Critics have described their debut EP, "Cheap Thrills & Broken Zippers," as “the sound of a generation that forgot how to have fun finally remembering it’s okay to bleed a little on the dance floor.”
When we talk about the great all-female rock bands of the 1970s, names like The Runaways, Fanny, and The Go-Go’s rightly get the spotlight. But nestled in that timeline, raw, loud, and criminally underrated, was a band called .
And as Nylon Jane walked out into the world, she knew that she would never be the same again. She was a work of art, woven from the very threads of life itself.
Critics have described their debut EP, "Cheap Thrills & Broken Zippers," as “the sound of a generation that forgot how to have fun finally remembering it’s okay to bleed a little on the dance floor.”
When we talk about the great all-female rock bands of the 1970s, names like The Runaways, Fanny, and The Go-Go’s rightly get the spotlight. But nestled in that timeline, raw, loud, and criminally underrated, was a band called .
And as Nylon Jane walked out into the world, she knew that she would never be the same again. She was a work of art, woven from the very threads of life itself.