Panic At The Disco List Of Songs
Credit to Panic! At the Disco for all of the songs! (Brendon Urie and Ryan Ross) Mostly Brendon Urie. Credit to Google and DeviantArt for the picture. Named after a line from Name Taken’s “Panic,“ Panic! At the Disco was formed by drummer Spencer Smith, bassist Brent Wilson. Popular Panic! At the Disco songs High Hopes.
Official songs only (no demos or unreleased stuff we've all spotted online). - No cover versions (we love 'This Is Halloween' too but it isn't their original song). - No collabs where Panic! Isn't the lead artist ('20 Dollar Nose Bleed' is a banger but it ain't making the cut this time). Right, everybody 'Ready To Go'? Then let's dive in.
71) 'Intro' No, it's not really a proper song. Yes, it is on A Fever You Can't Sweat Out. Yes, we will just put it at the bottom and get it out the way.
70) 'Intermission'. Yes, this counts. No, there aren't any vocals. Yes, it is still pretty damn catchy. 69) 'Can't Fight Against The Youth' From the Too Weird To Live, Too Rare To Die period, this has an Imagine Dragons vibe to it that would have perhaps jarred with the more oddball elements of the main album. 68) 'Stall Me' Surprisingly heavier guitars from the Vice And Virtues sessions, it suffers in comparison to the similar but better 'Memories'. 67) 'All The Boys' Found on The Nicotine EP, this expands upon the lyrical theme of the lead track's excess and consumption 66) 'I Wanna Be Free' Positive messaging in this pedestrian radio rock number found in the Vice And Virtues bonus material.
65) 'Mercenary' From the soundtrack to Batman-themed video game Arkham City, there's certainly a Joker-esque clown quality to the fairground-style backing instruments. 64) 'Collar Full' Swaggering and synthy, this listens now like a proto-version of the later (and superior) 'LA Devotee'. 63) 'The Good, The Bad And The Dirty' Sports-style chant from Death Of A Bachelor, very appropriate for any boxing footage background music. 62) 'Turn Off The Lights' The Vice And Virtues sessions were very fruitful in terms of bonus material and this hyper arena-rattler is no exception.
Panic At The Disco All Songs
61) 'Far Too Young To Die' 1980s style UK synth pop in the vain of Duran Duran at their least boyband-esque. 60) 'House Of Memories' Minor mid-tempo number with a fantastic tempo-change in the middle eight. 59) 'From A Mountain In The Middle Of The Cabins' Beach Boys-style close harmonies give this a jolly, almost Disney vibe, complete with a whistling solo. 58) 'Bittersweet' An off-cut from Vice And Virtues, this is peppy and danceable pop, constantly switching between minor and major chords to give some fitting colour to the songtitle.
57) 'It's Almost Halloween'. A seasonal fave that makes for excellent holiday fare, with or without the iconic video. 56) 'We're So Starving' The perfect introduction to the Pretty.Odd. Like the theme tune to a long lost Monkees episode. 55) 'C'Mon' Epic collab with label mates Fun. Develops into a rather lovely string-led singalong.
54) 'Impossible Year' Brendon pushes his Sinatra tribute even further with luscious orchestral flourishes and a commanding vocal performance. 53) 'Crazy=Genius' A sister tack to 'There's A Reason These Tables Are Numbered.' With similarly jazzy influences.
52) 'Nails For Breakfast, Tacks For Snacks'. Business english for beginners pdf. Taking the lead from Mariah, Brendon is clearly aware that all the best festive tracks are fast-paced, danceable and feature a horn section. 42) 'The Piano Knows Something I Don't Know' Kate Bush-esque ambient vocals bleed into an ELO tribute steeped in 1960s nostalgia. 41) 'Memories' One of the best intros they've ever put together, building towards one of their biggest choruses and a name drop for A Streetcar Named Desire thrown in for good measure.
40) 'When The Day Met The Night' The soundtrack of sweet summer days in the park. Big, bold and brassy. 39) 'Folkin' Around' Does exactly what it says on the tin.
List Of Most Popular Panic At The Disco Songs
Divisive but undeniably fun. 38) 'Nearly Witches (Ever Since We Met)' From the French language choir intro to the organ noises and intricate lyrical references, this is just weird as hell and all the more glorious for it. 37) 'Golden Days' The most traditional rock song from Death Of A Bachelor comes ready to slay any festival stage. 36) 'The End Of All Things' At the time, this piano ballad with grandiose backing was the most ambitious Panic! Song ever attempted. The effort paid off. 35) 'Do You Know What I'm Seeing?'
A campfire singalong complete with a string section. Bittersweet and beautiful. 34) 'Casual Affair' Infidelity never sounded so dirty with a dense, bassy synth line wobbling along beneath.
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33) 'Hallelujah' Gospel-tinged glory with an incredible vocal performance that nails the high register. 32) 'I Constantly Thank God For Esteban' Spanish guitars lead the way in this passionate and adventurous romp. 31) 'Behind The Sea' Ryan Ross takes on lead vocals for his joyful, orchestral, shining moment in his time with the group. 30) 'London Beckoned Songs About Money Written By Machines'.