No Doubt Bio
~How
it all got started, past and present. Credit to NoDoubt.com
for the info~
December 1986
Back-flipping singer John Spence forms the
Orange County-based 2 Tone ska group No Doubt -- named after
his favorite expression -- with keyboardist Eric, who forces
Gwen to sing backing vocals. Gwen cites Madness, Kermit the
Frog, Julie Andrews and Fishbone's Angelo Moore as her heroes.
March 12, 1987
After several raucous party performances, No Doubt play
their first "official" gig at Fender's Ballroom in
Long Beach, California; the band was second on a bill of
fourteen with The Untouchables headlining. Tony was one of
several hundred people watching.
Shortly after, Tony, a high-school junior, shows up to try out
wearing baggy pants and Mexican sandals. Band accepts him even
though this is his first band; still a high-school senior,
Gwen eagerly accepts him.
Summer 1987
Gwen kisses Tony at an Orange County party. They hide
their relationship from the band. An organized perfectionist,
Tony becomes the band manager (now he's just the bass player).
Dec. 21, 1987
Tragically, John Spence shoots himself at an Anaheim park.
A few days later, No Doubt plays big industry gig at the Roxy
in Hollywood; but devastated over John's suicide, they call it
quits. Days later, they reform knowing that's what John would
want.
STILL FORMING
Spring 1988
Heavy-metal guitarist Tom, a college music student, leaves
his sister's heavy-metal band, Rising, because the metal scene
in O.C. sucks; after peering in the window while No Doubt
rehearsed, Tom pulls his long hair into a ponytail and joins
the ska-heavy No Doubt, adding a heavier edge.
1987-1988
Part of the then-underground-ska-scene, No Doubt built a
huge following of loyal "rude boys" and "rude
girls" after numerous gigs opening for The Untouchables
and Fishbone, as well as their own all-ages shows. Through
this following, they were able to avoid the
"pay-to-play" crap many young bands acquiesced to. A
three-song and a five-song demo are sold at shows.
Summer 1989
Drummer, huge No Doubt fan and fibber, Adrian joins No
Doubt after calling a number from the back of a demo tape; he
tells No Doubt he has years of experience, but later admits he
only has one. His love of 70's rock and ska made the choice
obvious. No Doubt plays their first out-of-state show in
Arizona in front of about a hundred people.
1989-1990
No Doubt evolved into a solid five-piece unit, expanding
their sound to include the styles of each member. The natural
evolution caused a few "rude kids" to fall away, but
with shows opening for the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Ziggy Marley
and Mano Negra, their fan base broadened to the college crowd.
Pizza mailing list parties became the modus operandi as the
list, which was started in 1987, grows from a few hundred
names to a couple thousand. (In 1993, when the list reaches
approximately 7,000 names, Tony decides to have just pizza
parties).
UNDERGROUND BAND STRIKES IT BIG, SORT OF
August 1991
No Doubt signs a "big" recording contract with
Interscope Records; they continue driving around O.C. in their
old cars and work day jobs (Gwen and Tony were sales people at
the same department store, Adrian waited tables at a steak
house, and Tom ran a small music equipment rental business).
Interscope head honcho Jimmy Lovine predicts Gwen will be a
star in five years. The band really wants to be played on
local radio station KROQ.
Oct.-Dec. 1991
Between working and going to school (Tom's a music major,
Gwen's an art major, Tony and Adrian are psychology majors --
it's a smart band), band drives to a Los Angeles studio as
often as possible to record their debut album, a 14-song
collection of older material (1987) as well as recently penned
tracks; on a budget, they spend less than $13,000.
March 1992
Self-titled No Doubt released. Only 30,000 sold; grunge is
in; they don't get played on KROQ. Adrian remembers the
program director saying, "It would take an act of God for
this band to get on the radio." Enough said.
In support of No Doubt, the band embarks on their first
two-week 13-show Western-state headlining tour in two vans
(five members, a three-piece horn section, a roadie, tour
manager/soundman and equipment).
