Panic! at the Disco
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Panic! at the Disco is an American pop rock "band" of which the sole permanent member is singer Brendon Urie. It is part of the record label known as Fueled by Ramen.
About
Panic! at the Disco was founded in 2004 in Las Vegas by Brendon Urie along with Ryan Ross, Spencer Smith and Brent Wilson, all of whom have since left the project. The band's debut album, "A Fever You Can't Sweat Out", was a triple-platinum hit and spawned the iconic single "I Write Sins, Not Tragedies", which contains the famous and often-referenced lyric "Haven't you people ever heard of closing the goddamn door?"
Subsequent albums have consisted of "Pretty. Odd." (2008), "Vices & Virtues" (2009), "Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!" (2013; also the final album where the "band" was an actual band), "Death of a Bachelor" (2016) and "Pray for the Wicked" (2018), whose lead single "High Hopes" became the "band"'s most commercially successful song ever and was later involved in a political incident wherein Brendon Urie attacked United States President Donald Trump over its unauthorized use in a campaign rally.
Fandom
Panic! at the Disco is regarded by its fans as forming a third of the so-called "Emo Trinity", along with similar bands My Chemical Romance and Fall Out Boy. [1]
Search interest
External references
[1] Brentwood High School Pow Wow News – The Holy Emo Trinity: How Three Bands Created an Alternative Music Religion
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