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| September 28th, 2005 from MTV & Gwen Stefani Newsletter |
| Pharrell's
Got Naked Women, Fireballs, And, Oh Yeah, Gwen Stefani For Clip Shot over the weekend with director Paul Hunter and guest star Gwen Stefani, the concept behind the clip is that not only are we watching Pharrell, but so is some secret organization — the FBI, the CIA, the NSA, who knows? The group is tapping his phones, taking shots of him with telephoto lenses and recording Pharrell with voice satellite discs so that the video actually becomes part of the organization's surveillance of him. The camera angles add to the paranoia, according to the treatment, always moving left to right, or circling as someone walks by. Throughout this, Pharrell acts as if he knows someone's watching — but he doesn't care. He talks on his cell to a mysterious woman, but doesn't hide his conversation (she's later revealed as Stefani). While he's not exactly trying to outrun them, they're in hot pursuit everywhere he goes, whether it be an exclusive boat party with his bodyguards in tow or to an even more exclusive party in his penthouse, where naked women painted like exotic animals step out of wallpaper matching their patterns. No matter — he eventually makes his escape, with a helicopter taking him away. The song will be included on Pharrell's solo debut, In My Mind, which is slated for release on November 15. — Jennifer Vineyard Show
Us How Creative You Are CLICK HERE TO SUBMIT: http://www.gwenstefani.com/fanphotos The
MTV European Music Awards Nominees Are.. Gwen Stefani is nominated in four categories, Best Female, Best Pop, Best Album for "Love. Angel. Music. Baby" and Best Video for "What You Waiting For?" Other non-Europeans nominated for three awards apiece are rapper 50 Cent, rockers Green Day and rapper Snoop Dogg. Not surprisingly
James Blunt has been nominated for Best New Act as well as Best UK and
Ireland and Best Song for "You're Beautiful". |
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| September 23rd, 2005 from MTV & AMA |
| Hey
Baby America
Music Awards 2005 Favorite
Female Artist: Mariah Carey, Kelly Clarkson, Gwen Stefani |
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| September 22nd, 2005 from MTV |
| Luxurious
is LAMB`s 5th Single "I'm
looking forward to it, it's going to be unbelievable," she said.
While "the set list is set," she's hoping to throw a few of
her new songs into the show. "I would love to try to roll a little
bit of 'Orange County Girl' in there. We'll see. Anything can happen in
rehearsals. I don't even know how long the show can be right now."
While in town for rehearsals, she's also going to slip in a guest appearance
in Pharrell's video for his new single, "Can I Have It Like That,"
which is shooting on Friday and Saturday. Stefani's also got a new single
of her own; she's picked "Luxurious" to be her follow-up to
"Cool. |
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| September 20th, 2005 from MTV | |||||||
Gwen
Previews New Songs, Clothing Line For Diddy, Kravitz, Others Stefani's collection — which was previewed at the Roseland concert venue, instead of the usual Fashion Week encampment at Bryant Park — lured the likes of Diddy, Ashanti, Lenny Kravitz, Bijou Phillips, Damon Dash, Kelly Osbourne, Scott Weiland, Faith Hill and Nicky Hilton, not to mention countless buyers from nationwide department stores and boutiques, plus fashion editors such as Vogue's Anna Wintour (who was seated next to the singer's husband, Gavin Rossdale, in the front row). Interspersing snippets from "The Sound of Music" with her own music, Stefani presented some of her favorite cars, clothes and music on an unconventional runway that wasn't even really a runway at all, but more like the floor of a haunted garage. Four models emerged from pimped-out Cadillacs, which were initially covered with white sheets (to remind folks they were there, the car horns honked intermittently throughout the show). The clothes themselves combined some of Stefani's other favorite things. One of the looks combines garden party with reggae; she calls it "Rasta Gatsby." Another, named "Pirate Trooper," draws inspiration from Vivienne Westwood's buccaneers and paratrooper jumpsuits. While many models did the usual stomp-walk down the stardust-flecked walkway, a few got into the groove and danced a little, especially when one of Stefani's new tunes was