "Oi to the World", which was written by Joe Escalante. Jamaican singer Lady Saw raps a verse for the 2001 single "Underneath It All". British musician Ms. Dynamite contributes guest vocals to "A Real Love Survives", a remix of No Doubt's "Rock Steady". Prince co-wrote "Waiting Room" for Rock Steady.
No Doubt's self-titled debut album was released in 1992, but it featured no radio singles, although a video was made for "Trapped in a Box". Owing to the music world's direct focus on grunge, No Doubt's album was not supported by the record label, and was considered a commercial failure for selling only 30,000 copies. [ 4 ]
"Underneath It All" is a song by American ska band No Doubt, released in July 2002 as the third single from their fourth studio album Rock Steady (2001). Written by the band's lead singer Gwen Stefani and David Stewart , the song features a reggae production from Sly and Robbie and guest vocals from Lady Saw .
No Doubt pushed for the release of the punk rock version while the song's producer, Matthew Wilder, preferred the country version. "Excuse Me Mr." was written by Gwen Stefani and Tom Dumont, while produced by Matthew Wilder. It was featured as the second track on No Doubt's third studio album, Tragic Kingdom, which was released on October 10 ...
Terry Hall, the vocalist for U.K. ska legends the Specials, died yesterday (Dec. 18) at the age of 63. In a statement posted to social media, the group attributed Hall’s passing to “a brief ...
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]