The Pigeon Detectives Verified
Concerts and tour dates.
Live Photos of The Pigeon Detectives
Fan Reviews
Fans Also Follow
About the pigeon detectives.
The Pigeon Detectives announce November 2023 tour
Home » The Pigeon Detectives announce November 2023 tour
Having recently unveiled the details of their long-awaited sixth studio album ‘TV Show’, which is set to land on July 7th through Dance To The Radio, The Pigeon Detectives have now announced their plans for a UK-wide tour to celebrate the release of their new full-length.
Stretching across the first three weeks of November, The Pigeon Detectives will embark on an 18-date stint throughout the country, marking one of their most extensive run of shows in years. Tickets for the tour will go on presale this Wednesday 26th April at 9am via the band’s website, before going on general sale from Friday 28th April at 9am. See below for the full list of shows confirmed to date.
The Pigeon Detectives 2023 UK Tour Dates: 1st Nov – Edinburgh, The Liquid Room 2nd Nov – Glasgow, Queen Margeret Union 3rd Nov – Manchester, New Century Hall 4th Nov – Nottingham, Rock City 6th Nov – Portsmouth, The Wedgewood Rooms 8th Nov – London, Electric Ballroom 10th Nov – Birmingham, O2 Institute 11th Nov – Bristol, SWX 13th Nov – Norwich, Epic 14th Nov – Cambridge, Cambridge Junction 16th Nov – Hull, The Welly 17th Nov – Middleborough, Empire 18th Nov – Sheffield, Foundry
Produced by the renowned Rich Turvey (Blossoms, The Coral, Oscar Lang), their new album ‘TV Show’ looks to cement a rebirth within the band’s own legacy. After storming the stage at countless festivals in the summer of 2022, The Pigeon Detectives quickly became one of the more talked about names on the circuit once again, feeding the public’s need for anthemic indie-rock tunes after years of isolation and social distancing.
Speaking about the new album, they said, “Making music together for all these years has been the greatest gift of our lives. This album gives a nod to every step we have taken on the amazing journey we have been on as five scruffy friends from Rothwell, whilst also driving our sound to new, exciting areas. Above all though it is full of absolute bangers and we just can’t wait for everyone to hear it!”
To celebrate the release of ‘TV Show’, the band also set to embark on a number of record store show performances across the UK. Capping off with two dates at Leeds’ The Wardrobe, near where the album was written, a full list of live events can be found below. Ticket and album bundles on sale HERE
Record Store Show Dates: 6 July – Pryzm, Kingston (Banquet Records) 7 July – Rough Trade East, London 8 July – HMV, Manchester 8 July – The Leadmill, Sheffield (Bear Tree Records) 9 July – Rough Trade, Nottingham 10 July – Rough Trade, Bristol 11 July – HMV, Birmingham 12 July – Jacaranda, Liverpool 13 July – The Wardrobe, Leeds (Crash Records) 13 July – The Wardrobe, Leeds (Crash Records)
Our other pages
Related posts.
GROUPLOVE release ‘I Want It All Right Now Deluxe’
El Moono release debut album ‘The Waking Sun’
Latest Hull
Fiery Demon Attacks Old Man on Bridge!
Mouses refuse to separate art and artist on new single, ‘Fiends’
Hull-based Serial Chiller on the creative grind of being in a band, 'No Pay'
Code Orange Share New Video For ‘Swallowing The Rabbit Whole’
Comments are closed.
Alternative music and culture for the North of England and Worldwide.
Website by Mattix.
Find Music Jobs here!
Find Arts Jobs here!
© Soundsphere Magazine. All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy & Cookie Policy Terms of Use Advertise with us Contact
- Video Games
The Pigeon Detectives
Latest setlist, the pigeon detectives on february 3, 2024.
Foundry Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom
Popular Tracks
X-Posure with John Kennedy 11pm - 2am
Now Playing
M Television Kings Of Leon Download 'M Television' on iTunes
Pigeon Detectives announce 2023 UK tour dates and TV Show album
24 April 2023, 13:00
The Leeds indie rockers will embark on a tour in November to support their upcoming album, TV Show. Find out their live dates and how to buy tickets.
Listen to this article
Pigeon Detectives have announced their new album and tour dates for November 2023.
The Leeds outfit will celebrate the release of their new record TV Show on 7th July with shows that will see them visit the likes of Edinburgh's Queen Margaret Union, Manchester's New Century Hall, London's Electric Ballroom and the Foundry in Sheffield.
Tickets go on general sale from Friday 28th April at 9am and will go on pre-sale this Wednesday 26th April at 9am from the band's website thepigeondetectives.com.