playing. "I have a bunch of leftover tracks from making Love, Angel, Music, Baby," she said. "And two months ago, Pharrell called me up, he was like, 'Come down to Miami and write some more songs!' And I'm like, 'OK!' I went down there and wrote four songs and played three of them tonight. They're really fresh." Besides previewing "Candyland," "Breaking Up" and "Orange County Girl," Stefani also snuck in a new song from Rossdale's new band, Institute, called "When Animals Attack." "It was a surprise," she said. "He didn't know about it. I bet he was like, 'Whoa!' " "It was nice of her to put it in," Rossdale said. "I think she wanted to do something sweet." "That was probably my favorite part of the whole thing," Stefani said. "Besides 'The Sound of Music,' of course. The Julie Andrews part was the best." Come back later this week for a full-length feature on Gwen and her foray into fashion. — Jennifer
Vineyard |
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| September 18th, 2005 from Yahoo | |||||||
LAMB
at Fashion Week Designers this week largely brought out muted colors, simple silhouettes and tailored looks, reflecting a national mood marked by tentativeness over the war in Iraq, soaring gasoline prices and rising mortgage rates. "There were not the elements of overt sexuality. Everyone felt it was time to get away from that," Henri Bendel fashion director Scott Tepper said. While the turn in fashion tastes cannot be entirely pegged to the social climate, "when you see a khaki or an olive green as your accent colour, clearly the mood is not utterly optimistic," he said. While the usual glitz, glamour and celebrity sightings were still prevalent, a few in the fashion crowd acknowledged the devastation in the Gulf Coast region, where Hurricane Katrina left hundreds dead and thousands homeless. The organisation that runs Fashion Week, 7th on Sixth, sold T-shirts, with proceeds to be donated to victims. Supermodel Naomi Campbell was set to stage a star-studded "Fashion For Relief" benefit show on Friday. Kenneth Cole, known for making political statements on the runway, appeared at the end of his show in a Red Cross T-shirt with an 800 number on the back and urged attendees to make donations. SUBDUED SOPHISTICATION Embellishments of all kinds -- crystals, embroidery, beading -- were evident on the catwalks this week, as were feminine details such as ruffles and flowing, full skirts. Even those designs came off more sophisticated and subdued than the flashy, over-the-top feeling of many collections last season. Neutral colors were back in vogue, contrasting with the bold, bright hues of last spring. Calvin Klein, Zac Posen and Proenza Schouler all stuck largely to white, beige and grey. Fashion staple black showed up in force in collections by Narciso Rodriguez, Michael Kors and Vera Wang. Big belts, high waists and buttoned-up looks were in, replacing the low-slung, belly-baring fashions seen in recent years. The L.A.M.B. ("Love. Angel. Music. Baby.") show marked the latest attempt by a pop star to cross over into the world of haute couture. This spring, Jennifer Lopez made her New York runway debut with her "Sweetface" label to mixed reviews. While the fashion elite are somewhat skeptical of celebrity brands, Stefani's 2-year-old line has already won over some fashionistas and has been selling well at department stores like Saks Fifth Avenue and Bloomingdale's. "I'm not doing it for the fashion world," she told Reuters before the show. "I'm doing it for me." Still, she admits to being a neophyte in the world of haute couture. "I know that I'm a baby at it, and I'm just starting, and I want to be in this for a long time, so don't be too tough on me yet," she said. The show was not short on drama, with models emerging from tricked-out cars next to the runway that bounced at various times during the show. The clothes, which ran the gamut from gangster-style motorcycle jackets to sexy, ruffled halter dresses, seemed to hit the right note with the fashion crowd. "It was everything that we were hoping for," Tepper said. "Everything draped beautifully, and it's a collection that spanned a lot of different age groups." Stefani, dressed in baggy pants and a simple white tank, described her latest endeavor as a mix of Mexican gangster, Rasta, English countryside and old-fashioned Hollywood. "Something
I've always done is mix and match, but it's about making it all work together."