Summer 1992
Band makes video for "Trapped In A Box" for a
mere $5,000; MTV never played it, but M2 does now. No Doubt
once again make a two-week Western run.
Fall 1992
Hitting the big time, the band undertakes a two-and-a-half
month national-tour -- still in a van. Although, predominately
headlining small clubs, the band plays a couple shows with
Public Enemy, Pato Banton, and The Special Beat, a reunited
Specials and The English Beat.
FROM TRAGIC TIMES COMES MAGIC
March 1993
No Doubt begins the first sessions for what would be
called Tragic Kingdom. The album was recorded in eleven
different studios over two and a half years. Tony refers to it
as a "battleground" -- and there were casualties.
1994
Eric departs before the completion of Tragic Kingdom, and
continues as an animator for The Simpsons.
After a seven-year relationship, Tony gets claustrophobic and
dumps Gwen; the singer has plenty to sing about and
"Don't Speak" evolved from a love song into a broken
heart song.
Early 1995
Knowing it had been three years since they had any music
out and local fans were wanting something new, No Doubt
self-releases the 10-song Beacon Street Collection, named
after the house on Beacon Street in Anaheim where several
members lived and the garage studio where most of the tracks
were recorded. They sold out of the first thousand CD's within
two weeks after selling them at shows and local record stores
(To date, they've sold approximately 100,000 copies).
Fall 1995
Wanting to learn how to read music and grasp the
rudiments, Adrian takes a basic drumming class at Fullerton
Junior College (California); not a morning person, Adrian
still makes the 8 a.m. classes.
Aug.-Sept. 1995
Laying the groundwork for Tragic Kingdom, No Doubt plays
the main stage on the first Warped Tour.
October 1995
Tragic Kingdom, a mixture of ska, new wave, pop, punk and
rock, is released. Of the lyrics, Gwen says: "We went
through some really bad times in the past couple years --
personally and bandwise -- and our whole way of dealing with
that is humor and I think that's really apparent in the
record."
Album doesn't make the charts and KROQ, slow to catch on,
doesn't pay attention.
No Doubt play the Virgin Megastore in Costa Mesa, California;
since relatives will be attending, and also, Gwen believes,
because she's a girl, her mother asks her not to swear when
she sings "Just A Girl"; Gwen swears; her mom won't
speak to her for a week.
Winter 1995
KROQ pays attention; band smiles. New wave-ish "Just
A Girl," about being a girl, gets massive requests.
Band swears it's not their friends calling.
In support of Tragic Kingdom, No Doubt tours a week with 311,
then several weeks on their own, followed by holiday radio
shows.
A GIRL IS A QUEEN, NO DOUBT IS FLY
January 1996
Several months after it's release, Tragic Kingdom debuts
on Billboard's Top 200 at No. 175, and the single "Just A
Girl" reaches No. 10. "That single surprised the
hell out of me," Tom, who created the music, told Guitar
World. "I always thought the song was cool, but I never
expected it to fly like it has." Video, which features
band in one room and Gwen in another, is all over MTV; media
ignores band and focuses on Gwen's midriff and bindi.
No Doubt makes late night debut performing "Just A
Girl" on Late Night with Conan O'Brien.
March 28, 1996
David Letterman is seen tapping his foot while No Doubt
performs "Just A Girl" on The Late Show.
May 1996
On the road opening for Bush, Gwen breaks her foot while
performing; the show must go on -- this time with plenty of
Band-Aids.
After Dominic Griffin interviews No Doubt for the syndicated
radio show, "Live From The Pit", Dom follows Gwen,
repeatedly saying: "Yeah, I know I was the drunk Irishman
from the Real World, but I'm just a boy and you're just a
girl." A restraining order is issued. (If you believe
this, you believe Dominic is a journalist.)
June 1996
The catchy "Spiderwebs," with music by Tony and
Gwen-penned lyrics NOT about their relationship, reaches No. 5
in Billboard.
Band begins their first European tour, followed by dates in
Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia and Japan.