UK TOUR! Pre-Sale Wed 26th April 9am from https://t.co/H95kqwdwPA General Sale Fri 28th 9am from all the usual outlets, links at https://t.co/VAn2OkLkTB We’re back out on tour in November, doing what we do best and the thing we love the most. pic.twitter.com/mtCyT4YE3l — The Pigeon Detectives (@pigeonsofficial) April 24, 2023
READ MORE: The Pigeon Detectives return with new single Lovers Come and Lovers Go
The Pigeon Detectives' 2023 UK Tour Dates so far:
1st Nov - Edinburgh, The Liquid Room
2nd Nov - Glasgow, Queen Margaret Union
3rd Nov - Manchester, New Century Hall
4th Nov - Nottingham, Rock City
6th Nov - Portsmouth, The Wedgewood Rooms
8th Nov - London, Electric Ballroom
10th Nov - Birmingham, O2 Institute
11th Nov - Bristol, SWX
13th Nov - Norwich, Epic
14th Nov - Cambridge, Cambridge Junction
16th Nov - Hull, The Welly
17th Nov - Middlesbrough, Empire
18th Nov - Sheffield, Foundry
Last Friday (21st July) saw the band release the second single from their upcoming LP Falling To Pieces.
Watch the official music video for the anthem here:
The Pigeon Detectives - Falling To Pieces (Official Video)
Speaking of their new album, the band said: "Making music together for all these years has been the greatest gift of our lives. This album gives a nod to every step we have taken on the amazing journey we have been on as five scruffy friends from Rothwell, whilst also driving our sound to new, exciting areas. Above all though it is full of absolute bangers and we just can't wait for everyone to hear it!"
To celebrate the release of TV Show, the band will also play a number of record store shows across the UK, which will culminate with two dates at The Wardrobe in Leeds, near where the album was written.
Pigeon Detectives' 2023 Record Store Show Dates:
6 July – Pryzm, Kingston (Banquet Records)
7 July – Rough Trade East, London
8 July – HMV, Manchester
8 July – The Leadmill, Sheffield (Bear Tree Records)
9 July – Rough Trade, Nottingham
10 July – Rough Trade, Bristol
11 July – HMV, Birmingham
12 July – Jacaranda, Liverpool
13 July – The Wardrobe, Leeds (Crash Records)
More Music News
The black keys talk hanging out with liam gallagher and the "crucial advice" he gave them, travis share raze the bar single featuring brandon flowers and chris martin, kings of leon discuss feelings on sex on fire amid billion streams milestone.
Kings of Leon
The Black Keys wrap trio of triumphant shows at O2 Academy Brixton
Kings of leon talk new album, "creating a legacy" and aiming for the rolling stones & u2 status.
Never Miss The Artists You Love!
Register for a See account here to import your Spotify library or ‘follow’ artists you find on our site to add them to your ‘favourites’. We will send you email alerts every time one of your favourite artists goes on tour.
In your user account, you can import your Spotify library or ‘follow’ artists you find on our site to add them to your ‘favourites’. We will send you email alerts every time one of your favourite artists goes on tour.
The Pigeon Detectives Tickets and Dates
Sorry, there are no shows for The Pigeon Detectives right now.
Past The Pigeon Detectives Events
- Statistics Stats
- You are here:
- Pigeon Detectives, The
The Pigeon Detectives Concert Setlists & Tour Dates
Upcoming shows.
- Date and Venue Doors Scheduled
- Jul 20 2024 Cosmic Cape 2024 Capenhurst, England Add time Add time Add times
- Jul 27 2024 Truck Festival 2024 Steventon, England Add time Add time Add times
- Jul 28 2024 Tramlines Festival 2024 Sheffield, England Add time Add time Add times
- Aug 25 2024 Victorious Festival 2024 Portsmouth, England Add time Add time Add times
- Aug 30 2024 Live at the Hall 2024 Nottingham, England – Find tickets Add time Tickets Add time Add times
The Pigeon Detectives at Foundry Sheffield, Sheffield, England
- Falling to Pieces
- This Is an Emergency
- Hard To Love
- I Found Out
- Keep On Your Dress
- Done in Secret
- Lovers Come and Lovers Go
- Nothing to Do With You
- Romantic Type
- Dreaming of a Song
- Edit setlist songs
- Edit venue & date
- Edit set times
- Add to festival
- Report setlist
The Pigeon Detectives at The Middlesbrough Empire, Middlesbrough, England
The pigeon detectives at the welly club, kingston upon hull, england, the pigeon detectives at cambridge junction, cambridge, england, the pigeon detectives at epic studios, norwich, england, the pigeon detectives at swx, bristol, england, the pigeon detectives at o2 institute, birmingham, england, the pigeon detectives at electric ballroom, london, england, the pigeon detectives at wedgewood rooms, portsmouth, england, the pigeon detectives at rock city, nottingham, england.
The Pigeon Detectives
More from this artist.
- Artist Statistics
- Add setlist
Most played songs
- I Found Out ( 123 )
- I'm Not Sorry ( 123 )
- Take Her Back ( 120 )
- This Is an Emergency ( 112 )
- Everybody Wants Me ( 99 )
More The Pigeon Detectives statistics
The Amazons Joe Carnall Level Red Sweetheart Surgery
View covered by statistics
Artists covered
View artists covered statistics
Gigs seen live by
844 people have seen The Pigeon Detectives live.
