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Gwen Stefani - Sweet Escape (CD)

Sweet Escape
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4.6 out of 5.0 stars 14 Ratings (7 Reviews)

Album Details: Sweet Escape

Release Date:02/20/2007
Label:Universal Japan
UPC:4988005536785

Other Available Formats: Sweet Escape

User Reviews: Sweet Escape

  • Overall:

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    Music:

    Gwen's album is a sweet escape

    By Spencer  Dec 28, 2007

    Pros: Great album

    Cons: Pop music

    Mrs. Stefani's album, Sweet Escape definatly is worth the money. It has awesome songs including, Wind It Up, Sweet Escape, Early Winter, and many more. The song Wind It Up is about a party with girls in boys and Mrs. Stefani's opinion of w...hat boys are thinking. The song Sweet Escape is about Gwen trying to earn her date's trust and love back again also a very great hit. The song Early Winter is about her and her man having a Early Winter. The cd's songs have some sexual lyrics and on wone song(Don't Get it Twisted) there is a continued use of swearing making this cd a 12 and up cd. But over all this cd is on my list of top ten albums and is gonna make you escape in the music. Her voice is great and so is her music definetly a must have. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

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    =)

    By Kate  Aug 31, 2007

    Pros: EVERYTHING IS GREAT!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Cons: NUNE!!!^_^

    loveitloveitloveitloveit!
    !!!gottahavegottahavegott
    ahave!!!

Pro Reviews: Sweet Escape

  • All Music Guide

    Awkward and alluring in equal measures, Gwen Stefani's 2004 solo debut, Love.Angel.Music.Baby., did its job: it made Gwen a bigger star on her own than she was as the lead singer of No Doubt. With that established and her longdesired wish for a baby finally fulfilled, there was no rush for Gwen to get back to her regular gig, so she made another solo album, The Sweet Escape, which expanded on what really sold her debut: her tenuous connections to Californian club culture. There was always a sense of artifice behind the turnofthecentury makeover that brought Gwen from a skapunk sweetheart to a dance club queen, but that doesn't mean it didn't work at least on occasion, most spectacularly so on the gloriously dumb marchingband rap of "Hollaback Girl," the Neptunes production that turned L.A.M.B. into a blockbuster. There, as on her duet with Eve on "Let Me Blow Ya Mind," Gwen made the transition into a modernday material girl with ease, but when she tried to shoehorn this ghettofabulous ...persona into her original new wave girl character, it felt forced, nowhere more so than on the Linda Perry written and produced "What You Waiting For." Gwen doesn't make that mistake again on The Sweet Escape by and large, she keeps these two sides of her personality separate, favoring the streets and nightclubs to the comfort of her new wave home. Just because she wants to run in the streets doesn't mean she belongs there; she continues to sound far more comfortable mining new wave pop, as only a child of the '80s could. As always, it's those celebrations of cool synths and stylish pop hooks that work the best for Stefani, whether she's approximating the chilliness of earlyMTV new romantics on "Wonderful Life," mashing Prince and Madonna on "Fluorescent," or lying back on the coolly sensual "4 in the Morning." Only once on the album is she able to bring this style and popcraft to a heavy dance track, and that's on the irresistible Akonproduced title track, driven by a giddy "weeoh" hook and supported by a nearly anthemic summertime chorus. Tellingly, the Neptunes, the architects of her best dance cuts on L.A.M.B., did not produce this track, but they do have a huge presence on The Sweet Escape, helming five of the 12 songs, all but one being tracks that weigh down the album considerably. The exception is "U Started It," a light and nifty evocation of midperiod Prince, with its lilting melody, silken harmonies, and pizzicato strings. It sounds effortless and effervescent, two words that do not apply to their other four productions, all skeletal, rhythmheavy tracks that fail to click. Sometimes, they're merely leaden, as on the stumbling autobiographical rap "Orange County Girl"; sometimes, they're cloying and crass, as on the rather embarrassing "Yummy"; sometimes they have an interesting idea executed poorly, as on "Breakin' Up," a breakup song built on a dying cell phone metaphor that's interesting in theory but its stuttering, static rhythms and repetitive chorus are irritating in practice. Also interesting in theory is the truly bizarre lead single, "Wind It Up," where the Neptunes force fanfares and samples from The Sound of Music's "The Lonely Goatherd" into one of their typical minimalist tracks, over which Gwen spouts off clumsy materialminded lyrics touting her fashion line and her shape. Nothing in this track really works, but it's hard not to listen to it in wonder, since its unwieldy rhythms and rhymes capture everything that's currently wrong about Stefani. far too much of the album, all the dancepop here seems like a pose, creating the impression that she's a glamour girl slumming on a weekend night something that her selfproclaimed Michelle Pfieffer in Scarface "coke whore" makeover showcased on the album's cover doesn't do much to dissuade. If the dance production on The Sweet Escape were better, these hipster affectations would be easier to forgive, but they're not: they're canned and bland, which only accentuates Stefani's stiffness. These misfires are so grand they overshadow the many good moments on The Sweet Escape, which are invariably those songs that stay true to her longstanding love of new wave pop (not coincidentally, these include every production from her No Doubt bandmate Tony Kanal). These are the moments that give The Sweet Escape its sweetness, and while they may require a little effort to dig out, they're worth the effort, since it proves that beneath the layers of bling, Gwen remains the SoCal sweetheart that has always been as spunky and likeable as she has been sexy. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Gwen Stefani

A young and energetic Gwen Stefani moved into the music spotlight in 1987 as the sexy lead singer for the band No Doubt. One of her biggest hits in the '90s with the cross-mixed group of ska-punk and new wave fashion was a single called "Don't Speak," one of the tracks from No Doubt's Grammy nominated third album Tragic Kingdom. The video for "Don't Speak," a play on in... Read more