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Honey Revenge in Los Angeles

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Honey Revenge
The Belasco — Los Angeles, CA

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 sharp, anxious pop to the Wiltern in February 2026, a venue that's seen enough genre-shifting acts to know quality when it walks through the door. The setlist leaned into their catalog's darker corners—"Seeing Negative (Disappointment)" and "Poison Apple Baby" cut deeper than the opener "Risk" suggested, while "Habitual" and "Worst Apology" hit like songs that know exactly what they're about. There's something about LA crowds that makes them patient enough for the slower burns, and Honey Revenge used that space well. The 11-song set felt lean but deliberate, closing on "Airhead" in a way that suggested they're more interested in the specific than the spectacular.

Los Angeles has always been big enough to hold multiple scenes at once, and that's where Honey Revenge fits—too smart and too anxious for straight pop radio, too catchy for the art-rock underground. The city's indie venues and mid-sized theaters have become increasingly comfortable with artists who split the difference, who make you think while they're making you feel something. That's Honey Revenge's lane here.

Stay in Los Feliz, where you can walk tree-lined streets and catch views from Griffith Observatory. Dinner at Republique in the Arts District—refined French-inspired food in a restored factory space that feels more Paris than LA. Spend an afternoon at the Huntington Library in San Marino, a world-class art collection that justifies the drive. The city's recording studio history is everywhere; walk through Hollywood and you're literally surrounded by the spaces where hits were made. End the night at a jazz bar like The Fonda Theatre or catch live music on Sunset Boulevard.

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