Get Apple Music on iOS, Android, Mac, and Windows
Albums
See AllMusic Videos
See AllArtist Playlists
See AllSingles & EPs
See AllLive Albums
See AllCompilations
See AllTicketmaster Panic At The Disco Albums
Books
![Disco Disco](https://www.concerttour.us/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/panic-at-the-disco.jpg)
About Panic! At the Disco
One of the biggest acts to emerge out of the emo movement of the mid-2000s, Panic! At the Disco transcended their early fame, transforming into a vehicle for singer Brendon Urie's charismatic, cross-pollinated brand of pop. Championed from the start by fellow emo-pop favorites Fall Out Boy, Panic! At the Disco found success on MTV and on the charts with the wordy, hyperkinetic anthem 'I Write Sins Not Tragedies' from their 2005 debut, A Fever You Can't Sweat Out. However, their follow-up, the '60s psychedelia-influenced Pretty. Odd., split fans and critics, and found them beginning a creative journey that would also bring lineup changes. Urie and co-founding drummer Spencer Smith pushed the band's sound toward synthy, '80s-style new wave and dance-punk on 2011's Vices & Virtues, and expanded into a swaggering blend of electronic pop, hip-hop, and R&B on 2013's Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die! With the departure of Smith in 2015, Urie took the helm as the sole original member and mastermind behind the band's sound. Despite the changes and ever-evolving music scene, Panic! At the Disco have retained a loyal following and remain creatively engaged, scoring chart-topping albums with 2016's Frank Sinatra-influenced Death of a Bachelor and 2018's Pray for the Wicked.
Formed in 2004, Panic! At the Disco came together when high-school friends Spencer Smith (drums) and Ryan Ross (guitar) began covering blink-182 tunes together. After tiring of playing another group's material, they recruited two additional classmates, guitar/vocalist Brendon Urie and bassist Brent Wilson, and the newly formed quartet decided to model their name after a line in Name Taken's 'Panic.' Crafting pop-influenced songs with theatrical touches, quirky techno beats, and perceptive lyrics, Panic! At the Disco posted several demos online that caught the attention of Decaydance Records, the Fueled by Ramen imprint headed by Fall Out Boy's Pete Wentz. Even though Panic! At the Disco had yet to play a live show, they subsequently became the first band signed to Wentz's label.
With their record scheduled for release in September 2005, Panic! At the Disco joined the successful Nintendo Fusion Tour and hit the road alongside Fall Out Boy, Motion City Soundtrack, Boys Night Out, and the Starting Line. The band continued touring into early 2006, while their single 'I Write Sins Not Tragedies' found its way onto MTV and the Billboard Top 40. Proving to be a popular lineup, the Nintendo tour consistently sold out venues across the country. Wilson was fired from the group mid-year; undaunted, Panic! continued with their friend Jon Walker on board for a full summer tour that culminated with appearances at Lollapalooza and the Reading and Leeds Festivals. The guys picked up a Video of the Year award at MTV's annual VMA ceremony, beating out heavy-hitters like Madonna and the Red Hot Chili Peppers, and a collector's box set version of Fever (featuring random Panic! paraphernalia and a DVD) came out just in time for the 2006 holiday season.
After additional tour dates, the bandmembers announced that they were eliminating the exclamation point from their name, a sign that seemed to foreshadow the mature, less emo-driven rock featured on Pretty. Odd. Released in March 2008, the sophomore album peaked at number two in the U.S. and showcased an evolving band whose tastes had grown to encompass the Beatles' psychedelic pop. The group supported the album with another round of shows, one of which was captured on the CD/DVD release ..Live in Chicago. The band took a hit in June 2009, though, when Walker and Ross left the lineup in order to form their own band, the Young Veins. Urie and Smith soldiered on in the studio as a duo, though they did fill the holes in their touring lineup with Ian Crawford and Dallon Weekes. In 2011, they released their third studio album, the John Feldmann and Butch Walker-produced Vices & Virtues.
Two years later, the band returned with Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die! Once again produced by Walker, the album was inspired by Urie's hometown of Las Vegas and featured a title borrowed from Hunter S. Thompson's classic Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. An eclectic album that showcased Urie's interest in hip-hop and electronic music, it was also the first album to feature Weekes in the studio. After several live shows in 2013, Smith announced he was leaving the band's tour, citing his ongoing substance abuse issues.
