Gavin Rossdale could also be a Grammy-nominated rockstar, however he’s not afraid to confess that he’s not the most effective musician in his family.
“What occurs with me now in my home [is] they’ll play their songs — what they’re doing,” Rossdale, 59, completely advised Us Weekly of his kids on Monday, July 21, in celebration of I Beat Loneliness, BUSH’s tenth studio album, launched July 18.
“Kingston will try this — play a tremendous tune,” he continued. “Zuma has begun recording — he’s uncontrolled. I’m not even the most effective singer in my home anymore. It’s tremendous annoying.”
He added, “So, I take delight in listening to all the things they’re doing and never sharing something that I’m doing with them.”
Rossdale shares children Kingston, Zuma and Apollo together with his ex spouse and fellow singer Gwen Stefani. (The pair cut up in 2015 after 12 years of marriage.) He’s additionally dad to daughter Daisy from a earlier relationship.
Whereas thrilled about BUSH’s newest album, Rossdale advised Us that he doesn’t push his music on his kids.
“I’m actually cautious to not push,” he defined. “I’m their dad — father, not buddy.”
He continued, “Now, in the event that they uncover it independently, that’s when it’s, like, I don’t need it to suck.”

Gavin Rossdale of Bush performs at Little Caesars Enviornment on July 25, 2025 Scott Legato/Getty Pictures
As a substitute of “pushing” his new or earlier information on his kids, Rossdale advised Us he would moderately his kids “uncover it independently.”
“I’ve 4 children with actually good style — actually good style,” he gushed, earlier than admitting that he did ship his daughter, Daisy, the band’s new file.
“She goes, ‘Oh, no, we have already got it. It’s superb. Unimaginable. Thanks, it’s so good.’ However I don’t prefer to push it on the others,” he added of his extra kids. “I simply need ‘em to find it. It’s a lot better. After which I’m their dad. I’ve a unique job. I’m just like the man that makes certain they eat.”
Whereas Rossdale makes it a degree to simply be “dad” to his kids, he can’t preserve his iconic discography fully hidden from his household. Whereas not too long ago remixing his 1994 hit “Machine Head” in his at-home studio subsequent to his son Zuma’s room, he realized how a lot his kids do, actually, admire his music — effectively, at the least more often than not.
“So I put it collectively and my son Zuma got here in. He goes, ‘What you engaged on?’ I used to be like, ‘Test it out.’ And I did assume he’d be impressed,” he mentioned. “This is the reason I don’t do that stuff usually. So I performed it. I mentioned, ‘Yeah, simply put this collectively, no large.’ He goes — and he’s [giving] me the poo face — he goes, ‘You’re not placing that out, are you?’ I mentioned, ‘Nicely, I used to be pondering of it. Why, is there one thing notably fallacious with it?’ He goes, ‘‘Machine Head’ is famous. I dunno about that.’ After which left the room. Destroyed me. Killed me.”


