"I've listened to your 'music' and it made me cry! just like the big black guy in the end of Prince's video for purple rain."
Kelson Matthias (ex-Jarcrew/current Future of the Left).

"Awesome."
Zane Lowe - BBC Radio One

"One of the loudest new bands I've seen in a long while... Properly forthright, in-your-face rock music."
Steve Lamacq - BBC 6 Music ('6 Music Unsigned Band of the Week')

"The sawtooth plosives of guitars strung like catapults and screams at exactly the right frequency to be heard by humans suggest that, while their young may be born harmless, they'll soon learn to get winningly offensive."
Plan B Magazine (RIP)

"Angular feist-punk doesn't get more brutal or enthralling than this"
NME

"Fingerpainting with the rock formula!"
The Fly

"Hence:Elvis" is one of those perfect little bridges between noise-heavy shouty rhythmic punk, and catchy tune that has you clicking the repeat button ten seconds in."
Drowned In Sound (read)

"They have cracked something on the head with their ace garage punk, just mind you don't crack your own head when listening in."
Bearded Magazine

"The future's bright as far as blazing angular art-punk is concerned. Their debut single 'Hence Elvis' (Dirty Records) is an electrifying 1000mph blast. They sound like an angry mob but assure us they are also intent on good-timing too. An Unmissable debut."
Art Rocker

"A rampant, hard-hitting profusion of smashing guitars and basslines that sound as aggressive as their spitting vocals."
Gigwise.com

"Fast, intense and violent... They sound as good as all of the splendid influences they list. Really."
William Ravenscroft - Unpredictable Porridge

"Noisy, rhythmic art-punk with a nod to Erase Errata and Pre"
Time Out (London)

"In the post-hardcore world there's not many more superior young British bands around than Ice, Sea, Dead People"
Sweeping the Nation

"An intricate punk scrawling of a band with a myriad of angles jutting dangerously out of their thoughts and the conviction to hurl them with abandon around the tiny spaces these petulant bastards of songs inhabit."
No, Really (webzine)