Long Hiatus, Clear Identity
Dogstar returned after a long break, rebuilding as the tight trio of
Bret Domrose,
Keanu Reeves, and
Robert Mailhouse. The reunion frames their identity now: unpretentious alt rock with clear hooks, steady grooves, and lyrics that look back without getting stuck in the past.
Songs Likely in the Mix
Expect a focus on the 2023 record
Somewhere Between the Power Lines and Palm Trees, with likely spins through
Everything Turns Around,
Breach,
Glimmer, and
Lily. Crowds skew mixed in age, with longtime 90s fans shoulder to shoulder with newer listeners who discovered the band through the bass player but stay for the songs. You will see calm head-nods up front, phones down during quieter verses, and warm singalongs when a chorus lands. Trivia: the name comes from Sirius, the Dog Star, and the group first cut its teeth at low-key Los Angeles benefits before pressing anything to disc. Note: the setlist and staging notes below are informed guesses from recent runs and could shift by city.
Dogstar Crowd, Threads, and Rituals
Low-Key Style, Shared Focus
The scene feels relaxed and neighborly, with vintage tees, flannels at the waist, black denim, and worn boots showing up more than fashion experiments. You will hear quick bursts of chorus lines between songs—especially the hook from
Everything Turns Around—but chatter drops as soon as the count-off hits.
Little Rituals, Big Respect
Merch leans into the comeback era, with palm-tree and power-line motifs and a clean, beach-sunset palette on shirts, hats, and a small-run poster. Longtime fans swap stories about 90s gigs while newer faces compare notes on bass tone and pedal choices, and everyone seems fine giving each other space. Pre-show playlists tilt toward 90s alt and dreamier indie, which sets a steady tempo before the band takes over. After the bow, the room exits unhurried, with people trading favorite song moments rather than chasing selfies.
How Dogstar Sounds When It Counts
Tight Pocket, Open Bridges
Live,
Bret Domrose sings in a warm, slightly rough tone, and phrases verses with space so the words carry.
Keanu Reeves holds the center with simple, driving bass lines, often picked for extra attack and a mild growl that thickens the guitars.
Robert Mailhouse favors kick-snare patterns that sit right in the middle, keeping tempos steady while opening room for guitar textures.
Music First, Lights Second
Arrangements keep verse-chorus shapes tight, but bridges tend to open up, with the guitar riding delay while the rhythm section drops to half-time before the final push. A small but telling detail: newer songs are sometimes played a half-step lower live to sit more comfortably in the vocal range and add warmth to the guitars. Lighting is understated, with amber and blue washes that trace the mood, so the ear stays on tone, pocket, and the way bass, drums, and guitar interlock.
If You Like Dogstar, You'll Get This
Overlapping Sounds and Crowds
Fans of
Bush tend to connect with the same mix of grit and gloss, where guitars crunch but choruses stay clean.
Third Eye Blind draws a crowd that loves melodic, guitar-front pop-rock and long, cathartic refrains, which fits this show's sing-along moments.
Where Hooks Meet Grit
If jangly mid-tempo songs are your lane,
Gin Blossoms hit a similar sweet spot with chiming guitars and wistful hooks. For punchy, straight-ahead alt with honest storytelling,
Everclear overlaps on drive and subject matter. Each of these acts balances radio-ready structure with the live looseness that lets a bridge stretch or a groove breathe. If you move easily between these catalogs, you will likely feel at home when
Dogstar locks into a tight pocket and lets a chorus bloom.