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| September 17th, 2005 from Pussycat Dolls | ||||||||||||||||||
Pussycat
Dolls Debut Album
1. Don't Cha |
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| September 16th, 2005 from Calandar Live |
| A
singer in L.A.M.B.'s clothing, no doubt Stefani is
the celebrity headliner at this season's New York Fashion Week, which
she closes out on Friday with the first runway show of her L.A.M.B. clothing
label. In sweatpants with L.A.M.B. printed on the cuffs, a zip-up hoodie with Rastafarian stripes, mile-high Christian Louboutin leopard-print stilettos and borrowed bling in the form of a gold Cartier necklace with a tassel on the end, she looks fabulous. Her platinum blond hair is swept into a tidy bun, while her lips and long nails are the perfect shade of crimson. Upstairs, co-designer Zaldy and stylist Andrea Leiberman buzz around clothing racks full of floral dresses with wisteria prints ("They grow like weeds on the side of the highway in Japan," Stefani offers), skinny jeans and screen-printed cardigans. Slip-on sneakers and other accessories have hard-core details such as padlocks, keys and chains. Back in Stefani's office, a work table is covered with spools and swatches. A stack of sketches is paper-clipped with a photograph of Marilyn Monroe, Stefani's idol. Nearby, a mannequin is wearing the start of a white gown. Fluffing the hem on the creamy silk column, Stefani explains: "This is the bride. I had the concept for the dress, but the back was wrong. Then, I was lying in bed the other night and I had an epiphany. It needed a dropped waist." Seemingly out of nowhere, a video camera is thrust in her face. "This is my brother, Todd," says Stefani, 35, adding that the two are planning a DVD documentary about the design process. "I wouldn't have anybody else in my life with me all the time," she says. No reality shows here. Stefani's first foray into the fashion business was in 2003, when she was approached to design a collection of handbags for LeSportsac. She chose "L.A.M.B." spelled out in Gothic letters as a logo (named after her childhood dog) and the corresponding words "Love, Angel, Music, Baby" as a recurring motif. The name stuck and she launched a full L.A.M.B. clothing line for spring 2004, based on the touchstones of her personal style, incorporating elements of Julie Andrews in "The Sound of Music," heavily made-up tough girls she got to know growing up in Orange County and Jamaican Rastafarians. The 2006 spring collection brings pirates and Victoriana into the mix, which she researched by renting the "Pirates of the Caribbean" film costumes from a London costume house. "This collection is very wearable," says Stefani, who is married to Gavin Rossdale, former front man of the band Bush whose new group is called the Institute, and splits her time among New York, L.A. and London. "Nothing is clingy. There are lots of fancy dresses that you can wear during the day with flip flops or you can dress up at night." Stefani's show will, naturally, incorporate some of her new music, including the yet-to-be released song "Orange County Girl." "I didn't know if I could use my new music, if the record company would want that. But it's mixed in with other stuff. So it's just a little lick." Sony is bankrolling the $1-million production. Stefani is realistic about the glut of celebrity fashion labels and her primary role as a muse for co-designer Zaldy, who also has his own fashion line. "I would not be where I'm at if I wasn't a celebrity. I would not have someone paying for this line," she admits, which, according to Women's Wear Daily, is selling in more than 200 stores, including Henri Bendel, Saks Fifth Avenue and Nordstrom, with strong fall and spring numbers. L.A.M.B. retail sales for 2005 are expected to reach $40 million, according to a spokeswoman for the line. Still, she has a way to go before reaching the success of some of her celebrity competitors. Sean "Diddy" Combs' Sean John line, which launched in 1998, pulls in annual sales in the $400-million range and won a Council of Fashion Designers of America award last year. Jennifer Lopez's Sweetface label, which closed out Fashion Week with its first show in February, is taking in an estimated $200 million in annual sales, according to the Wall Street Journal. For Stefani, though, it's just as much about the love of designing. "I have been making clothes all my life," she adds. I don't know how many