Billboard (May 23rd 2009)
No album? No problem. No Doubt re-enters orbit with a summer tour - and lures ticket buyers with a download of its catalog.
The Los Angeles Times (May 12th 2009)
The singer-songwriter always knew No Doubt would rise again. No matter how long it took.
USA Weekend (May 8th 2009)
The real No Doubt recently dished with us about high school and gossip.
MTV News (May 4th 2009)
The No Doubt reunion tour is finally on. With a pair of high-energy shows — Saturday at the Borgata Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and a Sunday night headlining slot at the Bamboozle Festival — the O.C. hitmakers officially returned to the road.
SPIN (May 2009)
No album, no game plan, no problem! But as No Doubt embark on their first tour in five years, Gwen Stefani and her droogs face the biggest challenge of their career: uncertainty.
Entertainment Weekly (May 28th 2004)
Well, No Doubt’s greatest hits, anyway – which is what they’ll be playing on their last tour before Gwen Stefani drops a solo CD.
Music Connection (May 22nd 2000)
After five years, and despite dramatic changes in the public’s musical taste, this Southern California quartet have returned with a top-selling, critically acclaimed new album, Return of Saturn, their fourth, which shows how a band can grow and mature with its audience.
Entertainment Weekly (May 12th 2000)
They came from within: the intra-band battles, that is. But now that No Doubt have emerged from a rocky hiatus with Return of Saturn, only Gwen Stefani’s internal conflicts still rage.
USA Today (May 3rd 2000)
Selling 11 million copies of a breakthrough album should foster enough self-confidence to brave any obstacle, even one as towering as bubble-gum croon group 'N Sync. But No Doubt knows doubt.
All Access (May 2000)
Can No Doubt’s new record, Return of Saturn, save pop music from Britney? Can anyone?
SPIN (May 2000)
Tired of ska, bored of bindis, and suffering from nasty writer’s block, No Doubt looked back to the ‘80s for inspiration, conjuring a new-wave fest that would do missing persons proud. Now if only a certain person would propose…
NY Rock (May 2000)
The past couple of years have been pretty quiet for No Doubt, particularly compared with the media hype the band experienced after the release of their 1995 album Tragic Kingdom.
Chart (May 2000)
The perky singer with her cotton candy-coloured hair and Betty Boop voice is the subject of fashion spreads and gossip columns, but the band has remained relatively anonymous
Rolling Stone (May 27th 1999)
Sporting a Farrah-meets-Blondie do, Gwen Stefani made the rounds with Natalie Imbruglia at the L.A. premiere of the swinging rave flick Go
The Los Angeles Times (May 29th 1997)
After two years on tour, the group is back home - and reflecting about how far it's come in 10 years.
People Magazine (May 19th 1997)
Glam-rocker Gwen Stefani takes her punchy pop quartet No Doubt to the top.
BAM Magazine (May 16th 1997)
Needless to say, a lot has happened since the Fall of '95. From Details to Rolling Stone, the members of No Doubt have become fodder for a media frenzy for over a year.
MuchMusic x AOL (May 13th 1997)
No Doubt have sold over 11 million CD's worldwide, 11 million in Canada alone... and they join us here tonight, LIVE! Following their MUCHMUSIC Intimate & Interactive performance in MUCH!
The Face (May 1997)
Fresh as newly-hatched chicks by comparison, the members of No Doubt are ensconced inside their dressing room, evaluating the level of rejection and humiliation awaiting them. "We're totally going to lose," states drummer Adrian Young. "We don't stand a chance."
Rolling Stone (May 1st 1997)
No Doubt thought they were ready for anything. Then they got famous and suddenly their singer was no longer just a girl.