Gwen Stefani is the perfect girl. At once eternally self-confident
and vulnerable, playful and tough, Stefani brings all the confusing
(and often paradoxical) characteristics of femininity into one
package. The girls love her, the boys love her. Rock fans love her,
pop fans love her. Her recent collaborations with Moby and Eve
just further prove Stefani's wide-ranging appeal. Everyone
loves Gwen, and everyone should. No Doubt is one of the few
bands everyone can love without any sort of effort or even any
guilt.
As the follow-up to 2000's Return of Saturn, which took
some unfair critical hits for being about Stefani's unabashed desire
for domesticity (perhaps the world just wasn't ready for rock songs
about marriage and family), Rock Steady seems to be
something of a concession to their earlier days of straightforward
party-rock. Rock Steady is just solid fun -- no angsty ballads
about marriage here -- and that's the main component of the album's
appeal. While it doesn't completely abandon introspection, gone is
the longing and wistfulness. No matter your thoughts on Return
of Saturn, the connection you'll make with Rock Steady
is instantaneous.
But unlike Return of Saturn's tight-knit cohesiveness that
almost bordered on "concept" (thanks to the dead-on production of
Glen Ballard), the diverse half-dozen producers picked for Rock
Steady, including Nellee Hooper, Ric Ocasek, William Orbit,
and Prince, do bring their respective styles of Rock Steady and,
consequently, the album jumps around quite a bit. From the hip-hop
snarls of "Detective" to the blatant new wave beats of "Don't Let Me
Down", there is little to unite these songs stylistically. While the effect
isn't jarring, the songs definitely seem like ones that were pieced together
from different recording sessions rather than ones that were conceived
in unison.
It is to No Doubt's credit, though, that they manage to keep the album
together with little more than their collective personalities. All these
songs sound like No Doubt just because you can automatically tell
that they are. Stefani may be continually at the forefront of the
band, but the group has stayed together because they all have such
an instinct for each other. Stefani's vocals are at turns seductive
and innocent depending on the song (or moment in the song),
while Tony Kanal's bass growls and throbs along with Adrian
Young's fierce drum work and Tom Dumont's understated guitars.
No Doubt sounds like a band, and this gives Rock Steady an
unexpected and much needed strength.
While the electronic loops of "Making Out" (William Orbit's track),
and even the guest contributions of Bounty Killer and Lady Saw,
show the obvious influence of Stefani's solo collaborations, No
Doubt's re-embrace of the reggae/ska sound is all personal. The
band's desire to reconnect with its musical beginnings shows how
far it has come since its days as a local Southern California band.
Still, No Doubt still doesn't want to be pegged as any one thing on
Rock Steady, and the band's willingness to explore different
genres and styles shows a surprising savvy. Its fan base is already
there, and the band moves its sound forward just enough to not be
alienating.
Although some of the songs here tend to fall flat, such as
"Running", a music-box ballad that would be more worthy of some
Britney clone, or the sloppy dancehall sound of "Underneath It
All", No Doubt isn't afraid of working with new ideas, even if they
happen to be the wrong ones. "Waiting Room", the collaboration
with Prince, is perhaps the unanticipated standout of Rock
Steady because of this. With its sultry beats and Stefani's
downright adorable Prince impression, it is the song that breaks
away from the traditional No Doubt sound the most while still
maintaining what makes No Doubt such a dynamic band. It is
eager to take chances if they will in any way aid its identity as a
band.
Stefani's lyrics have an immediacy to them that sometimes seem
like just a means to an end for the music. When she sings "I
tried to think about rainbows when it gets bad" on "In My Head", it
is a bit hard not to cringe, but there's a spontaneity to the lyrics
here that is hard to ignore. On "Don't Let Me Down", when she
sings "'Cause now you're all mine/ Don't you forget it/ Don't let me
down", there's an intensity in her voice that borders between joy
and viciousness. There is still something very open and honest
about Rock Steady. Even if Stefani isn't pouring out her
heart about wanting to settle down, the emotions are still there.
Rock Steady may never fully find a unifying voice as an
album, but that's simple to overlook. Refusing to settle into one
definition, No Doubt is vibrant and full of life here, even if the
heights it reaches for aren't always achieved. Gwen Stefani's
sparkling charisma cannot be disregarded, and no matter what
else, when she sings on the opening track "You got me felling hella
good", it's pretty easy just to nod in agreement and keep on
listening.