|
"Occasionally during her 70-minute set the Canadian teen pumped her fist - along with the screaming legion of necktied tweenage Avrilutionaries - or kicked out her leg and strolled around the stage. But she rarely bobbed her head in time to the music, swung her rigid hips or did anything that could remotely be called dancing."
— The Boston Herald, 5/17/03, Pg. 026
"The Avrilution must go on. Until it dries up and blows away, of course."
— Washington Post, 5/7/03
"Liz Phair, Avrilutionary ...
Can you think of 10 women with more indie-rock credibility than Liz Phair?"
— The Courier-Journal, 4/26/03, Pg. 5S
"The first headlining tour in her short but illustrious career is scheduled to stop at the Tacoma Dome on Monday, and local Avrilutionaries - as one popular fan site has dubbed her followers - are hoping to get more than the brief glimpse they got during Lavigne's last Dome stop in December."
— The News Tribune, 4/25/03, Pg 03
"Or, to put it in terms that might be clearer to the crowd of young "avrilutionaries" who dressed like their heroine in skinny ties, tank tops and olive combat fatigues: Lavigne rocked my world."
— Chicago Sun-Times, 4/21/03, Pg. 54
"She donned an acoustic guitar for a few tunes to make a show of being, you know, a musician, and she proved her solidarity with her following of largely pre-teen, self-described "avrilutionaries" by pulling two kids out of the audience to sing along on "Complicated."
— Chicago Sun-Times, 4/18/03, Pg. 5
|