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OK Magazine interview with Gwen, November 2005
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THERE IS NO DOUBT ABOUT THIS QUADRUPLE THREAT
GWEN STEFANI THE SINGER, DANCER, ACTRESS AND FASHION
DESIGNER SEES CHILDREN IN HER NEAR FUTURE:
Gwen Stefani, 36, is doing a little short of building an empire. After achieving
worldwide success with her band, No Doubt, she is making as a big a name for herself as a solo artist with her debut CD, Love,Angel,Music,Baby.
In between recording and performing, she's found time to launch her own fashion label, L.A.M.B, and forge ahead in her
acting career! But Gwen - who is married to Bush frontman Gavin Rossdale - is also starting to gear herself up for an even
more demanding role - as a mother.
With your music and your clothing line, do you ever get a chance to relax? I've
had a few seconds to myself. It was werid, and I think that I really brought me down. I was like, "Let me go back to work;
I don't know how to deal with this." I'm trying to live in the moment and really enjoy this wave that I'm riding.
Do
you and Gavin get much time together? For about the last three years we've seen a lot of each other. We're together most
days. But in the previous years, because we've been together nine years, there was a lot of time apart because we both were
touring so much. But we try not to get too far apart or else that's when all the disasters come! Stay close, hold hands!
What
about having kids? You know, it's definately on my dream list. One of the big reasons I wanted to do this dance record
was because I knew that my passions were going to change soon and I'm to want to have a family. But right now I'm trying to
live in the moment and really enjoy this wave that I'm riding. It's not up to me, is it? If it happens it happens, it'll happen
when... To me it's such a miracle anyway, that when it's suppose to happen to me, I guess it will.
Gavin is British
- do you spend much time over there? We spend a lot of time over there. We had a dog there that passed away, and being
over here I think has made it easier on us because somehow it just kind of masks it a little bit.
What inspired you
to take a break from No Doubt and start a solo career? When we did the Rock Steady record, that was probably the highlight
for me in the sense that we were such great friends at that point. The tour and everything about it was just so fabulous that
I pictured a break was the next thing we needed to do. We have never taken a break from each other at that point. So everybody
agreed and I had just gotten married. The band were so committed to each other that you kind of don't even realize it because
it's just up passion. But it was time.
How did you tell the band? I said to Tony [Kanal], "I really wanna frickin'
make a dance record," because I heard a Club Nouveau song, "Why You Treat Me So Bad." I just thought it would be a fun thing
to do, and it was very innocent. Like, Tony would be part of it, we would do it in his studio at his house, and it would just
be this thing we were going to do. So we started trying it and it turned into this major project where it was like this challenge
I had for myself because I never really wrote songs outside of the group.
What does the rest of the band make of your
solo project? Like I said, everybody was very ready to take a break from each other. Tony was so involved in the record
that in some ways it didn't feel like a huge break. It's almost like it was out of our hands, like we were sent to each other
because the idea that we could actually stay together that long is pretty insane, you know? Eighteen Years! I mean, marriages
don't even stay together that long! I never thought the solo record would turn out as good as it did.
Are you surprised
your solo album was received so well? I never thought the solo record would turn out as good as it did, it has so many
different styles on it. I think there's a nice balance of silly stuff on the record. I mean, the whole idea behind it is that
it's a silly dance record, you know? It was based on the whole Harajuku scene in Tokyo and the idea of self-_expression through
fashion and being unique and individual. I was on a quest. I was like, " I know, I'm goin to get some Harajuku Girls and I'm
going to roll with them everywhere I go."
What was the significance of the Harajuku Girls? It was like my fantasy
come true. When I first wrote "What You Waiting For?" I'd written a line in the song and it said "I can't wait to go back
and do Osaka,Tokyo, you Harajuku Girls, damn you got the wicked style." I was giving them a shout-out basically because they're
wicked.
