Gwen Stefani and No Doubt opened their Las Vegas Sphere residency Wednesday night. Stefani became the venue’s first female headliner in its history.
What We Know: No Doubt delivered a two-hour, 21-song set on Wednesday night. The band leaned heavily into their 1995 breakthrough album Tragic Kingdom, performing 10 of its 14 tracks. Additionally, the show featured fan favorites from Return of Saturn and Rock Steady. Foam oranges literally rained from the ceiling during Don’t Speak, a nod to the band’s Orange County roots.
What’s at Stake: The Sphere residency is a major moment for No Doubt’s legacy and relevance. Furthermore, it puts Stefani alongside U2, Dead & Company, and other marquee Sphere acts. The venue’s floor-to-ceiling visuals raise the bar for every artist who follows. Simply put, the production either elevates a band’s brand — or exposes its limitations.
What Remains Unclear: No formal announcement has addressed how long the residency will run. However, additional dates have bee announced. It’s unclear whether additional tour dates in other markets will follow. The band has not released new music in over a decade. Therefore, questions remain about whether this marks a full reunion or a limited engagement.
What It Means: Is this the next step for Gwen Stefani and No Doubt to cement themselves among rock’s all-time greats? Or is this simply Sphere searching for the next generation of marquee acts beyond Eagles, U2, and Metallica? Either way, No Doubt proved Wednesday that nostalgia still works when it’s done right. The Sphere gave the band’s catalog a new dimension, while Stefani reminded audiences why she remains a generational star. More importantly, it reinforced that female-led rock acts can still command the biggest stages in entertainment.
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David Hill serves as a Music Radio Editor, Columnist and Features writer for Barrett Media. A radio lifer with more than 30 years behind the mic, in the control room, and in the program director’s chair, David’s career spans influential stops at brands such as WIYY 98 Rock, WBAL-AM, and 99X. He has worked across multiple formats and ownership groups, including iHeartMedia and Cumulus Media, developing talent, breaking music, and navigating every major industry shift from diary to PPM and terrestrial dominance to streaming disruption. When he’s not writing or analyzing the industry, Dave runs The Tune Farm, a marketing firm built to help artists and brands grow audience the same way great radio always has—by creating connection, not just impressions. He can be reached at David@BarrettMedia.com.