Crossfire StormerPB Ell_7x TomGreaves thebigo_ Markp061292 manicmun JackRollo olivershorthose katiecolcough FatladLes2446 Ewillday mtldn dobbietheelf SeanFloz muscum Billbo360 Dicker1986 dannyjoe86 bobeisenberg Munchie63 Britpopmatt Dekovite Thebear frostees AllyMcCormick Sadistic_Cheese Alex_19XC Iandaisymay robinmoth stuburrows xLeoni warren87 JazzBraithwaite anyaisstupid DigitalLove samnew81 Sebby14 abs2107 Derbyshire10 Degzy jonny_ delqhic kgn1985 cwblueroom richpell13 frimf Karlosb14 AIWilliams individual6827
Showing only 50 most recent
The Pigeon Detectives on the web
Music links.
- The Pigeon Detectives Lyrics (de)
- The Pigeon Detectives blog
- Official Homepage
Tour Update
Marquee memories: cold war kids.
- Cold War Kids
- May 8, 2024
- May 7, 2024
- May 6, 2024
- May 5, 2024
- May 4, 2024
- May 3, 2024
- FAQ | Help | About
- Terms of Service
- Ad Choices | Privacy Policy
- Feature requests
- Songtexte.com
The Pigeon Detectives
Want to be notified when tickets for this event next appear?
Sorry, we don't have any events available in your country.
Please set up an alert to be notified when tickets become available
Twickets is the largest fan-to-fan secure ticket trading platform
The Pigeon Detectives
The Leeds-based Pigeon Detectives play an exciting blend of rock'n'roll born out of a love for classic rock music and the indie rock of the 1990s more...
Fans who like The Pigeon Detectives also like
Courteeners
The Vaccines
A beloved alley cat now lives in the Watergate. Was she kidnapped, or rescued?
This is the saga of Kitty Snows, street queen of Foggy Bottom, and the neighbors who are fighting over her.
T he cat worked the not-so-mean streets of Foggy Bottom, earning her keep by playing bad cop with the rats. She kept a quiet, almost monkish life, at first. She dozed on sunlit stoops, her black fur shimmering like polished obsidian. She scaled fences that allowed her a prison guard’s view of Snows Court, a historic alley with brick sidewalks and narrow rowhouses. She slept in a boxy shelter on a neighbor’s lawn.
She arrived in Snows Court in the summer of 2021, courtesy of the Blue Collar Cat program run by D.C.’s Humane Rescue Alliance. She was named Kitty Snows, after her new home, where she belonged to everyone and no one.
For the first six weeks, she had to stay in an enclosure that would establish Snows Court as her turf. Will Crane, a member of her inner circle of caretakers, erected a structure atop a toolshed in his backyard. He treated her to a smorgasbord of sardines, mackerel and anchovies.
“I wanted to ingratiate myself to her, but she was defensive,” Will says, recalling a simpler time. “I was never able to pick her up. She was always ready to bite and scratch.”
After her liberation, Kitty Snows became the whiskered mascot of the Snows Court area. She had chartreuse eyes, a stubby tail and a clipped left ear, which marked her as a spayed community cat.
Over the next 2½ years, Kitty Snows got to know her neighbors, and they got to know her. She began to accept hand-fed treats and gentle pats on the head. She crashed college house parties near the George Washington University campus. She slipped into homes and napped on couches. The Foggy Bottom Association sold her likeness on T-shirts, mugs and trucker hats. In December 2022, she won the association’s Appreciation Award for “community service and the joy she brings to many who cross her path.”
And then, this February, Kitty Snows vanished.
Her caretakers batted around theories. A neighbor had recently spotted a red fox, which preys on cats. A black cat would face grim odds while crossing nearby K Street or Virginia Avenue on an ink-dark night — did Kitty Snows become too adventurous or insouciant? The city had recently experienced a rash of petnappings, though the scrappy feline did not have the pedigree or street value of, say, a French bulldog.
The neighbors mined social media for information. They posted “Missing Kitty Snows” signs. They set up a phone line for tips.
One citizen shared a possible lead by text message: “I watched the little black cat with the short tail enter into a cat trap and then the trap close.”
B lue-collar cats are strictly business, or supposed to be. They land at the Humane Rescue Alliance’s shelter presumably after a cutthroat, vagabond street life. They aren’t suited for domestication.
“Since these cats cannot be rehomed through traditional adoption channels,” the alliance website says, the Blue Collar Cat program “is often their last chance at a rich and fulfilling life.”
Did Kitty Snows find her new life to be “rich and fulfilling?” It’s hard to know, because Kitty Snows is a cat and cannot speak. But her humans were fulfilled.
“She sparked joy,” says Denise Vogt, whose family has lived around Snows Court for more than three decades. Kitty Snows often visited Denise while she gardened. “I can’t tell you how many times people would say, ‘Have you seen Kitty today? Where’s Kitty?’ She was a staple on I Street.”
Around mid-February, “Where’s Kitty?” acquired a more urgent tone.