You've had such a long working relationship with your band. Was it hard to adapt to working with new people
like Pharrel Williams and Andre 3000? To get out there and write with all these different people was really hard because
you to put your ego aside and you have to get out there and open yourself up to not only new people who you respect and you're
a fan of, but also a whole different culture of music as well. So it was a pretty big trip, I have to say. It was a lot harder
than I thought it was going to be and my ego had a real problem with it a lot of the time. What really defines me, when I
think about myself and what makes me feel good about myself is that I'm lyricist - I write lyrics and I express myself through
music, and I write melodies. I don't know how I've ever done it, it's all a mystery to me, music, like I go, "Wait,how did
that song happen?" So the idea of getting in with somebody I don't know and trying to make that magic happen is kind of risky
and intimidating.
But What and amazing experience. When the magic really did come, it was really unbelievable because
the people I was working with were unbelievably inspiring and talented. It was just so amazing after 18 years to get in a
room and see how other people do it because no on taught me; it was just instinct and just trial and error. It was really
cool to get in the room with Pharrell and go "oh that's how you do it," or Dr.Dre and seeing how he does it.
So how
did you get into music? I think what happened was my older brother brought home a Madness record that had one hit, "Our
House." So when we discovered that when we were like 14, 15, that was it! We were in and we thought we had found the coolest
thing around. We were really inspired by the whole ska thing, which turned us onto reggae music as well, and then we just
said "We're gonna start a band." There was nothing else for us to do in Orange County.
Was your family supportive?
My parents were kind of conservative, strict. At the same time they were musicians and I grew up on Bob Dylan. My first
concert I went to was Emmylou Harris. So my parents are a little bit of a contradiction because musically they love all kinds
of hippie folk groups, but then they're very Catholic and strict. When we started the band they were very supportive of it
being a hobby, but at the same time we were all meant to go to college and be something when we grow up.
You have done
so much more than 'be something'. You did you first fashion show with L.A.M.B this year at New Your Fashion Week. How was
that? It is different whe you know that you're actually doing a show, you know? It's a little bit more pressure. I have
a whole other accessories line, too. When you put out a record, like with No Doubt, we always have merchandise line. That's
just the way you do it and it's pretty ordinary.
Where did the name for the L.A.M.B clothing line come from? I was
trying to think of a name and I had a dog, Megan, for 16 years. She was this little stinky dog that I loved so much and I
used to call her Lamb. For most of her life she was called Lamb, because she used to follow me everywhere , she was so independent
on me. When she died, I was just trying to think of a name and I call everybody Lamb, like anybody I love, it's like my pet
word. So I just thought it was a good way to kind of let her live on. It's really hard because it becomes something more that
the namem it has this whole new life. It just seemed like the right thing and instead of just saying "Lamb," I wanted each
letter to rotate and I would give different names to it, and the first ones I came up with were "Love,Angel,Music,Baby."
Do
you enjoy the process of designing clothes? The whole design process is something I've done my whole life and it fulfils
me in the same way as music - you have nothing and then you have something. It's just a very creative,fulfilling, passionate
thing that I like to do. It's something I'd like to do for the rest of my life and that's why I started the clothing line.
I think that every season it just gets better and better. I still have a lot to learn, though. I'm still totally a baby at
it.
So there will be more No Doubt albums? That's the plan. I really didn't know that it would take so long to make
Love, Angel, Music,Baby. Then we ended up putting a greatest hits record out and that took up time. We went on tour. It was
amazing -- we never even thought we would have a greatest hits record out. I never intended for this record to take song long,
but I kind of want to ride the wave while it's out there.
What about acting? You were amazing as Jean Harlow in The
Aviator. I would love to do another movie, like to have a real role - not that that wasn't - I mean Jean Harlow in a Martin
Scorsese movie is not bad! But I would love to do a film. I have something I'm developing right now, but with films there's
so many poeple involved and it costs so much, and there's so much at risk; I don't like to talk about it. When it's coming
out, I'll talk about.
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