

A generational voice in hyperpop and shoegaze who chronicles digital-age anxiety with raw, genre-blurring soundscapes.
Emerging from the online DIY ferment of the early 2020s, Jane Remover quickly proved to be more than a digicore prodigy. Their 2021 debut album 'Frailty' was a seismic event, a hyperpop-inflected diary entry that captured the dizzying dissonance of adolescence with startling clarity and digital distortion. But Remover refused to be pigeonholed. Coming out as transgender became a catalyst for even bolder artistic exploration. 2023's 'Census Designated' was a stark, gripping left turn into dense shoegaze and post-rock, inspired by a harrowing near-death experience and weaving a narrative of survival and identity. With each release, Remover dismantles expectations, using production not just as a tool but as the very language of their storytelling. They represent a new archetype: the auteur producer-songwriter whose work is a direct, unfiltered transmission from the front lines of modern youth.
1997–2012
Born into smartphones, social media, and school shootings. The most diverse generation in history. Pragmatic about money, fluid about identity, anxious about the climate. They do not remember a world before the internet.
Jane was born in 2003, placing them squarely in the Generation Z. The events that shaped this generation — social media, climate anxiety, and a pandemic — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 2003
#1 Movie
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
Best Picture
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
#1 TV Show
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
The world at every milestone
US invades Iraq; Human Genome Project completed
Barack Obama elected first Black US president; financial crisis
Donald Trump elected president; Brexit vote
First image of a black hole; Hong Kong protests
January 6 Capitol breach; COVID vaccines roll out globally
AI reshapes industries; Paris Olympics
They initially gained attention online under the name 'dltzk'.
Jane Remover's album 'Census Designated' was partly inspired by a car accident they survived.
They have cited artists like My Bloody Valentine and Have a Nice Life as major influences on their later work.
“I recorded my first album in my bedroom with a laptop and a cheap microphone.”