Her absence was out of character, so the neighbors assembled an informal search party. While on a walk the early evening of Feb. 13, Denise says she ran into neighbor Tom Curtis, one of Kitty Snows’s many caretakers. She brought up the cat’s disappearance. Tom blithely responded that he had trapped Kitty Snows and, for her own health and safety, relocated her roughly 1,000 feet southwest to Watergate West. A resident was caring for her, 14 floors above the street she once ruled. Tom assured Denise that Kitty Snows was thrilled to trade her blue collar for a white one.
Denise was relieved. Kitty Snows was alive! But soon Denise’s head caught up with her heart, and she was struck by a realization.
This man has stolen our cat.
W hat has unfolded this year around Snows Court is an old-fashioned neighborhood melodrama — “Kittygate,” if you must — complete with wounded feelings, rampant gossip, sidewalk spies, lawsuit threats and tricky questions, such as: Is Tom Curtis a catnapper, or is he a modern-day St. Francis?
Tom is 86 and retired. He remembers the exact moment when he became a vigilante for animals. He was in his 30s and living in Baltimore when he noticed a group of delinquents trying to stone a small dog. He shielded the animal and, with a rock in each hand, confronted its tormentors. The posse retreated, and he scooped up the stray and brought it to a shelter.
“I am basically a coward, but when it comes to animals, I am fearless,” says Tom, who wears baseball caps and strolls with a cane.
Tom fills his hours walking neighbors’ dogs and caring for urban wildlife. He sprinkles seed for the birds and uses peanuts to spoil his favorite pigeon, which he gave the somewhat possessive name of “My Pigeon.” If the peanut is too large, he will use his teeth to break it into beak-size pieces.
Tom, who was not involved in procuring Kitty Snows for the neighborhood, first noticed the cat during her inaugural winter in Snows Court. One bitterly cold night, he spotted her lying on a dirty piece of cardboard. From that night forward, he provided her with food and water twice a day. Often, she would be waiting for him at their spot by the I Street entrance to Snows Court. If she was not present, he would purse his lips and emit three kissy noises, and she would come running.
Tom was definitely a caretaker of Kitty Snows, but other neighbors also regularly left her food. Kitty Snows was looking after the neighborhood, and the neighborhood was looking after Kitty Snows.
“Tom’s done a great job of helping us feed the cat. No doubt. It was appreciated,” said Will Crane, standing outside Watergate West one spring afternoon, searching the windows for Kitty Snows. “So many people are still concerned about where she is. We didn’t realize — I didn’t realize — how many people had actually been involved in taking care of this cat.”
And now everyone in her life is in a literal cat fight.
T hree days after Denise’s encounter with Tom, Kitty Snows’s original sponsor called 311 to report a stolen cat. The dispatcher said she’d call her back. The Humane Rescue Alliance told her it was not an animal welfare issue but a police matter.
So, at around 11 p.m. on Feb. 26, Kitty’s original sponsor — who spoke to The Washington Post on the condition of anonymity because she fears reprisal and bullying — entered the 2nd District police station near Washington National Cathedral and filed a report: A “domestic shorthair cat” was “stolen” from a “highway/road/alley/street/sidewalk” on Feb. 13 by an “unknown person.”
The person wasn’t “unknown,” but Kitty’s sponsor wanted to trigger a formal response to the situation. It worked. A detective was assigned to the case. When he contacted the sponsor for additional information, she provided names: Tom and his collaborator, Barbara Rohde, a resident of Watergate West.
Barbara, the executive director of a nonprofit, grew up on a farm in North Dakota, where the tenant cats had a quid-pro-quo agreement with the landowners. She was fine with them chasing the field mice and sleeping in the barn, but she did not identify as a cat fancier.
Unlike Tom, who walks her cocker spaniel, Barbara did not consider herself a Kitty Snows caretaker. She, along with other neighbors, donated to a food fund for the cat. That was basically it.
But last summer, Barbara noticed a crusty wound on the cat’s snout. In October, her condition seemed worse. Barbara found Kitty Snows listless on the edge of Snows Court, her nose raw and teeming with bugs.
“She was stretched out flat in a parking lot, and flies were feeding on her scab,” Barbara says. “She was hardly moving.”
Barbara said she wanted to inform a caretaker, but she could not find a name or number to contact. (Kitty Snows has a microchip inside her, with contact information, but who has a cat scanner at home?) So she and Tom decided to bring the cat to the Dupont Veterinary Clinic themselves. Tom set up a carrier with food inside. He said Kitty Snows marched right in.
The clinic’s medical director, Jan Rosen, administered spot treatments, recommended a biopsy, and had one strong recommendation: The cat had to give up her freedom. She should become an indoor cat, permanently.
“It didn’t make any sense to do a biopsy unless she was in a home where she could be treated for whatever I diagnosed her with,” says Rosen, who — it’s important to say — dislikes the concept of community cats.
Rosen eventually determined that seasonal allergies were likely to blame. Her diagnosis matched the one given to Kitty Snows months earlier, when Will Crane brought her to the Humane Rescue Alliance with the same ailment.
