[b] Following their debut EP, No Words, Just a Picture of Me, in 2020, Remover released Teen Week's two singles—"Woodside Gardens 16 December 2012" and "52 Blue Mondays"—in 2020 and 2021, respectively.
It was positively received by Pitchfork, who considered it one of the best progressive pop albums of the year; The Line of Best Fit deemed it one of the best hyperpop releases of all time.
In early 2020, the American musician Jane Remover started to create digicore music,[4] and released their debut extended play (EP), No Words, Just a Picture of Me, in July 2020.
[8][11] It incorporates popular underground production elements, including bitcrushed and robotic vocals, breakbeats, breakcore sequences, and stuttering electronic instrumentals.
[14] A digicore song, "52 Blue Mondays" features multiple sound elements, such as samples of screaming, synthesizer waves, and snapping drums.
They sing the line "Sorry I'm not what you wanted, I know you can't try again" repeatedly, over an 8 bit instrumental reminiscent of an older Pokémon video game.
[1] The theme of adolescence is shown on the track, with the line "Go to college, have a shit time / I'll get a job and I won't be happy / But if you ask I'll say I'm fine".
Sundaresan wrote that Remover "has a strong ear for motion" and each track "push[es] this genre further from its roots towards something more complex, more definitvely of its own substance".
[1] The EP was included in Pitchfork's list of the "Best Progressive Pop Music" of the year; Cat Zhang called it "an explosive ride through adolescence".