underscores— How are you doing?
Jane Remover— I’m doing pretty good, how are you doing?
underscores— Chilling, this is fire. We’re having an Olivia-Rodrigo-Phoebe-Bridgers-interview moment. But I think we’re both Olivia Rodrigo.
Jane Remover— I don’t think either of us are Phoebe, both of us are Olivia for sure.
underscores— Love to Phoebe, though.
Jane Remover— For sure. How’s your tour been? I know that you're currently on the road on the Hometown Tour.
underscores— It's been really fun so far, we’re about a third of the way through. I really wanted it to feel like it was super high effort vibes for a small show, so hopefully that comes across. But I’ve been having trouble seeing the guitar while I’m on stage. That’s been the only bummer. What about you, are you doing any live shows soon?
Jane Remover— Not that I know of, no. Sort of on pause with that, not for too long though. I’m excited to get back at it again, I found touring really rewarding, so I’m looking forward.
underscores— Something I’m really curious about is how you’d translate Census Designated into a live setting. What would that look like?
Jane Remover— I would wanna have a band, and then some kind of granulizer machine with me on stage that I could play with.
underscores— Oh, that's sick!
Jane Remover— I know, right? I mean if we can, we can, if we can’t, we can’t and that’s okay. It would just be the band and I with my machine and then…. I don’t know how much I can talk about it actually, I might need to keep this off the record….
underscores— That’s fire. I really liked the setup you had for the brakence tour; it was guitar, vocals, and noise. You’ve really hit this really crazy pocket that I don’t think anyone else can really claim where you’ve made these super pastoral and beautiful rock songs and, at the same time, they’ve got all of this insanely detailed and thoughtful noise woven throughout the whole project.
Jane Remover— Hell yeah, I appreciate it.
underscores— I want to hear more about the differences in the production process for Census Designated versus, like, the stuff you’ve been putting out in the past though, because they're two very different sonic palettes.
Jane Remover— I found that the songwriting took a lot more tries for the recent album. I think the only one that didn't go through any revisions was Lips.
I knew that I didn't really want to do the whole chiptune, bitcrushed guitar, pop route. This time around, I just wanted everything to be a little more serious, whatever that means. I told myself from the beginning, that every album I do should be in a different genre or style. So this is the noise rock album, I guess. But I guess the next one will be something completely different.
underscores— That’s cool, I think it’s interesting how a lot of the hints of new styles you were playing with in your earlier work almost metamorphosed into Census.
Jane Remover— What about you! I’m interested in Wallsocket’s connection to horror; the “final girl,” the dark color grading in the music videos, the body-horror imagery in our song “Uncanny long arms” and “Horror movie soundtrack.” Were there any horror movie influences in your mental Pinterest boards for this project?
underscores— Yeah, totally. Especially the ones that are centered in a pastoral, American setting. I think there's something really beautiful about the medium of horror films. The whole goal of the genre is to scare people. And if you're making a horror movie, you wanna scare the most people. And the people that are gonna be the most scared are, like, the upper-middle class. You know, the comfortable kind of two-car situation. And that's why you see in slashers, for example, they're always running through these pseudo-extravagant McMansions and stuff like that. These horror class implications were like something I definitely wanted to include, just because I wanted to poke at the upper-middle class sphere that I grew up in.
But I also think I was inspired by movies like Texas Chainsaw Massacre or Bones and All where they focus on the beauty of these pockets of America that are just, like, super empty and wide. It also came from me traveling, being like, “Oh, it's kinda beautiful here.” So just seeing new places was a huge part of it, too.