Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
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 ]
A music video for the song was directed by Sophie Muller and released on July 16, 2012. In it, the members of No Doubt reassemble in the form of a trucking convoy, which meets up to perform the song in a parking lot. It received mostly favorable reviews, with the reviewers praising the colors, lights and the band for returning to do videos.
No Doubt embarked on the Tragic Kingdom World Tour, beginning in 1997, two years after the release of Tragic Kingdom. They expected to tour for two months, but the tour ended up lasting two and a half years. [8] The band chose Project X, headed by Luc Lafortune and Michael Keeling, to design the stage for the series of concerts. The band ...
The video, however, also does not note a date or time. Formed in 1986, No Doubt disbanded in 2015. In 2016, Stefani, who would go on to focus on her solo career, told Rolling Stone that she didn't ...
The Videos 1992–2003 is a DVD featuring all of the music videos released by the American third wave ska band No Doubt, between 1992 and 2003.It was released first in 2003 as the second disc of the Boom Box box set, and was the companion to the first disc in the set, The Singles 1992–2003.
The band resumes playing while a group of paparazzi enters and disrupts them. The video ends with No Doubt posing for a group picture in front of the paparazzi. [29] The clip was selected for rotation on several music-related television networks, including MTV, where it charted within the top 10 on the channel's official "most-played clips ...
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. This is the only music video to feature original keyboardist Eric Stefani, who left in 1994. The video was directed by Mike Zykoff.
Slight spoilers ahead for Wicked part one. In Wicked the stage musical, act one ends with the iconic song, "Defying Gravity." Part one of the film, in theaters now, ends similarly. "We found it ...