The key difference between medical opinions: The rescue alliance said she could resume her life outdoors; the vet said she should never go back to her old lifestyle.
“I’m aware that many good Samaritans provide food and sometimes shelter for outdoor cats, and I absolutely honor and admire them for that, but it’s not been enough for this cat,” Rosen says. “I would not be doing my job if I were to recommend removing her from her current home and putting her back out on the streets of D.C.”
S ince word got out about his involvement, Tom has been avoiding I Street. He claims Will shouted at him — “You’re a cat thief!” — while he was leaving the Watergate. (Will said he asked him when he planned to return the cat.) Tom says another neighbor followed him and repeatedly muttered to his back: “That lady stole her!” During a late-night run-in with Kitty’s sponsor, he says she called him “unethical” for bringing the cat to the vet. The sponsor says Tom called her “disgusting” for neglecting Kitty.
On Feb. 23, Denise delivered a letter to the front desk of Watergate West. She enclosed a gift-wrapped container of cat grass.
“Until her disappearance about 2 weeks ago, she provided pet therapy for countless number of people,” Denise wrote to Barbara. “Now the fans of Kitty Snows are devastated she is no longer around. They are grieving and concerned.”
A few days later, on Feb. 27, the Kitty Snows case came up at the monthly gathering of the Foggy Bottom Association at the West End public library. Sadie Cornelius, who lives around the corner from Snows Court, stood before roughly 30 attendees and declared: “We have a hostage situation. We just want to make sure she’s safe.”
On March 1, Kitty’s sponsor received an email from an attorney named Sean Day, who is representing Barbara. He wrote that Kitty Snows was better off in her new environment — Barbara and Tom were sharing custody — and the sponsor needed to accept this arrangement. If she didn’t stop harassing Barbara, Day wrote, they would “pursue lawfully available actions against you.” (The sponsor denies harassing Barbara.)
On March 15, two detectives showed up at Tom’s door, and, according to Tom, requested to see Kitty Snows. He told them she was not available. (She was cowering under the sofa.) They said if he didn’t return her to the street, they might come back with a warrant. (The D.C. police could not corroborate this account, but confirmed that officers did visit Tom on March 15.) At the Watergate, the detectives left a business card for Barbara.
Barbara said she called and grilled them about intimidating an elderly man. She also forwarded them an October photo of Kitty Snows’s infected nose and the vet statement advising against returning the cat to the streets.
Again, it’s impossible to know what Kitty Snows thinks of this. But this story is about more than that.
“We talk about treating the cat well,” Will says, “but for me, it’s more about how are we treating each other.”
A t the heart of the issue is: Who owns Kitty Snows, and did they provide her with humane care?
The Humane Rescue Alliance refers to her original sponsor as her official adopter and said she can prove ownership with the adoption contract, vet records and microchip inside Kitty Snows (which also lists Will as an emergency contact). Sean Day, Barbara’s lawyer, said community cats do not have official owners. If any neighbor claims ownership to put Kitty back on the streets, then Day will accuse them of animal cruelty.
Community cats can be divisive, says Holly Sizemore, chief mission officer with Best Friends Animal Society . Many people see an animal living outside and their hero impulse kicks in. They want to rescue it from the cruel streets and pamper it. But community cat programs — which trap, neuter and release — are helping curtail the world’s overwhelmingly large feral cat population.
The Humane Rescue Alliance says the Foggy Bottom residents did not violate the Blue Collar Cat contract, which does not require the caretakers to bring the animal indoors.
Kitty’s sponsor does not wish to sue Tom or Barbara. So where does that leave us?
A relatively new D.C. law — the Animal Care and Control Omnibus Amendment Act — allows judges to take the interests of the animal into account when awarding custody to divorcing or separating couples. Under the law, the animal is regarded as more of a person than a piece of property, says Joan E. Schaffner, co-director of the Animal Legal Education Initiative at the George Washington University Law School.
In this context, Kitty Snows is not just a neighborhood feature. She’s a neighbor herself.
Schaffner floats another solution for the denizens of Snows Court: Just get another cat .
O n a sunny afternoon in April, Barbara opened the door to her 14th-floor residence. The walls were covered in art from her foreign travels, including impressionistic paintings of a Russian forest that she acquired in Moscow and pieces from an Angkor Wat stone-carving school for young Cambodians. A baby grand piano backed up against soaring windows. A roomy stone balcony overlooked a long ribbon of the Potomac.
Tom was there, holding Kitty Snows, his hand stroking the spot between her two small ears.
Barbara said that when Kitty Snows first arrived in her swanky new digs, she slept hard for three days straight, as if she had been wandering the Earth for years and could finally rest. Kitty Snows likes to hide behind the toilet or under the sink, and sleep in a carrier that Barbara calls “her condo.” Kitty Snows will sometimes pad onto the parquet floor that leads to the main living space. She has not yet ventured to the windows, where she might be able to spy a sliver of her former life.
