Gwen Stefani
“The Sweet Escape”
This is the type of album that makes real musicians cringe.
A long-held truth has been that pop stars can throw hastily scribbled lyrics behind a few funky-sounding samples and heavy beats to make a club hit.
But the former No Doubt frontwoman takes this nonsensical formula to a new level on her sophomore solo album.
From the album’s first moments, you know you’re in trouble. A yodeling sample taken from “Sound of Music” leads to lyrical gold like “This is the key that makes us wind up/When the beat comes on, the girls all line up” on the album’s first single, “Wind it Up.” There’s nothing wrong with a little experimenting, but superstar producers The Neptunes go too far on this track, taking it from potentially interesting to the kind of song you spend the rest of the day desperately trying to get out of your head.
Stefani spends much of the remainder of the record offering herself props for her Grammy win, mad skills behind the mic and overall greatness — the kind of insipid songwriting too flaccid for a half-bottle of Levitra to correct.
The Neptunes and other producers such as Swizz Beatz give the album that slick feel that moves a lot of units, but there’s nothing on this record worth remembering even six months from now. Stefani has vocal skills that used to shine through in No Doubt (former bandmate Tony Kanal produced one of the album’s few bright spots, “4 in the Morning,” a ballad that sounds a bit like “Don’t Speak” with a hip-hop beat behind it), but it’s obvious she’s more concerned with being a pop star than having any semblance of substance.
The only sweet escape from “Sweet Escape” will be when you turn the album off. [One star]
— Paul Lane
Music
REVIEW: Gwen Stefani's "The Sweet Escape"
- Music
-
-
Baseball tune worthy of hall
As of this summer, the list of people in the Baseball Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame will grow by one.
It will then total one.
But that one person is wholly deserving of the dual accolades. -
Local music impresses
I wasn't the first choice to be a judge in the Hard Rock Cafe Battle of the Bands. But that didn't make the experience any less fun.
-
Bieber wows kids, but can his act mature with him?
Justin Bieber impresses teenagers, but can he keep their interest as they - and he - age?
-
TSO embarks upon holiday-free music tour
The Trans-Siberian Orchestra finally will get a chance to showcase its nonholiday fare during a spring tour.
-
NT-based jam band Aqueous looks to ride the wave to musical stardom
Speaking during a recent interview in the News office, the members of Aqueous discussed the difficulties in achieving musical stardom and the downfall of much of modern music.
-
NIGHT & DAY: Flaming Lips bringing oddball antics to Artpark
The Lips will bring what’s sure to be an odd-looking playlist — among the band’s songs are “Free Radicals (A Hallucination of the Christmas Skeleton Pleading with a Suicide Bomber)” and “Psychiatric Explorations of the Fetus with Needles” — to Lewiston this summer for a dynamic and lavish stage show to Artpark on July 22. Tickets for the concert go on sale Friday at 10 a.m.
-
LIFESTYLE: TSO brings holiday magic back to Buffalo
The Trans-Siberian Orchestra might have a name that implies chilly conditions, but the musical group has been red hot as of late.
-
MUSIC: Best of the Decade
No industry changed more this decade than the music industry.
-
MUSIC: Solo pianist George Winston visits Buffalo
At this rate, George Winston reckons he’ll be back in Buffalo, by, oh, 2022. So if you want to see him perform live, Friday night’s your chance.
-
MUSIC: The songs (and paintings) of Ron Hawkins
A lot of things have changed since Ron Hawkins was on the stage at Gateway Harbor in North Tonawanda in 2006.
- More Music Headlines
-






