For all your copy and pasting needs!!!
Stereogum:
"The happiest, most pure moment of music this year... Based on these five minutes, I'd follow Terror Pigeon! blindly to the ends of the earth."
Noisey:
"So goddamn catchy and anthemic"
New York Mag:
“It’s nearly impossible to stand on the sidelines of a Terror Pigeon Dance Revolt! Show. Well it’s possible, but you’d be missing the very reason people come: to be part of the sweaty disco pileup.”
Pitchfork:
“The Terror Pigeon Dance Revolt! have caused a stir closer to home with their high-energy gigs and ridiculous costuming”
NY Times:
"It used to be that Moby was the artist people thought of when the words innovative and hip were applied to a musician who had sprung from the corridors of SUNY Purchase. But Terror Pigeon Dance Revolt! — a revolving band of musical party-throwers signed to David Byrne’s Luaka Bop record label — are racking up a string of much-hyped shows around Manhattan and Brooklyn."
Papermag:
"the performance art party band to end all performance art party bands."
Clash Magazine (UK)
"Genius." (9/10 review)
Pop Matters:
“These guys were concerned with nothing but a positive message and having a good time; a massive amount of relief of bands taking themselves extremely seriously.”
The Onion AV Club:
"The band approaches its mix of flailing synth-pop, performance-art, and crowd participation with an abandon that should be admired rather than mocked."
Vice:
"...everything worthy of a band known for memorable performance-art-led, costume-fuelled, all-singing-all-dancing extravaganzas"
Tampa Bay Times:
"Going to a Terror Pigeon show isn’t about watching a band play live; it’s about strangers coming together to share an evening dancing, singing and reveling like there’s no tomorrow."
Orlando Weekly:
"You may never witness a more interactive live show than a performance by New York’s Terror Pigeon Dance Revolt. Their shows are unchained dance parties that shatter the separation between performer and audience."
Creative Loafing Tampa:
"...a traveling dance party with the goal of involving their audiences in on their fun and getting the normally stone-faced indie statues crowd to break out of their molds."
IndieRockReviews:
"Nothing can honestly prepare you for Terror Pigeon Dance Revolt. Imagine if Gwar and Fraggle Rock had an incestuous relationship and you had to deliver the baby amidst all your friends having a pillow fight."
Charleston City Paper:
"...[they] aren't reinvigorating synth-pop or indie-rock, but rather marrying the two with avant garde, open-arm party spectacles."
Greenshoelace:
"The Terror Pigeon Dance Revolt!’s debut LP off Luaka Bop records is sure to crack open the party in your pocket and release the dusty disco ball in your chest."
Factory Made Future:
"...ADD-powered live performances that have left quite a few people out of breath and sweating by the time they finish playing their set."
Consequence Of Sound:
"They weren’t messing around when they called it Have the Best Day of Your Life!"
Limewire:
"a group of likeminded musical compatriots jamming on a hodgepodge of electronic and acoustic instruments, chanting in unison and generally sounding like they’re having a grand old time."
INK 19:
"...for a half-hour I got to let loose and photograph one of the most interesting groups of people I had ever met."
Phoenix New Times:
'While it's not a requirement to cover your face in paint or glue on jewels or ribbons to your forehead, just think about how AWESOME it would be if all the attendees did it...just a thought."
The New Gay:
"Terror Pigeon Dance Revolt are making music to get you through tough times, and hell with the economy and job market down everyone needs a pick me up."
Creative Loafing Charlotte: "...soul-disco with a Zappa affliction"
The Free Lance-Star: "...Terror Pigeon Dance Revolt will leave you feeling its touch in both your heart and your feet."
Austin Town Hall: "It’s like taking Broken Social Scene and making them throw a party with Los Campesinos, which really isn’t a bad thing now is it? "
The Deli: "the band...produces songs fueled with excitement, and choruses that sound like dance-inducing war cries."