Search - Artist/Band: Julie Doiron

Artist Info

  • Name: Julie Doiron
  • Birthday: 06/28/1972
  • Birth Place: Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada
  • Decades Active: 2000
  • Genre: Rock
  • Styles: Alternative/Indie Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative Singer/Songwriter, Sadcore, French, Western European Traditions, Lo-Fi
  • Moods: Bittersweet, Intimate, Melancholy, Precious, Reflective, Autumnal, Brooding, Delicate, Sad, Wistful

Albums

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  • I Can Wonder What You Did with Your Day W
  • 03/10/2009
  • Woke Myself Up W
  • 01/23/2007
  • Goodnight Nobody W
  • 09/07/2004
  • Desormais/Heart & Crime W
  • 10/13/2003
  • Julie Doiron & Wooden Stars/Will You Still Love Me EP W
  • 10/13/2003
  • Julie Doiron/Okkervil River W
  • 06/17/2003
  • Broken Girl [Bonus Tracks] WA
  • 04/22/2003
  • Desormais WA
  • 08/09/2001
  • Heart and Crime WA
  • 2001
  • Julie Doiron and the Wooden Stars WA
  • 02/01/2000
  • Loneliest in the Morning WA
  • 08/26/1997
  • Broken Girl WA
  • 1996

    Individual Bio

    Julie Doiron began her musical career in 1990, singing and playing bass for the Canadian indie rock band Eric's Trip. As the group released numerous EPs and three albums for Sub Pop, Doiron also began writing her own largely acoustic material. When Eric's Trip broke up in 1996, she released an album under the name Broken Girl on Sappy Records, her own label. Later that year, Doiron worked on her second album, Loneliest in the Morning, which came out on Sub Pop and was recorded with prominent indie rock producers and musicians like Doug Easley, Davis McCain, Giant Sand's Howie Gelb, and the Grifters' Dave Shouse. Doiron moved to Tree Records for her next release, 1999's EP Will You Still Love Me?; a collaboration with Canadian indie rockers the Wooden Stars followed in early 2000. Julie Doiron and the Wooden Stars won that year's Juno -- Canada's equivalent of a Grammy Award -- for Best Independently Released Album. Doiron moved to Jagjaguwar for 2001's Desormais and the following year's Heart and Crime; the label also reissued Will You Still Love Me? and Julie Doiron and the Wooden Stars in 2002 with some multimedia extras. The following year, she collaborated on a split album with Okkervil River for Acuarela Records, and 2004 saw the release of Goodnight Nobody. Former Eric's Trip member Rick White produced Doiron's 2007 album Woke Myself Up, as well as her 2009 release I Can Wonder What You Did with Your Day. In between, Doiron found time to work with Phil Elvrum on his 2008 Mount Eerie excursion, Lost Wisdom. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide