"Hollaback Girl" | ||||
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Song by Gwen Stefani | ||||
from the album Love. Angel. Music. Baby. | ||||
Written | 2000 - 2002 | |||
Released | May 14, 2004 (Promotional Single February 8, 2005 (US Single) | |||
Recorded | 2003 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:19 | |||
Label | Interscope | |||
Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) | The Neptunes | |||
Gwen Stefani singles chronology | ||||
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"Hollaback Girl" is the third single off American singer Gwen Stefani's first solo studio album Love. Angel. Music. Baby. The song was released on February 8, 2005. the son g priemre dht epromotional single in 2004
While writing the song, Stefani and Pharrell Williams discussed about writing a song on her intentions for pursuing a solo career. Stefani then said that the album was missing an "attitude song", and she remembered a negative comment that musician Courtney Love had said about her in an interview with magazine Seventeen.[1]
Stefani then responded to Love's comment in the March 2005 issue of the NME:
On the Billboard charts, "Hollaback Girl" was able to peak at #1 on Hot 100,[3] #1 on the Pop 100,[4] #8 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs,[5] #15 on the Hot Dance Club Play,[6] and #18 on the Adult Pop Songs charts.[7] In 2006, the song was nominated for a Grammy Award in the categories of Best Female Pop Vocal Performance and Record of the Year.[8]
Weekly charts[change | change source]
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The music video for "Hollaback Girl" was directed by Paul Hunter and filmed in January 2005. the Van Nuys and Reseda neighborhoods of Los Angeles, California. It opens with a scene of Stefani taking a picture of her four Harajuku Girls, when a crowd of students appears. Stefani and the Harajuku Girls then drive down Sherman Way past Magnolia Science Academy to Birmingham High School in a 1961 Chevrolet Impala, accompanied by the crowd. Stefani and the group cause a commotion when they disrupt a football game by walking onto the field and when they go to a 99 Cents Only Store and throw cereal and other food products down an aisle. Throughout the video, there are intercut sequences of choreographed dancing filmed in a sound stage, intended to represent Stefani's imagination. Stefani and the Harajuku Girls are outfitted in cheerleading uniforms, accompanied by several Californian spirit groups: the Orange Crush All Stars, a cheerleading squad from Orange County; a marching band from Fountain Valley High School in Fountain Valley; a pep flag team named the Carson High School Flaggies from Carson; and a drill team from Stephen M. White Middle School in Carson. To visualize the song's bridge, the Harajuku Girls spell the word "bananas" with cue cards. The video ends with a close-up frame of Stefani with her arms in the air.
The Chevy Impala convertible from the video includes a painting by artist J. Martin.The design includes Stefani as seen on the album cover of Love. Angel. Music. Baby. with the words "Hollaback Girl" in calligraphy. The car was, eventually, sold on eBay. Pharrell, one of the song's co-producers, makes a cameo appearance. The complete version of "Hollaback Girl" featured in the music video was released commercially through CD singles and digital downloads. Some include remixes by Diplo and former No Doubt bandmate Tony Kanal.