July 1996
Tragic Kingdom goes Platinum.
Gwen changes her hair; Mabel's Salon in Austin reports big
business in platinum color treatments.
August 1996
Tragic Kingdom certified Double-Platinum. Although No
Doubt had been headlining in clubs for seven years, the band
embarks on their first sold-out theater-size headlining tour.
Salons across the country complain that every teenage girl
wants to get their hair cut and colored like "that No
Doubt girl." "Gwennabees" are hatched.
Meanwhile, Tony goes from blond to brown, and Adrian, who had
sculpted his hair into two red horns, and Tom check the theory
that blondes have more fun by dipping into the bleach bottle;
barber shops don't report an increase in coloring.
Sept. 5, 1996
Mutual admiration established, No Doubt returns to
Letterman to perform "Spiderwebs."
Sometime 1996
Some leading news magazine reports that those other two
blonde singers are out and "that No Doubt girl" is
paving the way for a new style; she changes her hair again.
The band gets cropped out of photos. No Doubt stipulates they
are a BAND, not just a girl. Gwen feels guilty, but becomes
the reigning queen of pop and idol to teenage girls.
October 1996
November issue of SPIN hits the stands with No Doubt cover
story--only they forgot there were three guys in the band too.
Gwen's pretty face and belly button get top billing while the
boys are relegated to the Table of Contents page. SPIN says:
"No Doubt is the Last American New Wave Group."
November 1996
After performing nearly every night for a year, Gwen's
vocal chords are strained; the band cancels its second
European tour; the dates are made up in February and March
1997.
Quintessential power ballad "Don't Speak," about
Tony and Gwen's break up, reaches No. 2 on the Modern Rock
chart and No. 1 on Hot 100 airplay chart in Billboard. Video
portrays a different story, the story of three forgotten guys
pitted against the adored singer; it was therapeutic.
"Has it got to the point where we mean nothing?" Tom
queries a Rolling Stone writer. "If Gwen doesn't speak,
we mean nothing?"
Dec. 7, 1996
No Doubt perform "Don't Speak" and "Excuse
Me Mr." on Saturday Night Live. The following week Tragic
Kingdom reaches No. 1 in Billboard -- 14 months after its
release, selling 229,000 copies the first week at the top
spot, more than 500,000 Christmas week, and 6 million total.
The album will spend nine weeks at No. 1, and 36 weeks in the
Top 10.
DECADE OF NO DOUBT
Winter 1997
No Doubt begins their third headlining tour, this time at
enormadome venues. It was either stripped-down clubs or Spinal
Tap, jests Tom. They went with the classic comedy and the
Cirque de Soliel sets.
Tragic Kingdom reaches No. 1 on Billboard's International
Album Eurochart, and was a Top 5 album in the U.K., Canada,
Germany, Australia, Norway, Spain, Portugal, New Zealand,
Denmark and Finland.
January 1997
No Doubt attends American Music Awards after being
nominated for Favorite New Artist Pop/Rock. Band's super
excited even if they don't win. "Not bad, Best New Artist
and we've been around for 10 years," marvels Gwen.
February 1997
No Doubt attends Grammy Awards after being nominated for
Best Rock Album and Best New Artist.
Band's super excited even if they don't win. They perform
"Spiderwebs" live.
All-time touring highlight, No Doubt plays a sold-out
3,000-capacity show in Israel -- including members of the two
opposing religious groups. On their day off, they tour
Jerusalem and swim in the Dead Sea.
March 1997
No Doubt celebrates Tenth Anniversary!!!
April 11, 1997
No Doubt perform the reggae-tinged "Sunday
Morning" on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno; although the
lyrics are once again about their break up, it's Tony's
favorite No Doubt song.
May 1997
Rolling Stone finally puts No Doubt on the cover--the
ENTIRE band in white surgical garb. The writer announces
"everything (Gwen) says is true" and that their pop
music is "rousing and potent."
