$12 in advance, $15 at the door, tickets at Leo’s Videos and Habitat.
Here's a bunch of words to describe
Julie Doiron: happy, positive, hopeful, excited, and especially, rocking. Yes, you're reading that right. In the past, people were used to reading things like sad, quiet, acoustic, thoughtful, and reflective. That all changes with her new disc, "I Can Wonder What You Did With Your Day". Meet the new Julie Doiron.
"I'm more positive, for sure," she laughs, from her home in Montreal. "I guess it's because I'm happy, pretty much...maybe...finally. I think that I finally figured out how to move around a little easier in the world. I feel a lot happier, and if things aren't going as well, I try to change it. Maybe that's why. I just was starting to write happier
songs, 'cause it feels like a new chapter in my life."
Originating in Canada,
Dog Day is a quartet -two girls and two boys- of those that inspire so much energy to their songs that these finish for being inflamed in our ears. Theirs they are positions in that already distant creative explosion of the indie-rock one American of ends of the 80, that that was convinced to itself, and to millions of fans in all the planet, that two guitars sufficed, low, battery, good voices and ideas to shake fossilized structures. And they comply with all and each one of the requirements, so by force they shake.