On April 22, Barbara’s lawyer received a letter from Kitty’s sponsor, saying she had initiated a “mediation intake process” through the Multi-Door Dispute Resolution Division in D.C. court. Barbara says that if her neighbors continue to press for the cat’s return, she will consider filing animal cruelty charges against them.
The Saga of Kitty Snows has become so complicated. And yet, in some ways, it’s also fairly simple.
“I truly never wanted a cat,” Barbara says, “but now I have a cat.”
- Popular artists in Sheffield
- Trending artists worldwide
- Tourbox for artists
Search for events or artists
- Sign up Log in
- Get the app
- Sheffield concerts
- Change location
- Popular Artists
- Live streams
- Deutsch Português
- Concerts near you
- Popular artists
Upcoming concerts for The Pigeon Detectives
- Thursday July 25, 2024 James Ludlow Castle, Ludlow
- Friday July 26, 2024 Madness Kirkstall Abbey, Leeds
- Friday July 26, 2024 Paolo Nutini, Maxïmo Park, Miles Kane, and Sophie Ellis-Bextor Tramlines 2024, Sheffield
Saturday 03 February 2024
The Pigeon Detectives
Discover more in Sheffield
S10 2TG Sheffield, UK
Similar artists with upcoming concerts
Additional details.
Doors open: 19:00
Concert in your area for Rock , Indie & Alt , and Electronic .
Find out more about Rock and Electronic .
Share this concert
5 people were there.
Related upcoming events
- Friday June 14, 2024 Blue and Scouting for Girls Hooton Lodge Farm, Rotherham
- Thursday June 27, 2024 The Zutons Holmfirth Picturedrome, Holmfirth
- Saturday July 06, 2024 The Reytons, Jamie Webster, Little Man Tate, and Lucy Spraggan Herringthorpe Playing Fields, Rotherham
- Saturday August 31, 2024 Milburn Don Valley Bowl, Sheffield
- Thursday October 24, 2024 Maxïmo Park The Leadmill, Steel Stage, Sheffield
- Most popular charts
- API information
- Brand guidelines
- Community guidelines
- Terms of use
- Privacy policy
- Cookies settings
- Cookies policy
Get your tour dates seen everywhere.
- But we really hope you love us.
Putin reappoints his prime minister, a technocrat who has kept a low political profile
- Show more sharing options
- Copy Link URL Copied!
Russian President Vladimir Putin reappointed Mikhail Mishustin as the country’s prime minister on Friday, a widely anticipated move to keep on a technocrat who has maintained a low political profile.
Mishustin and other technocrats in the Cabinet have been credited with maintaining a relatively stable economic performance despite bruising Western sanctions for Russia’s role in Ukraine. Most other Cabinet members are expected to keep their jobs , though the fate of Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu appeared uncertain.
In line with Russian law, Mishustin, 58, who held the job for the past four years, submitted his Cabinet’s resignation on Tuesday when Putin began his fifth presidential term at a glittering Kremlin inauguration .
Mishustin, the former head of Russia’s tax service, steered clear of political statements and avoided media interviews during his previous tenure.
During Friday’s meeting with Putin, he assured the president that “there will be no breaks in the government’s work” and pledged to “ensure continuity on all national goals.”
“We will do everything for the development of our economy to justify people’s trust,” Mishustin said.
Hours after Putin submitted Mishustin’s candidacy to the lower house, the State Duma, lawmakers vetted it at a quickly organized session.
Under the constitutional changes approved in 2020, the lower house approves the candidacy of the prime minister, who then submits Cabinet members for approval. The changes were ostensibly meant to grant parliament broader power, but the procedure is widely seen as pro forma given the Kremlin’s overwhelming control over the body.
Most Cabinet members are expected to keep their jobs, but it was not clear if Shoigu, the defense minister, would be among them after last month’s arrest of his top associate, Timur Ivanov.
Ivanov, who served as deputy defense minister in charge of massive military construction projects, was arrested on bribery charges and was ordered to stay in custody pending official investigation.
The arrest of Ivanov was widely interpreted as an attack on Shoigu and a possible precursor of his dismissal despite his close personal ties with Putin.
Shoigu was broadly criticized for Russian military’s setbacks in the early stage of the fighting in Ukraine. He faced scathing attacks from mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, who marched on Moscow nearly a year ago to demand the ouster of Shoigu and the chief of the General Staff, Gen. Valery Gerasimov.
After Prigozhin’s death in a suspicious plane crash two months after the rebellion — widely seen as the Kremlin’s revenge — Shoigu appeared to shore up his position. But Ivanov’s arrest, interpreted by many as part of Kremlin’s political infighting, again exposed Shoigu’s vulnerability.
Top headlines by email, weekday mornings
Get top headlines from the Union-Tribune in your inbox weekday mornings, including top news, local, sports, business, entertainment and opinion.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the San Diego Union-Tribune.
More in this section
Nation-World
The Flores agreement has protected migrant children for nearly 3 decades. Changes may be coming.