fittings I've been in since I was 3 years old," she says. Indeed, Stefani did sew many of her early costumes when No Doubt was performing in clubs instead of arenas. The line has made fans out of pals Gwyneth Paltrow and Cameron Diaz, but Stefani insists she designs L.A.M.B. for herself. "In fact, I get jealous when other people wear it if I haven't worn it yet," she says. "For this collection, there are going to be very strict instructions. There is so much stuff I want to wear that they can't be sending it out to other celebrities." L.A.M.B. pieces are priced from about $100 to $600. It is produced in China, where Stefani says the factory workers have her photo hung on the wall above their machines for inspiration. This month, Stefani is also launching Harajuku Lovers, a more affordable line of novelty merchandise pegged to her current solo album and cutesy Japanese backup singers named Love, Angel, Music and Baby. It is available now at Kitson on Robertson Boulevard, and it will be in Urban Outfitters in November, featuring products relating to song lyrics such as banana-shaped erasers (which references the hit "Hollaback Girl") lip gloss and bubble gum, and T-shirts and sweatshirts for men, women and kids. With prices at less than $100, Harajuku Lovers is for the fans, she says. "I didn't see myself doing regular merchandise, like a T-shirt with a Gwen face on it. That's embarrassing." Jerry Leigh, chief executive of Jerry Leigh Entertainment, the California-based licensor collaborating with Stefani on Harajuku Lovers, has said the line could do as much as $2 million in sales its first season. Stefani is obsessed with all things Japanese, and her product lines and websites (both gwenstefani.com and harajukulovers.com) trade on the same childlike fairy tales as Sanrio's Hello Kitty. Many clothing items have hidden messages written in the linings — a poem or motivational phrase such as "You've got some wicked style." Ironically, she has yet to conquer the Japanese market. "I've always wanted to be big in Japan," she says. "But they listen to Japanese music, which is fair enough." Long before Fox's "The O.C." made Orange County fashionable, Stefani's sense of style was being molded in Anaheim, where she grew up in the shadow of Disneyland. She remembers shopping at Jo-Ann fabric stores with her mom, Patti. "My brothers would be running around the fabric rolls and I would be sitting there with my Simplicity and Vogue pattern books. "Old Hollywood was always an inspiration, with the blond hair and the red lips," she says. "I was also inspired by chola girls in their baggy pants and wife beaters. It was always about a contrast between being overly girlie, with long red nails and masses of makeup, and being masculine and tougher. And if you look at the collection, you will always see that." Stefani was one of four kids, and it was older brother Eric Stefani who started the band No Doubt and persuaded his sister to sing. "I didn't really need a passion because he was the passion. I was his puppet," she says. "He brought home a ska record and we got super into Madness and the Specials. We thought we had discovered something really underground. And it was underground in Orange County." Ska music drove her look in high school, where she says she was far from the coolest kid. "I was really into thrift store shopping," she says. "We would get clothes from the 1950s and '60s and taper the pants. Everything was pegged." Her first fashion show was for Nordstrom's Brass Plum junior's label at the Buena Park mall. Her first designer purchase was the Vivienne Westwood corset she wore in the early "Spiderwebs" video. "I was on Melrose and I saw this corset in the window and I was obsessed. It was $800, which was a million dollars to me. They didn't have that in the budget for the video, but I didn't care." She still wears it, and says Westwood is the one designer "I give all my money to." John Galliano is another favorite and a frequent collaborator. Their relationship began after Stefani watched a video of one of his fashion shows. "I couldn't believe it was so amazing. Cut to my wedding dress," she says, referring to the dip-dyed pink confection she wore when she married in 2002. "He said he was going to make a gown based on everything I love. It was very punk rock, which you couldn't really tell from the pictures. But it had zippers and cargo pockets." She has yet to consult the Christian Dior designer about her own fashion line. "I