Nov 13, 2018 A list of all Panic! At The Disco songs. I update this a least once a week or so, so that hopefully I should have all the most recent songs as well, or if one video gets deleted i will replace it. A list of all Panic! At The Disco songs. I update this a least once a week or so, so that hopefully I should have all the most recent songs as well, or if one video gets deleted i will replace it.
11 years since the release of their debut album, A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out, Las Vegas’ Panic! At The Disco have strived to push boundaries in the alt-rock genre. The band’s most recent album, Death Of The Bachelor, continues that trend and mirrors ’s myriad influences of swing, gospel, pop, rock and emo. Grandia 1 and 2 hd. If pushed, he can do a decent metalcore vocal too.
His skills are sickening. As his band prepare for their tour later this month, we challenged him to pick a 10-song essential playlist from his band’s five studio albums. “It’s so crazy talking about this,” laughs Brendon. Talking about my own stuff is so weird!” Still, we managed to prise a playlist from him.
It wasn’t that hard. Here, in no particular order, are the 10 songs he selected Time To Dance (A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out, 2005) “This was the first song I wrote for Panic! At The Disco.
When I first joined, I was the guitar player, and this was one that I worked on with everyone. I wasn’t yet the singer.
Once the album came out and it was my voice singing, it was a huge pivotal moment for me because it was the first time I felt I was part of the band. I’d been in bands before but this was the first time I felt like the part of a group; a part of something special.” Do You Know What I’m Seeing? Odd., 2008) “I remember writing this and watching Alice In Wonderland and ‘shrooming out of my mind, and being like, ‘Oh my God, I’m going to lose my mind’ and trying to put what I saw into words. That was an adventure for me, trying to be.” Mad As Rabbits (Pretty. Odd., 2008) “This one started off as a really slow jam, we all got together to work on it and it grew into this.
I jumped over to bass and we switched instruments between us which was really fun to do. How I write a bass part is like Paul McCartney writing a bass part, because he’s a frustrated guitarist and he writes guitar lines for bass. That was kind of what I was doing, and it was a a lot of fun.” “I was trying to write a Peter Gabriel song like In Your Eyes. I hadn’t written a song like that before for a Panic album, and I thought it was really neat because I was doing something new and exciting.” The Ballad Of Mona Lisa (Vices & Virtues, 2011) “This actually came from an idea right after A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out came out. I never stopped writing, and I had the pre-chorus and the chorus ready, so I jumped back through my files and was like, ‘Yeah, I’ve been sitting on it for about three years and I’ll use it!’.” • • • • Girl That You Love (Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!, 2013) “I was having a lot of fun in the studio doing a lot of production; I was just creating tracks.