By 2015, Smith officially announced he had left the band. Around the same time, Weekes' position was once again downgraded to touring member. With Urie at the helm, Panic! At the Disco finished out the year by releasing the singles 'Hallelujah,' 'Victorious,' and 'The Emperor's New Clothes.' All of the songs were included on the band's fifth studio album, 2016's Death of a Bachelor, which featured co-production from Urie and longtime engineer Jake Sinclair. The album debuted at number one in the U.S. and was nominated for a Grammy for Best Rock Album. A tour followed, resulting in a concert album in 2018. Also that year, Urie returned with the full-length Pray for the Wicked. Once again produced by Sinclair, it featured the singles 'High Hopes,' 'King of the Clouds', and 'Say Amen (Saturday Night),' the latter of which became the group's first number one single. ~ Corey Apar
Panic At The Disco Wiki
Similar Artists
See All* New subscribers only. Plan automatically renews after trial.
Despite the title of Panic! At the Disco’s latest album, “Pray for the Wicked,” frontman Brendon Urie insists he “can’t stand for evil.” At the “iHeartRadio Album Release Party with Panic! At The Disco” for the new record, which dropped today (June 22), Urie expressed his disgust for Donald Trump and his “zero tolerance” immigration policy that split more than 2,000 immigrant children from their parents at the U.S. border.
“Everyday it’s like another dumb piece of sh– thing that he just did,” Urie told Variety. “Like this pimp sh– that he just did where he set up the means to separate kids and put them in detention centers — in cages — like animals, and then signed the order and said, ‘I did this. I got rid of it.’ It’s like, ‘No, motherf—er. You made the order.’ That’s evil — that’s actual evil.”
Urie is hardly the first musician to denounce the president for his actions, but while he says he feels a responsibility to speak out against injustice, a concert stage isn’t necessarily his venue of choice.
“What I would rather do is use music as an escape, obviously, but I think it is important, to a certain degree, to make it known — to let it be known where I stand — because I can’t stand for evil,” Urie said. “I can’t abide; I will not stand for it, and I will continue to fight. And whether or not I use that during our show remains to be seen because I have said stuff in the past, but I don’t necessarily want to give Trump his time during my show for our fans. I want us to build something more beautiful rather than take away by having to talk about that jackhole. So there is a certain degree that I do want to be political, and I do want to have a stance on stuff, but I want to do it a smart way.”
As far as how he plans to take action, Urie said he intends to start a fund to support causes he cares about, as well as volunteer his time to community service efforts. During Thursday’s concert at the iHeart Radio Theater in Los Angeles, Urie kept his political comments brief, introducing the song “Girls/Girls/Boys” as his “f— you” to Trump. The song about bisexual relationships has been revered as an anthem for the LGBT community.
The political climate also played a role in developing “Pray for the Wicked,” which represents two years of both societal and personal changes for Urie since Panic!’s last album, “Death of a Bachelor” dropped in 2016. In that time, a new president was elected, and Urie completed a stint on Broadway starring in “Kinky Boots,” which he said had a significant influence on the sound of “Pray for the Wicked.”
During his eight-shows-a-week Broadway schedule, Urie used his downtime between double-header performances to set up his laptop, recorder and acoustic guitar, putting down beats and crafting new lyrics while Netflix played in the background. Since he completed his time on the Broadway stage in August 2017, the singer said the experience has also reshaped him as a performer.
“It changed it so drastically that I don’t even think I noticed it,” Urie said. “I end up onstage now, and I feel more comfortable than I have, but when I watch videos of us from the last six months of one-off shows, it’s weird in a good way. I look at myself, and I go, ‘I don’t recognize me ever looking like that onstage, but that’s cool.’ I have a different vibe about me, like I’ve been meditating with crystals or something — like I’ve been cleansed or something.”
As much as it is inspired by new developments, Urie said “Pray for the Wicked” is also a reflection, in part, on the band’s and his maintained success for more than 13 years since “I Write Sins, Not Tragedies” put them on the musical map.
“How did I get here? Why am I still here? It can’t be just me,” Urie said. “Being eight-years-old and making cardboard cutouts of guitars and putting yarn around it and standing in front of the mirror just singing whatever songs at the time — dreaming of it — to being here now. A lot of it touches on that.”
High Hopes on Pray For The Wicked [Explicit] | 3:10 |
Hey Look Ma, I Made It on Pray For The Wicked [Explicit] | 2:49 |
Say Amen (Saturday Night) on Pray For The Wicked [Explicit] | 3:09 |
The Greatest Show on The Greatest Showman: Reimagined | 2:54 |
Death Of A Bachelor on Death Of A Bachelor [Explicit] | 3:23 |
I Write Sins Not Tragedies [Explicit] on A Fever You Can't Sweat Out | 3:06 |
Dancing's Not A Crime on Pray For The Wicked [Explicit] | 3:39 |
Victorious on Death Of A Bachelor [Explicit] | 2:58 |
Hallelujah on Death Of A Bachelor [Explicit] | 3:00 |
Emperor's New Clothes on Death Of A Bachelor [Explicit] | 2:38 |