musicOMH
Twitter
Gwen Stefani - The Sweet Escape (Polydor)
UK release date: 4 December 2006
2 stars
Gwen Stefani - The Sweet Escape

buy this title


track listing

1. Wind It Up
2. The Sweet Escape
3. Orange County Girl
4. Early Winter
5. Now That You Got It
6. 4 In The Morning
7. Yummy
8. Fluorescent
9. Breakin' Up
10. Don't Get It Twisted
11. U Started It
12. Wonderful Life
13. Wind It Up (Live Version)
It's pretty fair to say that you know what you're going to get from Gwen Stefani. After the success of Love Angel Music Baby, it was always going to be a pretty safe bet that for her second album Stefani would return to the same template.

And so it proves with the release of The Sweet Escape. Stefani has retained the services of uber-producers The Neptunes, carried on with the same 'throw everything in the kitchen sink' sonic approach, and the usual role call of collaborators show up: Pharrell Williams, Akon, Linda Perry and, um, the pianist from Keane.

With The Neptunes on board, a Gwen Stefani record is never a dull listen, but as with her solo debut, there are moments that come periously close to crossing that line from 'quirky and interesting' to 'ridiculously irritating'. Nowhere is this more amply demonstrated than on opening track Wind It Up.

Sounding like a reprise of Hollaback Girl but even more annoying, Wind It Up tries to rehabilitate yodelling, possibly for the first time since one hit wonders Edelweiss. Built on a sample from The Lonely Goatherd, The Neptunes lay far too much percussion down while Stefani half-sings, half-raps and then bursts into yodelling. Maybe she's going for that How Do You Solve A Problem Like Maria audience, but it's just horrible, and possibly the worst start to an album this year.

Luckily, things quickly improve. The title track links up with Akon and is a lovely, summery bouncy pop song with a very infectious chorus. It starts off very similar to Gnarls Barkley's Smiley Faces, and has a similar addictive quality to it. It's also notable for being one of the tracks where all the effects are given a rest and the song is allowed to stand on its own merits.

It's a lesson that should be learned throughout the rest of the album. When Stefani plays it straight, such as on the lovelorn ballad 4 In The Morning, she sounds great. Yet when the self-consciously wacky and kitsch side to her personality surfaces, as on the inane Now That You Got It, the temptation is to dive for the 'off' switch.

This split personality ultimately flaws the album. One minute there's Breakin' Up, an atmospheric dancefloor filler produced by Pharrell Williams, yet the next minute Stefani's hollering "this is the most craziest shit ever" on Don't Get It Twisted and coming across like a low-rent Fergie (quite an achievement in itself). Williams also produces one of the other stand-out tracks, the glorious Yummy - even though there is rather a strong resemblance to Kelis' Milkshake here.

Keane's Tim-Rice Oxley also pops up with the rather nice Early Winter, but it does sound like Stefani covering a Keane song. Yet at least the lyrics here are palatable - this has always been one of Stefani's weakest areas and she doesn't get any better on this album. Orange County Girl is just cringeable, a ode from Stefani about she's an ordinary girl living in an extraordinary world, and featuring the line "gonna get myself another Grammy". Not with this song you're not Gwen.

Luckily the album does bow out on a high point with the synth-heavy Wonderful Life (featuring guest spots from both Martin Gore and Richard Hawley) and Linda Perry's songwriting skills help to steer Stefani away from the self-referential babbling so prevalent on other tracks here.

The Sweet Escape isn't a terrible record (although at times it does get infuriating). The trouble is that in the two years since Love Angel Music Baby she doesn't seem to have moved on or evolved at all - she's stood still by the sounds of it, and this comes across not so much as a sequel but rather a remake. Although it's nice to see she's dropped the rather creepy obsessions with Japanese girls...

  share: 
Facebook | Digg | del.icio.us | more
from the archive
Damon Albarn Graham Coxon Alex James




out this week:
Tinariwen - Imidiwan: Companions La Roux - La Roux Moby - Wait For Me
coming soon:
Florence And The Machine - Lungs The Duckworth Lewis Method Slow Club - Yeah So
recent releases:
Jack Penate - Everything Is New Gossip - Music For Men Tortoise - Beacons Of Ancestorship
Regina Spektor - Far The Mars Volta - Octahedron Dinosaur Jr - Farm
EAR PWR - Super Animal Brothers III Sonic Youth - The Eternal Future Of The Left - Travels With Myself And One Other
Little Boots - Hands Kasabian - West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum Placebo - Battle For The Sun
more album reviews
TOP ARTICLES NOW
COMMENT: Most Read Album Reviews: 2009 Q2

COMMENT: Michael Jackson dies: a first reaction

FESTIVAL PREVIEW: Latitude 2009

FESTIVAL PREVIEW: Field Day 2009

FESTIVAL PREVIEW: Glade Festival 2009

GIG: The Dead Weather: Jack White's latest supergroup hits London

ALBUM: Tinariwen: Imidiwan: Companions

ALBUM: La Roux: La Roux

ALBUM: The Duckworth Lewis Method: The Duckworth Lewis Method

RELATED ARTICLES
INTERVIEW:
Gwen Stefani

ALBUM:
Gwen Stefani - The Sweet Escape

ALBUM:
Gwen Stefani - Love Angel Music Baby

VIDEO:
Gwen Stefani - Luxurious

TRACK:
Gwen Stefani - Luxurious

TRACK:
Gwen Stefani - Cool

TRACK:
Gwen Stefani - Hollaback Girl

TRACK:
Gwen Stefani - Rich Girl

TRACK:
Gwen Stefani - What You Waiting For?

EXTERNAL LINKS
Gwen Stefani



  more album reviews...


Reading Festival tickets | Leeds Festival tickets
musicOMH
about us
contact us
copyright
home page
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Last.fm
MySpace
© 1999-2009 OMH