Julez and the Rollerz have today released their new album titled ‘Dirty Little Rock N’ Roller’ via Lollipop Records. Every few months another band strolls in wearing vintage leather jackets and claiming rock and roll is back. Most of them sound like they bought their personality from a thrift store. Julez and the Rollerz avoid that trap with ‘Dirty Little Rock N’ Roller’, an album that actually feels alive instead of carefully curated for social media nostalgia. It has swagger without smelling like cosplay, and it understands that great hooks still matter just as much as ripped fishnets and loud amplifiers.
The record thrives because it never mistakes volume for excitement. Every song has a purpose beyond simply making as much noise as possible. Glam attitude crashes into gritty punk energy while sharp melodies sneak into your brain before you realize what happened. The result is an album that feels reckless in all the right ways while remaining surprisingly focused. It is the musical equivalent of showing up fashionably late and somehow stealing the whole party without even trying.
Jules Batterman leads the charge with the kind of vocal performance that knows exactly when to snarl and when to let vulnerability slip through the cracks. That balance gives the album its emotional weight. The band sounds locked in behind her, pushing every chorus higher without crowding the spotlight. It is refreshing to hear chemistry that feels earned instead of assembled in a rehearsal room five minutes before recording.
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The Deep Dive with Jammerzine: ‘Dirty Little Rock ‘N’ Roller’ by Julez and the Rollerz
Jammer AI (JAI)
21:03
One of the album’s biggest strengths is its willingness to embrace growth without sanding off its rough edges. ‘Dirty Little Rock N’ Roller’ acknowledges that growing older does not automatically mean growing boring. The songs wrestle with change, uncertainty, and self awareness while still sounding like they would happily knock over a stack of amplifiers on the way out. That tension gives the record far more staying power than another collection of empty rock clichés pretending it is still 1977.
Fans of modern rock who have grown tired of endless imitation should find plenty to enjoy here. Even ‘Call Me Up’, which previously hinted at this direction, feels completely at home among the newer material, proving it was less of an outlier and more of an early warning that Julez and the Rollerz were leveling up. Every track reinforces the feeling that the band has figured out exactly who they want to be without sacrificing the unpredictability that made them exciting in the first place.
‘Dirty Little Rock N’ Roller’ is the kind of album that reminds you rock music does not need saving. It just needs bands willing to stop treating the past like a museum exhibit and start using it as fuel for something fresh. Julez and the Rollerz have delivered a record packed with attitude, memorable songwriting, and enough personality to embarrass a dozen copycats. The underground has been paying attention for a while now. Everyone else is simply running late.
About Julez and the Rollerz
Formed in 2021 by Jules with a rotating lineup of collaborators, Julez and the Rollerz quickly carved out a presence in the Los Angeles underground scene with their high-energy live shows and genre-blurring early material. Their one-off single “Call Me Up”, released in 2025 and also appearing on the new album, marked a turning point, hinting at a sharper and more defined sonic direction that now fully materializes on Dirty Little Rock ‘N’ Roller.
If earlier releases captured the chaos of youth and late nights, this album captures what comes after, the clarity, the doubt and the strange beauty of realizing you’re no longer the same person you were when you started. With Dirty Little Rock ‘N’ Roller, Julez and the Rollerz prove they’re not just playing dress-up in rock nostalgia. They’re evolving in real time and fully aware of the irony but committed to the music anyway.
Julez and the Rollerz, currently signed to Lolipop Records, are a rising all-women, glam-grunge powerhouse carving out their own lane in the modern rock landscape.
Fronted by the magnetic vocalist/guitarist Jules Batterman, the band blends glam-rock style and energy, punk ferocity, and hook-driven songwriting into a sound that feels both nostalgic and unmistakably new.
The group’s lineup features Morgyn Payge on bass, Shea Carothers on synth, and Sarah “Spark” Park on drums, creating a dynamic rhythm section that fuels Julez’s commanding vocals and storytelling. Together, they form a tight-knit, down-to-earth collective whose chemistry translates effortlessly from studio to stage.
On stage, Julez and the Rollerz radiate confidence and charisma, balancing theatrical glam with authentic connection. Each performance is a storm of emotion and empowerment, earning them a devoted following and a growing reputation as one of L.A.’s most exciting live acts.
As they continue to rise within Los Angeles’s rock scene and beyond, Julez and the Rollerz are redefining what it means to bring sincerity, power, and unapologetic femininity back to the forefront of rock and roll.
Featured image by Zach Adams.
LINKS:
https://www.julezandtherollerz.com/
https://instagram.com/julezandtherollerz
https://www.youtube.com/@julezandtherollerz
https://open.spotify.com/artist/4m5JKZ8aG68MAApXuhpTiU