July 1997
Tony's life takes on new meaning after meeting his
all-time music hero Prince, or as he is now called, The Artist
formerly known as Prince. After the Purple One checked out No
Doubt's Minneapolis show, he invited the band back to Paisley
Park to jam. How cool is that?
Summer 1997
Rarely seeing a Sunday morning at home, No Doubt continue
to see the world from a stage. Tragic Kingdom, still in the
Top 50 at 80-plus weeks on the charts, sells seven million in
the U.S. and eleven million worldwide. No Doubt, their first
record, has now sold around 250,000 copies.
Sept. 4, 1997
They finally win. "Don't Speak" gives No Doubt
the opportunity to speak as they enthusiastically accept the
Best Group Video statue at the MTV Video Music Awards.
Fall 1997
No Doubt plays across Europe, India, Singapore and South
America. Tragic Kingdom continues to sell big, reaching eight
million in the U.S. and fourteen million worldwide.
Oct. 21, 1997
Interscope re-releases 10-song Beacon Street Collection as
part of the back catalog.
November 1997
No Doubt releases Live In The Tragic Kingdom, a 92-minute,
live-performance video shot at The Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim,
the arena owned by Magic Kingdom heads Disneyland. Plenty of
rock poses, good cheer and sweat.
More good tidings, No Doubt's version of the Vandals joyful
carol "Oi To The World" -- recorded in one day while
on tour -- appears on the album A Very Special Christmas III;
proceeds benefiting the Special Olympics.
A REST TO DEVELOP IT
Early 1998
No Doubt takes some much needed time off, adjusts to being
home, step across the Orange County border, and settle into
new addresses within the L.A. County line; two now reside in
Long Beach and two in Los Feliz. They stop eating at fast food
eateries—except Tony. Renting out a Hollywood Hills home,
the band begins writing songs for their forthcoming
CD—finding their direction; as Gwen said: "We didn't
really know what kind of music we were gonna write because it
had been so long and we kind of out grew our old style."
Gwen, now very in love, has plenty to sing about.
March 7, 1998
They win again—this time at the California Music Awards
(formerly the BAMMIES). Gwen gets a statue for Outstanding
Female Vocalist Statewide, and the band walks off with
Outstanding Group Statewide.
April 1998
For the Stormy Weather '98 concert at L.A.'s Wiltern Theater,
a benefit for Don Henley's Walden Woods Foundation, Gwen sings
two torch songs: "I Can Dream, Can't I," made
popular by the Andrew Sisters, and Elvis Costello's
"Almost Blue."
August 1998
Gwen's a waitress—just for a day. She appears in an apron in
a Rufus Wainwright video shot at her house. A week later, Gwen
(without the apron) hosts a birthday bash for Tony and Adrian
at her house. Many musician friends dance to loud rock music
until 3 a.m. The excitement proves to be too much for Adrian;
around 4 a.m. he re-decorates Gwen's front yard with
regurgitated petits fours.
September 1998
The band attends the MTV Video Music Awards—purely for fun.
Gwen looks smashing in her blue Smurfs fuzzy bra top and
matching blue-dyed hair
October 1998
Straying for a brief afternoon, Gwen records a duet with Brian
Setzer for his new album, Dirty Boogie. The track, made famous
by Ann Margaret and Elvis Presley is called "You're the
Boss."
October 31, 1998
Boo! Trick or treats were courtesy of Offspring's Dexter
Holland. Gwen was a vampire, Tony was a bag of French fries
(he loves those things), Adrian was a nun, Tom was something
politically incorrect (we're not saying), and No Doubt horn
player Gabe McNair was a skeleton. It was a hoot!
November 1998
No Doubt celebrates their childhood in song for the Rugrats
soundtrack. In the fall, the band records "I Throw My
Toys Around" with musical hero Elvis Costello, who also
wrote (with his wife) and produced the song for the movie.
The band continues writing songs for their forthcoming CD and
searches for the right producer.