The Biden administration is expected to try to partially end a 27-year-old agreement that provides court oversight of how the federal government cares for migrant children in its custody
Hawaii officials outline efforts to prevent another devastating wildfire ahead of a dry season
Hawaii Gov. Josh Green announced Wildfire Mitigation and Risk Reduction Preparedness Month nine months after the nation’s deadliest wildfire in over a century burned the historic town of Lahaina
1 of 3 teens charged with killing a Colorado woman while throwing rocks at cars pleads guilty
One of three teens who was charged with killing a 20-year-old woman while throwing large rocks at passing cars in Colorado has pleaded guilty to reduced charges under a plea agreement
NYC policy on how long migrant families can stay in shelters was ‘haphazard,’ audit finds
Immigrants in New York’s shelter system may be getting evicted even if they are pregnant, according to an audit of the city’s shelter eviction policies
Louisiana court may reopen window for lawsuits by adult victims of childhood sex abuse
Louisiana’s Supreme Court has agreed to reconsider its ruling that wiped out a law giving adult victims of childhood sexual abuse a renewed opportunity to file damage lawsuits
US dedicates $60 million to saving water along the Rio Grande as flows shrink and demands grow
U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland says the federal government will be spending $60 million on projects along the Rio Grande in southern New Mexico and West Texas to make the river more resilient in the face of climate change and growing demands
- Science & Math
- Nature & Ecology
Enjoy fast, free delivery, exclusive deals, and award-winning movies & TV shows with Prime Try Prime and start saving today with fast, free delivery
Amazon Prime includes:
Fast, FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button.
- Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
- Unlimited Free Two-Day Delivery
- Streaming of thousands of movies and TV shows with limited ads on Prime Video.
- A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
- Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
- Unlimited photo storage with anywhere access
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.
Return this item for free
Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
- Go to your orders and start the return
- Select the return method
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required .
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Follow the author
Image Unavailable
- To view this video download Flash Player
A Pocket Guide to Pigeon Watching: Getting to Know the World's Most Misunderstood Bird Paperback – October 26, 2021
Purchase options and add-ons.
- Print length 240 pages
- Language English
- Publisher Workman Publishing Company
- Publication date October 26, 2021
- Dimensions 5 x 0.63 x 7 inches
- ISBN-10 1523511346
- ISBN-13 978-1523511341
- See all details
Frequently bought together
Similar items that may deliver to you quickly
Editorial Reviews
About the author, product details.
- Publisher : Workman Publishing Company (October 26, 2021)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 240 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1523511346
- ISBN-13 : 978-1523511341
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5 x 0.63 x 7 inches
- #77 in History & Philosophy of Science (Books)
- #92 in Bird Field Guides
Videos for this product
Click to play video
A Pocket Guide to Pigeon Watching
About the author, rosemary mosco.
Rosemary Mosco is a science writer and artist, and she’s passionate about sharing her love for the natural world.
She creates the award-winning science webcomic Bird and Moon and has written and drawn for Audubon, Ranger Rick, The American Ornithological Society, Nature Ecology & Evolution, and others. Her work was the subject of an award-winning museum exhibit at Cornell's Museum of the Earth and was featured by IFLS, Audubon, Upworthy, io9, Science News, the National Wildlife Federation, The Huffington Post, It’s Okay to be Smart, The Mary Sue, The Times of India, and more.
She once spent six months drawing all 162 species of snake in the United States. Her favorite bird is the Laysan Albatross.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Reviews with images
- Sort reviews by Top reviews Most recent Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. please try again later..
Top reviews from other countries
- Amazon Newsletter
- About Amazon
- Accessibility
- Sustainability
- Press Center
- Investor Relations
- Amazon Devices
- Amazon Science
- Sell on Amazon
- Sell apps on Amazon
- Supply to Amazon
- Protect & Build Your Brand
- Become an Affiliate
- Become a Delivery Driver
- Start a Package Delivery Business
- Advertise Your Products
- Self-Publish with Us
- Become an Amazon Hub Partner
- › See More Ways to Make Money
- Amazon Visa
- Amazon Store Card
- Amazon Secured Card
- Amazon Business Card
- Shop with Points
- Credit Card Marketplace
- Reload Your Balance
- Amazon Currency Converter
- Your Account
- Your Orders
- Shipping Rates & Policies
- Amazon Prime
- Returns & Replacements
- Manage Your Content and Devices
- Recalls and Product Safety Alerts
- Conditions of Use
- Privacy Notice
- Consumer Health Data Privacy Disclosure
- Your Ads Privacy Choices
IMAGES
COMMENTS
The Pigeon Detectives tour dates. Mailing List: Please sign up to the mailing list in order to get regular updates from The Pigeon Detectives. I consent to receiving a newsletter. Web site created using create-react-app.
Find information on all of The Pigeon Detectives's upcoming concerts, tour dates and ticket information for 2024-2025. The Pigeon Detectives is not due to play near your location currently - but they are scheduled to play 8 concerts across 1 country in 2024-2025.
Buy The Pigeon Detectives tickets from the official Ticketmaster.com site. Find The Pigeon Detectives tour schedule, concert details, reviews and photos.
