From browser-born to blown-out guitars
Jane Remover started in the online digicore world as
dltzk, then shifted to guitar-forward songwriting under her own name, and that change frames this run. The songs lean noisy and sweet, with fuzzed guitars on crisp programmed drums that nod to her bedroom-production roots. Expect anchors like
Cage Girl,
Royal Blue Walls,
Homeswitcher, and
Lips to land in the middle stretch.
Who shows up and what it sounds like
The crowd skews young but mixed, with thrifted layers, chipped nail polish in album colors, and film cameras clicking between songs. You also notice hyperpop kids next to shoegaze heads, trading earplugs and lyric theories without fuss. A small nugget: she built early tracks on a school laptop in FL Studio and carried those crunchy drum samples into newer arrangements. Another: early club sets blended DJ segues with live guitar, a habit she still uses to stitch one song into the next. These notes about selections and staging come from recent dates and public clips, so treat them as informed snapshots rather than fixed plans.
Jane Remover's Scene, Up Close
DIY polish, real care
The floor feels friendly and alert, with fans checking on each other when the push starts and using hand signals to cool it down. Style cues lean roomy and practical: baggy jorts, screen-printed tees, beat-up runners, and soft chains that do not snag in the pit. You hear pocket chants on drum count-ins and soft sing-backs on title phrases, then quiet as she drifts into a verse.
Small rituals that stick
Merch reads like a bedroom project, with zine-style booklets, CD-r graphics, and colorways tied to
Census Designated art. Between sets, groups trade camera flashes, share earplugs, and debate which cut from
frailty might sneak into the encore even if the mood stays guitar-first. The chatter carries clear respect for pronouns and space, and the energy feels like a friends-first club night more than a standoffish scene. By the end, you notice how many people linger to debrief mix choices, which says as much about the crowd as the show.
Jane Remover Live: Sound Before Spectacle
Guitars that hug the vocal
Onstage,
Jane Remover keeps the vocal slightly tucked into the guitars, letting the words ride the distortion instead of floating above it. The drummer nudges choruses a touch faster than the record, so hooks pop without losing the sigh in her phrasing. Arrangements favor two guitars trading textures, with one droning on open strings while the other sketches melody lines.
Little choices with big feel
She often reshapes intros by muting kick and bass for a verse, then slamming the full kit on the next pass for contrast. A small geek note: the band sometimes tunes a half-step down and uses a capo for sparkle, keeping chords bright while lowering the vocal range. Keys and backing tracks fill the high end when guitars step back, and simple blue-pink washes of light mirror those shifts. When a song needs room, she lets crashes ring and holds eye contact, turning a busy track into a slow-bloom moment.
If You Like Jane Remover, You Might Click With...
Shared DNA across scenes
Fans of
Glaive often chase the same tender melodies over clipped percussion here, though
Jane Remover brings heavier guitars.
underscores overlaps on diaristic writing and sound design that turns glitches into hooks. If you lean darker and hazier,
EKKSTACY rides a similar grayscale mood with a post-punk pulse. Guitar-forward digicore heads cross over with
quannnic, whose live shows favor the same loud-quiet crush.
Where overlap hits
These artists share DIY roots, internet pacing, and crowds who prize honesty over polish, which maps to what
Jane Remover aims for onstage. That overlap makes openers from this circle feel natural, and the room understands when a drop gives way to a noisy outro.