Sputterdoll played Warped Tour’s Shiragirls stage in 2005. They played The Pound — a great rock club out of horror movie central casting on Pier 96 — with Plain White T’s before Plain White T’s churned out a national hit. Of course, rocking DNA Lounge is part of her local lore. Unfortunately, pursuing music caused her to clash with her parents. She eventually worked three jobs to support herself, all while trying to keep her music dreams alive.
Once Killian became a certified musical veteran, she noticed her contemporaries in the Bay Area’s music scene mostly moved on or moved out. Teens in Trouble was born from a need to be independent and active, but she was twisting in the wind, and the project immediately stalled.
“My brain was so focused on work, that I didn’t know how to write songs anymore. At least, that’s what it felt like,” she says. “There was a point in 2017 where I was like, ‘Maybe that’s it for me. I guess I’m done with music or something.’”
Killian loves to bet on herself, though, and music is her gamble of choice. So in 2022, she doubled-down, asserting herself as a songwriter and performer, launching Teens in Trouble in earnest. Killian’s D.I.Y.-ethos meshes well with the label that signed her. San Jose’s Asian Man Records is Mike Park’s long-running operation out of his mom’s South Bay garage. That support energized Lizzie to assemble musicians to fully realize Teens in Trouble under her guidance.
Despite moving to Raleigh, North Carolina right before the pandemic, Killian’s Bay Area network has been key to her momentum for What’s Mine, recorded at District Recording in San Jose.
A slew of music videos with her best friend, director and cinematographer Aja Pop (another San Francisco Filipina), have amplified Teens in Trouble’s presence in the Bay and beyond. The visuals for the singles on What’s Mine — “You Don’t Want to Mess with Me,” “Playlist” and “It’s Up To Me” — all feature Aja Pop’s quirky and dreamy creative signature, inspired by French filmmaker’s Michel Gondry’s work with The White Stripes, and bolster Teens in Trouble’s proper arrival.
“I was not at all surprised that [Lizzie] figured it out, and got her act together — so to speak — to make this project happen,” says Pop. “I encourage all my friends to get their act together literally and figuratively because once you got that, that’s a sign of self-love.”