Deep Album Cuts Vol. 294: Panic! At The Disco






The other day I wrote about how I like Panic! At The Disco's new stuff, but they're in the awkward position where an older deep cut, "House of Memories," blew up on TikTok this year and has 8 times as many streams as their entire new album combined. I've always kind of made fun of this band and dismissed most of their music, even in the mid-2000s when I loved pretty much all their other big crossover emo bands (My Chemical Romance, Paramore, and of course PATD's mentors Fall Out Boy). But I enjoyed "Hey Look Ma, I Made It" from their last album and the new album enough that I decided to give their catalog a chance to grow on me, and it did. 

Panic! At The Disco deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. London Beckoned Songs About Money Written By Machines
2. Camisado
3. Time To Dance
4. There's A Good Reason These Tables Are Numbered Honey, You Just Haven't Thought Of It Yet
5. She's A Handsome Woman
6. When The Day Met The Night
7. Behind The Sea
8. She Had The World
9. Nearly Witches (Ever Since We Met...)
10. Hurricane
11. Sarah Smiles
12. Vegas Lights
13. Casual Affair
14. Collar Full
15. House Of Memories
16. Crazy = Genius
17. The Good, The Bad And The Dirty
18. The Overpass
19. King Of The Clouds
20. Old Fashioned
21. Say It Louder
22. God Killed Rock And Roll
23. Star Spangled Banner

Tracks 1, 2, 3 and 4 from A Fever You Can't Sweat Out (2005)
Tracks 5, 6, 7 and 8 from Pretty. Odd. (2008)
Tracks 9, 10 and 11 from Vices & Virtues (2011)
Tracks 12, 13 and 14 from Too Weird To Live, Too Rare To Die! (2013)
Tracks 15, 16 and 17 from Death Of A Bachelor (2016)
Tracks 18, 19 and 20 from Pray For The Wicked (2018)
Tracks 21, 22 and 23 from Viva Las Vengeance (2022)

Most of the members of Panic! At The Disco were in high school in the Las Vegas suburbs and hadn't played a show yet when Pete Wentz of Fall Out Boy heard their demos for "Time To Dance" and "Camisado" and signed them to Decaydance, a year after they'd transitioned from Blink-182 covers to playing original songs. I can't imagine those kids had any idea what hit them. A Fever You Can't Sweat Out was recorded on the cheap in a studio in College Park, Maryland, where my wife works and 20 minutes from where we live -- I'm always very curious exactly where the studio was, it's probably the biggest record ever made there. The album was released a couple weeks after "Sugar, We're Going Down" entered the top 10, and in under a year "I Write Sins, Not Tragedies" was a top 10 hit as well. 

Panic! At The Disco is one of those interesting bands that has completely changed lineups and creative leadership over the course of its career, but most people might have never even noticed, since the same lead singer was up front the entire time. Guitarist Ryan Ross was the lyricist and primary songwriter for the first two albums, which the band recorded as a quartet. But Ross and bassist Jon Walker left the band in 2009 (although one song on Vices & Virtues, "Nearly Witches," was a Pretty. Odd. leftover with a Ross writing credit). And drummer Spencer Smith left in 2015, with Panic! finally becoming a Brendon Urie solo project. 

PATD and a lot of their contemporaries seemed to pivot hard to classic rock influences when following up their breakthrough albums -- My Chemical Romance did a Queen thing, The Killers went all in on Springsteen, and Panic went for a Beatles/Beach Boys vibe on Pretty. Odd. It's got some really great stuff on it, and Ross sings some leads on "She Had The World" and "Behind The Sea" and has a pleasant if more ordinary voice. 

After Pretty. Odd. underperformed, Ross and Walker left and started a new band, The Young Veins, which released one album continuing in the style of Pretty. Odd. in 2010 and then split up. I have no idea what kind of personal or creative conflicts led to the split, but it's strange to think that Ryan Ross pretty much penned all the songs that launched the band's career and sold about 4 million albums, and then he virtually disappeared from the music scene for the past decade. 

Panic! is such a different thing now, it feels like even for nostalgic Warped Tour kids who embrace, say, Paramore's newer albums, "High Hopes"-era Urie has become kind of an arch villain. Ironically, that hasn't even changed with Viva Las Vengeance, which is something of a return to the nostalgic garage rock/power pop vibes of Pretty. Odd. But it's still hard to imagine the original PATD lineup reuniting and playing A Fever You Can't Sweat Out in its entirety at a When We Were Young festival someday, but stranger things have happened. 

"House of Memories" appears to be a completely fan-driven phenomenon. PATD didn't even perform the song live for the first time until this past September at the tour kickoff for Viva Las Vengeance, a few months after it took off on TikTok. But Death Of A Bachelor was a big album for them, their only multi-platinum album since A Fever even before "House of Memories" took off. "Collar Full" from Too Weird To Live is probably my favorite song on here, though, very much feels like the highlight of their work with Butch Walker. 
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