Dec. 31, 1998
The band throws a HUGE New Year's Eve bash at Gwen's house
for their friends, friends of friends, and musician- and
actor-friends of friends. A star-studded affair with the likes
of Tommy Lee, Ben Stiller, the Chili Peppers, Beck, plus many
more. It goes into the wee hours. Adrian, once again, is
plagued with ill feelings, but waits until the ride home.
After numerous attempts to find the right producer, the band
finally decides on Glen Ballard, with Jack Joseph Puig as the
man with the right mix and Alain Johannes (of Eleven fame) as
the engineer. The magic (and long process) occurs at two Los
Angeles studios—Ocean Way and Royaltone. According to Gwen,
the band has three goals: to grow as songwriters, keep it
simple and clean instrumentally with no tricks, and to be
spontaneous.
GETTIN' ON WITH IT
February 1999
After numerous attempts to find the right producer, the band
finally decides on Glen Ballard, with Jack Joseph Puig as the
man with the right mix and Alain Johannes (of Eleven fame) as
the engineer. The magic (and long process) occurs at two Los
Angeles studios—Ocean Way and Royaltone. According to Gwen,
the band has three goals: to grow as songwriters, keep it
simple and clean instrumentally with no tricks, and to be
spontaneous.
Feb. 22, 1999
Adrian's Schwing Magazine Charity Golf Tournament raises money
for a Hollywood charity. Out for a putt and a swing, members
from the Offspring, NOFX, Smashmouth and Cherry Poppin'
Daddies. Earlier in '99, Adrian and Vandals drummer Joe
Escalante started Schwing, an alternative golf publication
through Thrasher. Lotsa musicians and girls in bikinis.
March 1999
RIAA creates a new sales status symbol: the Diamond Award for
artists who move more than 10 million copies of a given album
in the U.S. Forty-six artists were responsible for the 62
best-selling albums of all time... and in the mix was No Doubt
for Tragic Kingdom (at 10 million!).
Band says "yes" to hip movie Go and delivers
"New" for soundtrack. Finally, new music from No
Doubt, although it's not so new ("New" was the first
song the band wrote after Tragic Kingdom). The song, produced
by Jerry Harrison, is received at radio with enthusiasm.
April 1999
Tom remarks: "This is our eighth week recording... and
probably our 80th week working on this record."
Unable to wait until Gwen finishes vocals for a track, Maggen,
the singer's 14-year-old dog, went poo-poo on the studio
carpet. Gwen cleans it with paper towels and disposed of the
mess in the garbage bin next to the studio, locking herself
into the stinky gated structure in the process. "There I
am, standing on top of the garbage bin that smells awful while
everyone is inside a sound-proof studio."
May 1999
A whopping 17 songs are recorded—the band is really excited.
It's a new sound for the band. One they have a hard time
describing—or pinpointing into a style. Tony thinks there's
a pervasive early '80s New Wave thing reminiscent of what they
grew up on, and a very organic rock '70s sparse sound. The
songs are somewhere between rock, pop and reggae. (Tony admits
that all reggae they've attempted in the past sucks;
"We've finally hit the right groove. Now we don't have to
qualify what we've done.")
Burning London—A Clash Tribute is released. It includes No
Doubt's cover of "Hateful," which is produced by
David Kahne and includes guest vocals, growls and hand
gestures by Billy Idol. Proceeds are donated to an L.A. youth
shelter.
June 1999
Gwen adds vocals to Fishbone's cover of Sly and the Family
Stone's "Everybody is a Star" for the Fishbone and
Familyhood Nextperience tribute album (out March 2000).
July 1999
No Doubt completes mixing at Ocean Way with Jack Joseph Puig.
Band is really excited. Record company is really excited. If
the fans knew, they would be excited. Then the band decides to
record two more songs; now they are the only ones excited.
Tour plans for fall are put on hold.
August 1999
Band enters the studio again to record new songs for the
as-yet-untitled new album on Interscope Records.
Tragic Kingdom continues to sell big, reaching 15 million
worldwide.
