Album DescriptionAvailable in:
The Sweet Escape —en español: El dulce escape— es el segundo álbum de estudio de la cantante estadounidense Gwen Stefani, publicado originalmente el 1 de diciembre de 2006 por la compañía discográfica Interscope Records. Tras haber pensado inicialmente volver con la banda No Doubt después de su álbum debut solista, Love. Angel. Music. Baby. (2004), Stefani decidió grabar un segundo disco, como una forma de publicar parte del material sobrante de las sesiones de LAMB. La portada fue tomada por la fotógrafa Jill Greenberg, la cual está inspirada por el personaje Elvira Hancock, interpretada por la actriz estadounidense Michelle Pfeiffer en la película Scarface (1983).
User Album Review
Everyone’s favourite hollaback girl is back! Gwen’s second solo album, Sweet Escape opens with “Wind it Up”, sampling the Sound of Music’s “Lonely Goat Herd”, singing about being a girl, and exactly why boys adore them. Suddenly you realise you’ve missed having Ms Stefani in your life.
A mistress of the synthetic sound, with lyrics that allude to smart girlie conversations over a cuppa, Gwen’s taken all the big hitters, ranging from Nellee Hooper to Keane’s Tim Rice-Oakley to contribute. She’s mixed them all up, soaking up trends that ensure she’s played in all the gyms and Topshops nationwide, but she’s not letting anyone take over. She’s big enough for all of them.
Topics span apologising for being grumpy (“The Sweet Escape”) men who lie, making her cry (the Cardigans-esque “Early Winter”), and being an unremarkable small town girl, a la J Lo (“Orange County girl”). As with her first album there are a few bland fillers, and she seems to lose her way a bit with “Breakin’ up”, a track about frustrating mobile conversations, but there’s enough trademark majorette drumming to carry the album off. “Yummy” sums her up, coquettish, amusing, annoying and hip wiggling in equal measure. All this and a new baby. Not bad.
External Album Reviews
None...
User Comments