Teen Jesus and the Jean Teasers' rise to fame began when four 15-year-old friends from Canberra started a rock band after watching the Richard Linklater film "School of Rock" at a sleepover. The name 'Teen Jesus and the Jean Teasers' was suggested by one of their uncles, which stuck.
The teenagers had enough punk brio that they were soon being booked to play venues they weren't old enough to enter without chaperones. Their parents would often accompany them to shows and even had lemonade on their rider. The four friends thought they were cool at the time but looking back now it's quite strange.
As they got bigger, they still felt impostor syndrome; when huge crowds lined up to see Teen Jesus play at Brisbane's Bigsound in 2018, Anna Ryan was like "what are they lining up for? Who is playing after us?" The band's EP Pretty Good for a Girl Band was named for the backhanded praise they often heard.
The title was meant to be ironic but people would come up and say that they were actually pretty good. Their debut album I Love You showed more polish with singles like Salt and Ahhhh winning best breakthrough artist at the Aria awards.
They opened for the Foo Fighters on their Australian tour, which marked a huge milestone for the band. "Our managers called us and said 'Guess who's playing with the Foo Fighters?'" Scarlett McKahey recalled. The band had to treat Dave Grohl as a regular person, as otherwise they'd throw up.
The transition from being four friends in a high school band to a professional band was delicate but none of them could imagine anything else. They all speak their own language and know each other so well that they can read each other's emotions when touring.
Teen Jesus and the Jean Teasers' new album Glory is out on 7 November. The band wishes you got what you give by New Radicals as the opening credits song if your life was a movie, and Pump It by the Black Eyed Peas as their go-to karaoke jam.
				
			The teenagers had enough punk brio that they were soon being booked to play venues they weren't old enough to enter without chaperones. Their parents would often accompany them to shows and even had lemonade on their rider. The four friends thought they were cool at the time but looking back now it's quite strange.
As they got bigger, they still felt impostor syndrome; when huge crowds lined up to see Teen Jesus play at Brisbane's Bigsound in 2018, Anna Ryan was like "what are they lining up for? Who is playing after us?" The band's EP Pretty Good for a Girl Band was named for the backhanded praise they often heard.
The title was meant to be ironic but people would come up and say that they were actually pretty good. Their debut album I Love You showed more polish with singles like Salt and Ahhhh winning best breakthrough artist at the Aria awards.
They opened for the Foo Fighters on their Australian tour, which marked a huge milestone for the band. "Our managers called us and said 'Guess who's playing with the Foo Fighters?'" Scarlett McKahey recalled. The band had to treat Dave Grohl as a regular person, as otherwise they'd throw up.
The transition from being four friends in a high school band to a professional band was delicate but none of them could imagine anything else. They all speak their own language and know each other so well that they can read each other's emotions when touring.
Teen Jesus and the Jean Teasers' new album Glory is out on 7 November. The band wishes you got what you give by New Radicals as the opening credits song if your life was a movie, and Pump It by the Black Eyed Peas as their go-to karaoke jam.