Jane Walker


During her time in the New Zealand music scene, Jane Walker was as much an iconoclast as Toy Love, the band in which she became well known. Apart from Clare Elliott – Zero in the Suburban Reptiles – there were very few female musicians in the early punk and post-punk bands.

Jane was not there for novelty or shock value, though she was unmissable in her thrown together, primary coloured, op-shop outfits. On stage, while all was chaos at the microphone, she was one of four musicians keeping the maelstrom together. Toy Love was the sum of its parts, each distinctive, but her clavinet gave the band a pop element that helped transport those great songs – credited to every member – beyond the post-punk audience.

Jane Walker and Paul Kean (obscured), October 1979
Photo credit: Simon Lynch
Mike Dooley, Paul Kean and Jane Walker in Sydney, early 1980
Photo credit: Photo by Carol Tippet
Jane Walker, Toy Love in the studio.
Photo credit: Murray Cammick
Jane Walker, Toy Love at Squeeze.
Photo credit: Murray Cammick
Toy Love: Paul Kean, Mike Dooley (rear), Jane Walker (front), Chris Knox and Alec Bathgate
Jane Walker and Mike Dooley, Toy Love, Willy's Wine Bar, Wellington, 27 August 1979.
Photo credit: Chris Bourke
Jane Walker in Christchurch in the early 1980s
Photo credit: Alec Bathgate
Jane Walker.
Photo credit: Peter Towers
Toy Love in Christchurch, outside the Gladstone, probably in October 1979: Chris Knox, Jane Walker, Paul Kean, Mike Dooley and Alec Bathgate.

Funded by

Partners with