Bass Player USA
Growing Up Doubtless
No Doubt’s Tony Kanal gains taste & maturity.
This summer marks 30 years since Tony Kanal was born and 15 since he took up bass. For nearly 14 of those years, Tony has played in the service of No Doubt, a band that began in Southern California’s third wave ska underground and became one of the defining groups of ’90s pop. With the 1995 Interscope album Tragic Kingdom, and its worldwide, bass-heavy hits “Just a Girl,” “Spiderwebs,” and “Don’t Speak,” No Doubt seemed to come from nowhere to international stardom. But this was no overnight success; Tony and his bandmates had struggled to make it since high school. Read the rest of this article »
Article from August 01, 2000
× Leave a Comment
Spin USA
Mission to 1982
Tired of Ska, Bored with bindis, and suffering from writers block, No Doubt looked back to the 80’s for inspiration, conjuring a new-wave fest that would do Missing Persons proud.
Now only if a certain person would propose…
In bed with Gwen Stefani! Bliss! Rapture! Total listener-contest dream come true!
That is, if you’ve haven’t already spent two years in a tour bus with Gwen Stefani. Or a thousand hours at soundchecks with Gwen Stefani. Or 18 months in recording studios with Gwen Stefani. Or untold nights in cramped, urine-smelling, graffiti-mottled backstage dressing rooms with Gwen Stefani. Read the rest of this article »
Article, General from May 01, 2000
× 1 Comment
OC Weekly USA
No Doubt
Like Anaheim, superstardom is a weird place to come from by Dave Wielenga
Three small orange trees grow along the curb in front of her stately mansion in an old-money neighborhood above Los Angeles, and the bright pink that has replaced brassy platinum as her hot new hair color glows all the way down to her scalp. No, Gwen Stefani has not forgotten her roots. But it’s going on five years since No Doubt, one of Orange County’s most enduring and identifiably local bands, experienced its overnight international sensation. Since then has come the 15 million-selling CD, the sold-out global tour, the fan zines and Web sites and MTV awards, the weekly photographic updates in Rolling Stone on every change of clothes, boyfriend or party itinerary—all of it laced with just enough rags-to-riches pathos and angst to green light an upcoming VH-1 Behind the Music special, which will be synergistically broadcast in April to coincide with the release of the band’s new album. By now, Stefani has been a bona fide pop Tinkerbell for so long that it’s sometimes hard to believe she was ever that just-a-girl who grew up near Disneyland. Her faithful little doggie—a 15-year-old Lhasa apso named Maggen that is one year older than the band—is still at her side, Toto-and-Dorothy-style. But the Oz they inhabit clearly isn’t Anaheim anymore. When No Doubt’s tour stopped for two nights at the Pond a couple of years ago, Stefani’s parents visited her in a hotel. “Something happens to you when you travel the world and embrace everything,” Stefani acknowledges. “Suddenly, you realize that the small, little back yard you came from is such a . . . like . . . Anaheim is such a weird place to come from.” Read the rest of this article »
Article from March 02, 2000
× Leave a Comment
Los Angeles Times
No Doubt about it
A deeper sound emerges
Gwen Stefani, looking like a hip Heidi in blond braids and a casually fashionable outfit of zippered jacket, blue denim jeans and leopard platform sandals, is kneeling, not sitting, on a red couch in a hallway outside a Hollywood record-mastering studio.
Snuggled beside her is a Lhasa apso named Maggen, her companion of 14 years–one year longer than Stefani has been singing for No Doubt. Sitting or milling about are guitarist Tom Dumont, bassist Tony Kanal, drummer Adrian Young and adjunct member Gabriel McNair. Read the rest of this article »
Article from August 22, 1999
× Leave a Comment