"Broadway.com decided to seek some secrets behind this long-running hit, and we were welcomed to the Orpheum stage by Stephanie Marshall and other members of the STOMP crew as they warmed up before the show." Watch Video
"Entertaining on multiple levels, great for families as well as couples and singles, STOMP is a shot of fun made for everyone." Read More
"New York's campaign to woo free-agent basketball star LeBron James...(is) a chance for the arts to connect with popular culture." Read More
"The only way to properly understand STOMP would be to see it live. From the very beginning of the performance there are random people who come on stage with random objects to make coordinated noise called music, perhaps just like it was thousands of years ago. STOMP takes us to the very origins of music and yet gives it a completely new definition." Read More
The Tomorrow Show’s Mo Rocca came backstage to learn the secret of the “stomp.” Watch It
STOMP, the international sensation, is making its triumphant return to a theater near you. The return of the percussive hit also brings some new surprises, with some sections of the show now updated and restructured and the addition of two new full-scale routines, utilizing props like tractor tire inner tubes and paint cans. Read More
Is it possible for eight performers to keep an audience entertained and engaged — for 90 minutes without fancy props, elaborate costumes or thoughtful lyrics? Yes, actually. "Stomp" continues to prove it, 15 years after the hit show began its Off-Broadway run. Read More
For eight minutes Thursday afternoon, 6-year-old Kevon London was a rock star. With a few of his classmates at the Atlanta Speech School, Kevon joined four cast members of ‘Stomp,’ the internationally acclaimed percussion show that’s at the Fox Theatre this week. Read More
There's one question to ask when considering an 18-year-old percussion/street theatre phenomenon known as Stomp that's been here three, maybe even four times - what the hell are they going to bang on this time? Garbage cans? Zippo lighters? Kitchen sinks? Been there, dented that. Read More
Take a mixing bowl. A box of Grape Nuts. A shopping cart. An empty water jug. A biscuit tin, two coffee cups, one bell, one stool, one cake tray, a mixing bowl, a green plastic garbage bin, a milk crate and a Calgary Food Bank donation bucket, add a few members of the cast of Stomp and what have you got? A lunch-hour concert like no other. Read More
The musical extravaganza Stomp, which opened at the Jubilee auditorium, is positive proof that sound, movement and laughter are all universal languages. There is not a word spoken in the 100 minutes of Stomp, but that doesn't mean that the Jubilee stage isn't alive with drumming and stomping.Read More
There's a temptation to think of "Stomp" as loud and chaotic. To be fair, there is some noise. In the course of the 90-minute show, at the Aronoff through Sunday, the eight performers make music with dustpans, rusty metal signs, ladders, folding chairs, boxes of kitchen matches, paper bags, garbage cans, oil drums and yes, even a quartet of kitchen sinks.
FORT WORTH — Stomp celebrates that most primal of musical instincts: Take one surface. Put it in contact with another. And presto, a rhythm is born. Read More
For its 25th anniversary issue, Entertainment Weekly created "The New Classics: Stage, 50 of the greatest productions since 1983," in which STOMP was featured with productions including "The Lion King," "Angels in America," and "Rent." Read More