Stop Missing Shows

Honey Revenge in Dallas

680 users on tonedeaf are tracking Honey Revenge

Never miss another Honey Revenge show near Dallas.

Honey Revenge
House of Blues Dallas — Dallas, TX

Honey Revenge emerged from the underground electronic scene with a sound that treats sweetness like a weapon. Their early releases combined saccharine synth work with genuinely unsettling vocals and production choices, creating a disorienting experience that felt intentional rather than accidental. The project pivots between lulling you into false comfort with warm, almost K-pop adjacent production on tracks like Digital Honey, then pivoting hard into industrial textures and distorted vocals that suggest something darker underneath. What's notable is how deliberate this tonal whiplash feels—not a flaw but a statement about expectations and aesthetic safety. Fans describe the work as catchy in ways that feel slightly wrong, like listening to a pop song through corrupted audio. The name itself suggests this duality: something that sounds pleasant but has bite. Recent work has leaned harder into this tension, with Revenge Protocol becoming an underground talking point for its refusal to settle into any single sonic lane.

Small venue crowds get visibly uncomfortable in the best way—people come for the curiosity and end up fixed in place. The shows are controlled and deliberate rather than chaotic. Fans stand more than dance. There's a sense that one wrong move would break the spell.

Known for Digital Honey, Revenge Protocol, Synthetic Sting, Neon Apology, Bitter Sweet Frequency

Honey Revenge brought their particular brand of emotional transparency to Trees in July 2025, running through twenty songs that felt less like a greatest hits tour and more like getting let in on something private. The Dallas crowd got the full spectrum—the tense buildup of 'Risk' early on, the bruised honesty of 'Loving and Losing' mid-set, and the deceptively casual sting of 'Airhead' as things wound down. They closed with 'Counting Worms,' which is exactly the kind of unsettling choice that suggests they know what they're doing. It was the sort of show that sticks with you because nothing felt forced.

Dallas has always had a soft spot for acts that don't need to shout to be heard. The city's indie and alternative circles tend toward the introspective—bands and artists who understand that vulnerability and technical precision aren't mutually exclusive. Honey Revenge fits that lineage naturally, their confessional songwriting finding purchase in a market that's learned to appreciate restraint and specificity over spectacle.

Stay in Uptown or the Design District — both have actual walkability and better restaurants than most of the city. Hit Uchi for inventive Japanese food before the show, or Mister Charles for French-leaning bistro cooking. Spend an afternoon in the Nasher Sculpture Center if you want something quieter; it's genuinely good and way less crowded than you'd expect. Deep Ellum's worth walking through for the murals and general vibe, though keep expectations modest. The Sixth Floor Museum covers JFK's assassination if you want something weightier. Catch drinks somewhere in Bishop Arts before heading to the venue.

Stop missing shows.

tonedeaf. reads your music library and emails you when artists you actually listen to have shows near Dallas. No app. No ads. No noise.

Sign Up Free