The Pigeon Detectives are an English indie rock band from Rothwell in Leeds, West Yorkshire, who formed in 2004. ... The band supported Kaiser Chiefs on three of their November/December 2007 UK tour dates, including 1 December at the Manchester Evening News Arena and 15 December at Earls Court in London.
The Pigeon Detectives are a five piece indie rock band from Rothwell, Leeds with influences such as The Beatles, The Kinks and The Velvet Underground. Pigeon Detectives, who formed in 2002, found acclaim among DJs and the musical press when they performed at 2006 Reading and Leeds festivals, being tagged as the "band most likely to leap to the ...
The Pigeon Detectives official YouTube channel. Digitally restored videos from across The Pigeon Detectives catalogue plus new releases! Reject all imitators! This is the new home for Pigeon ...
The Pigeon Detectives tour dates 2024. The Pigeon Detectives is currently touring across 1 country and has 2 upcoming concerts. Their next tour date is at The Foundry Sheffield University Students' Union in Sheffield, after that they'll be at Southsea Seafront in Portsmouth. See all your opportunities to see them live below!
Stretching across the first three weeks of November, The Pigeon Detectives will embark on an 18-date stint throughout the country, marking one of their most extensive run of shows in years. Tickets for the tour will go on presale this Wednesday 26th April at 9am via the band's website, before going on general sale from Friday 28th April at 9am.
The Pigeon Detectives. There are no upcoming events. Find concert tickets for The Pigeon Detectives upcoming 2024 shows. Explore The Pigeon Detectives tour schedules, latest setlist, videos, and more on livenation.com.
The Pigeon Detectives' 2023 UK Tour Dates so far: 1st Nov - Edinburgh, The Liquid Room. 2nd Nov - Glasgow, Queen Margaret Union. 3rd Nov - Manchester, New Century Hall. 4th Nov - Nottingham, Rock City
We are currently processing the maximum possible number of bookings we are able to handle at one time. You are being held on this page (which will refresh automatically in 15 seconds) until a space becomes available. You can attempt to access the booking page by manually refreshing as often as you like.
Artist: The Pigeon Detectives, Tour: TV Show, Venue: The Middlesbrough Empire, Middlesbrough, England. Edit setlist Show all edit options. Edit setlist songs; Edit venue & date; Edit set times; Edit tour; Add to festival; Report setlist; Nov 16 2023. The Pigeon Detectives at The Welly Club, Kingston upon Hull, England.
Buy tickets, find event, venue and support act information and reviews for The Pigeon Detectives's upcoming concert at Electric Ballroom in London on 08 Nov 2023. ... Monday November 13, 2023 The Pigeon Detectives Cambridge Junction, Cambridge; Tuesday November 14, 2023 The Pigeon Detectives Cambridge Junction, Cambridge; Related upcoming ...
Buy tickets for The Pigeon Detectives from Twickets, the fair, face value, fan-to-fan ticket exchange platform. Endorsed by hundreds of artists, Twickets is dedicated to combating ticket touting, ensuring true fans have access to shows at fair prices. Discover The Pigeon Detectivess tour dates and secure your tickets now.
The Leeds-based Pigeon Detectives play an exciting blend of rock'n'roll born out of a love for classic rock music and the indie rock of the 1990s more ... Tour Dates Rated Excellent. Watch The Pigeon Detectives Fans who like The Pigeon Detectives also like. The Enemy 10 UK Tour Dates Courteeners 3 UK Tour Dates The View 20 UK Tour Dates ...
The European 1979 concert uploads cannot conclude without Moscow 1979 being represented on this channel! Due to Tommy, Jacob, and Ethan constantly crying to ...
Provided to YouTube by Universal Music GroupSkyline Pigeon (Live From Moscow / 1979) · Elton JohnLive From Moscow℗ 2019 BBCReleased on: 2019-04-01Producer: J...
A detective was assigned to the case. When he contacted the sponsor for additional information, she provided names: Tom and his collaborator, Barbara Rohde, a resident of Watergate West.
Buy tickets, find event, venue and support act information and reviews for The Pigeon Detectives's upcoming concert with Ellur and Rhys Wade at The Foundry Sheffield University Students' Union in Sheffield on 03 Feb 2024. Buy tickets to see The Pigeon Detectives live in Sheffield. Track your favorite artists on Songkick and never miss another ...
Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin arrives to attend the Victory Day military parade in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, May 9, 2024, marking the 79th anniversary of the end of World War II.
"This book will change what you think about pigeons! With loads of eye-opening pigeon science, delivered in playful and engaging style by Rosemary Mosco's text and illustrations, A Pocket Guide to Pigeon Watching will help you gain a whole new appreciation of these smart, savvy, and adaptable birds whose lives are so intertwined with ours." — David Allen Sibley, author of The Sibley ...
ELTON JOHN RAY COOPER "SKYLINE PIGEON" LIVE MOSCOW 1979from the newly released BBC master tapes recordings, elton john with ray cooper live from Moscow 1979