would never go there with him. I would be ashamed to consider myself treading anywhere in his land. He's so shockingly clever." But she did have him over for dinner at her Los Feliz home a couple of years ago. "I rolled out the red carpet and had a long table with red roses. It was like a wedding. It was crazy. We drank champagne and I cried all night because it was so cool." Galliano told her about the corseted gowns he was working on for his collection, and she ended up wearing one of the regal-looking creations in her "What You Waiting For?" video. "The crate the dress came in couldn't fit in the front door of the Beverly Hills Hotel where we were shooting," she remembers. "The dress itself weighed 50 pounds." Next month, she hits the road for the Harajuku Lovers tour, which stops at the Hollywood Bowl on Oct. 21. But for now — or at least until Friday — it's all about fashion. "It's a dream come true, and I'm in it for the long run. I'm not in a rush, I don't want this to be a hit right away. Let it be what it's going to be. I want to do this forever." By Booth
Moore, Times Staff Writer |
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| September 15th, 2005 from Official No Doubt Site , Contact Music & Top Hits Online |
| Tony
Kanal about New No Doubt Record Stefani
Behind Pussycat Dolls Succes HOLLABACK GIRL hitmaker Stefani was so impressed when she performed alongside the saucy burlesque act she took it upon herself to introduce them to her music bosses. Pussycat Dolls' debut single DON'T CHA subsequently rocketed to number two in the US and number one in the UK. Bachar says, "Gwen had performed with us before, and one night she brought along her record label bosses. "They loved the show and wanted to develop a band from it, so we started auditioning performers." "Cool"
Stays At #1 for Third Week |
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| September 12th, 2005 from MTV |
| Gwen
with Pharrel in Miami for Recording New Tracks for LAMB Followup |
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| September 9th, 2005 from Official No Doubt Site |
| New
Message Board Launch Registered
users will get... The new Message Board will also feature “The Band Room” - a forum devoted to posts direct from the band. [posted 9/8/2005
U.S.A.] |
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| September 3rd, 2005 from Top Hits Online |
| Stefani
Cools Off The Competitions |
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| September 1st, 2005 from MTV |
| Destiny's
Child tops World Music Awards Destiny's Child, which also helped open the show Wednesday night, picked up the award for world's best pop group, besting Gorillaz, Maroon 5, Il Divo and the Black Eyed Peas. Gwen Stefani and The Game each earned an award honoring the best-selling new female and male artist, respectively. Usher,
50 Cent and Mariah Carey were among several recording artists up for multiple
honors at the awards show held at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood. It will
be telecast September 13 on ABC. Stefani, who released her first solo record last year, beat out R&B songstress Ciara, "American Idol" alum Fantasia, New Zealand native Natasha Bedingfield and MTV darling Ashlee Simpson. Stefani, who was on tour, accepted the award from Hillary Duff via satellite and gave a nod to fans around the globe who helped put her debut solo album "Love.Angel.Music.Baby" in the top spot. "We've
been all around the world and that's my favorite part of everything I
do," said Stefani, who was also up for best pop-rock artist, with
Eminem, Gavin DeGraw, John Mayer and Ashlee Simpson. The slate of nominees at this year's show reflected some of the past year's best-selling albums, many straddling the hip-hop and pop categories. Usher,
who won three awards at last year's show, was nominated along with rappers
Nelly and 50 Cent for best pop male artist. Crooners Josh Groban and Michael
Buble rounded out the list. Carey,
who staged a huge comeback this year with "The Emancipation of Mimi,"
also was vying for best R&B artist, along with Alicia Keys, Usher,
R. Kelly and newcomer Ciara.
Before the show, Denton and other celebrity attendees struck a serious
tone while reflecting on the destruction wrought upon New Orleans and
surrounding areas this week by Hurricane Katrina. Percussionist
Sheila E was particularly concerned because she has family in New Orleans,
she said. |
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