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The new book 'Tearing Down the Orange Curtain' charts the often violent history of the Orange County punk scene and bands ...
“Tragic Kingdom,” indeed. But as No Doubt’s banger of a show made clear, third-wave ska’s explosive popularity on MTV, KROQ and elsewhere back then wouldn’t have been possible without a ...
All three hits were released on No Doubt’s third album, Tragic Kingdom, which dominated the Billboard 200 chart for nine weeks beginning in December 1996. To date, the set has earned 9.4 million ...
No Doubt took a break after Tragic Kingdom, going on hiatus in 2003 to spend time with family and work on outside projects—Stefani released two solo albums and launched her clothing label L.A ...
High-spirited, energetic and oozing SoCal, No Doubt took their die-hard fans back to the mid-1990s, playing all their biggest hits from their seminal album "Tragic Kingdom," some bangers from the ...
The lead single off Tragic Kingdom, “Just A Girl” was also the first song Stefani wrote for No Doubt after her brother left the band. Stefani wrote the song after her father lectured her for ...
No Doubt ended their nine-year hiatus with ... The Anaheim players burned through more raucous Tragic Kingdom cuts, including the 1995 anthem, “Just a Girl” — which has seen a resurgence ...
Her many accomplishments include a 10-million-selling diamond album (No Doubt’s 1995 “Tragic Kingdom”), the first download to sell a million copies in the U.S. (“Hollaback Girl,” a No. 1 ...
No Doubt went on to release a monumental album, 1995’s Tragic Kingdom, and catapult its new singer, Gwen Stefani, into superstardom. As Tearing Down the Orange Curtain races through the chaotic ...
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