2006 December - Shout Magazine


For what felt like forever following the 2004 release of her quadruple-platinum album Love. Angel.Music.Baby, gay clubs all over the world were alive with the sound of Gwen Stefani. The hit singels from the No Doubt frontwoman’s solo debut - Hollaback Girl, What You Waiting for, and Cool - were a few of our favorite things, but did the overwhelming support she recieved from the gay community take her by surprise?
“I’m always in awe of the energy, lvoe and support I get from my fans,” Stefani responds. “I was’t surprised as much as I was ecstatic and humbled. I want the community to know that I feel ‘em, adn I’m glad that they are feelin’ me.”

If it’s chart-climbing first single “Wind It Up” is any indication, we’ll be feeling her new sophmore effort, The Sweet Escape, for months to come.
“There’s not a lot of depth to it,” she says of the track with a laugh. “It’s basically about trying to get the energy up and get people dancing on the dance floor.”

But what makes the single extra-gay friendly is the fact that it samples fag-favorite The Sound of Music, the classic Rogers and Hammerstein musical. Let’s start at the very beginning- a very good place to start: “Wind It Up” originally came out of the recording session with a then-pregnant Stefani and the Neptune’s Pharell more than a year ago in Miami.
“I had no business being back in the studio again, because I really had no intention of putting another record out,” she recalls. “I felt like I was just being greedy by going down there and hoping that I was goint to get something out of it - but I couldn’t help myself because I’m greedy!”

Considering that Escape has no less than five Neptunes-produced tracks, she and Pharell must’ve done something good.
“He drives the car, and I sit next to him and feed him and try to get him all revved up to take me somewhere rad,” said the Grammy-winning singer of their collaborative process.

When she was putting together her LAMB fashion show last year, Stefani took “Wind It Up” and “against Pharell’s will” she jokes - had a friend remix it for the runway with The Sound of Music’s yodel-driven “The Lonely Goatherd,” which led to the single’s final incarnation.
“It’s one of my favorite movies of all time,” gushes Stefani, who also names its star Julie Andrews as one of her biggest inspirations.
“Something about that film just touched me over the years,” she said, “so when I heard the mash-up, I actually cried. I know it sounds rediculous, but it was soo good and so fresh and amazing.”

Stefani hopes the track introduces the film to fans who are not familiar with teh 1965 classic.
“This is my way of sharing something that I think is really great,” she confided. “Maybe people will go out and watch it. It’s a really good film!”

Maria and her young charges also inspired the Wind It Up video, on which Stefani once again collaborated with equally obsessed director and pal Sophi Muller - who filmed Stefani’d just-released concert DVD Harajuku Lovers Live.
“The first time we ever met I told her I loved The Sound of Music randomly,” Stefani says, “and she was like, ‘Shut up. You do not.’ It bonded us. It’s the same kind of thing as people who like Star Trek - if you like it, you love it.”

In the clip’s futuristic twist on teh high-altitude action, which features robotic moves by Harajuku Girls’ choreographer Sho-Tyme with his Asian-gone-Alpine muses, Stefani gets to holy-roll as fashion-forward twisted sister.
“To me, it looks like the Tetris, inside-of-a-video-game version of Maria on the hill,” she said.

The film’s costumes take on an unique update in the video, thanks to Stefani’s longtime stylist and pal Andrea Lieberman - particularly the scene in which Maria cleverly makes clothes for the children out of curtains in her room.
“Obviously, me being a designer and clothes-maker myself, I was very ispired by that scene, so we recreated it,” explains Stefani, whose thouroughly modern Maria fashions sassy outfits for the dancers using curtains emblazoned with her new logo: a “G” that resembles both a guitar and a wind-up key.

This key to “getting off on the dance floor” -as she expains it - also unlocked the artistically stumped star, who had originally planned to have a second album out by Christmas 2005.
“There was a real concept behind it when I started it about a year ago,” says Stefani. “Three months after I had Kingston (her son), I stated going into the studio to start writing again. And it was a huge journey, because I didn’t have that same inspiration. Every time I would walk in a certain direction, I would get a roadblock. Finally it just became clear to me that it was all about the key, and the key is the music.”

Though the ultimate goal of giing us guilty pleasure is the same, Stefani considers Escape, which she describes as a “poppy, sugar-coated album of delicious ear candy,” a departure from Love.Angel.Music.Baby.
“The last record ws all about 80’s inspired music, but this time I was over all that and felt like I was in a whole different place.”

She calls Escape more modern than her debut due to an increase in melodic, emotional tracks such as the standout “Early Winter,” a ballad she wrote with Keane’s Tim Rice-Oxley - ironically with the intention creating another 80’s heartbreaker the likes of “Eyes Without a Face” or “Time after Time”

The album also includes drops fo golden sun produced by Akon, Nellee Hooper, Swizz Beatz and Stefani’s band mate - and former beau - Tony Kanal. But the sweetest influence heard on Escape might be just that of Stefani’s son Kingston, who is zero going on one.

“I dedicated the album to Kingston, because I want him to grow up and look back and just know how important he is,” she says beaming. “He’s just like the most delicious…I can’t even…see I have no words for him.”

It’s somehow fitting that a nearby, nanny-watched Kingston gets the last word in our interview, crying out for a feeding as his mother says so long, farewell, auf wiedersehen, goodbye