No Doubt hosts their second annual co-birthday bash for Tony
and Adrian (who sports a pink mohawk for the party) at
Adrian's home in Lakewood, California. Celebrating the dynamic
duo's special day: members from 311, Rage Against the Machine,
and the Vandals, Perry Farrell, actor Vince Vaughn, and...
well, more rock and movie stars than the neighbors liked. It
was a long and festive night.
Sept. 30, 1999
No Doubt kicks off an eight-city West Coast club tour in San
Diego in full pop gear: Tony and Tom wear red JUMPsuits, the
horn section in lime green, Gwen in bubblegum pink (including
her feathered hair), and Adrian shirtless and in boxers. The
jaunt was appropriately dubbed "Pop Smart" and
"Pop Start" by two fans who screamed in joy over the
new pop songs at the band's L.A. show.
Oct. 9, 1999
On the final night of No Doubt's club tour, in a tender moment
at The Fillmore in San Francisco, Adrian lures his girlfriend
Nina to the stage, and before the thousand-plus fans, gets
down on one knee, professes his love and then proposes. Nina
shakes her head "yes" and the two exit the stage in
each other's arms. The band, moved to tears, finishes the set
with Vandals drummer Josh Freese covering for Adrian.
Winter 1999
Final touches are made to the as yet untitled new record. Even
more recording, mixing, and mastering to make it just right.
Dec. 5, 1999
No Doubt attends the VH1/Vogue Fashion Awards at New York's
fashionable 26th Street Armory. The very fashionable band is
nominated for Most Stylish Video, and Gwen—proudly
displaying her multi-colored braces—is nominated for Most
Fashionable Female Artist. The band walks away with the statue
for Most Stylish Video for "New." Orthodontically-challenged
teens everywhere proudly smile a toothy grin.
Dec. 31, 1999
Way to ring in the millennium!! No Doubt played at one of the
biggest parties in the world: Times Square. To be exact, the
MTV New Year’s Eve celebration in Times Square. The first
band to play MTV in the new millennium, No Doubt took the
stage a few minutes after midnight, performing a festive
rendition of "It's the End of the World (And I Feel
Fine)" by REM, the new skool and new first single
"Ex-Girlfriend" to appease the millions of waiting
fans, and the old skool "Spiderwebs."
Jan. 5, 2000
No Doubt is shot—but it’s all good. The band is shot by
photographer David LaChappelle for their new album, drum roll
please, Return of Saturn.
Jan. 16, 2000
The first No Doubt wedding: Adrian and Nina happily make the
commitment at Adrian’s home in Southern California while
family and close friends (including members of the Vandals and
Sugar Ray) watched and cried. A true tight-knit group, Gwen
serves as a bridesmaid while Tony and Tom stand as groomsmen.
Jan. 24-26, 2000
The video for "Ex-Girlfriend," directed by Hype
Williams, is shot
SPRING AHEAD
Feb. 1, 2000
"Ex-Girlfriend," the first—and extremely
anticipated single—from Return of Saturn, will be released
to radio. The band waits for the day when all the planets
aligned in the… you get the point. The accompanying video
will be seen on millions of TVs the following week.
March 2000
No Doubt set to pack their bags and get their feet wet. The
band will hit the road for an intimate three-week club tour in
the States followed by a European tour in April and May. At
this point they plan to take a couple deep breathes and begin
a thorough tour of the U.S. and the rest of the world. Who
knows, maybe Saturn will follow.
April 2000
The very down-to-Earth yet extremely out there Return of
Saturn will be released April 10 internationally and April 11
in the States. Produced by Glen Ballard, mixed by Jack Joseph
Puig and recorded by Alain Johannes, the 14-song disc
encompasses the band’s eclectic tastes: New Wave, reggae,
pop and rock. Radio programmers across the country predict a
minimum of 14 hits.
And
you know, they have been through all that...the low and the
high..through years of experience together..and they are still
a band. And a successfull one at that. This is one of the
reasons that they are my fav band, and that they make a good
one. Good Luck to you No Doubt in the future! =0]
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