Fotos más vistas de Panic! At The Disco

Pete Wentz Adds the Latest Piece to the Panic! at the Disco Puzzle Last week, Panic! at the Disco released a snippet of what they told their fans was “something for all of your patience over the last year.” The prize was a ninety-second clip from a new song called “We’re So Starving” that the band admitted would “undergo some change” when they headed to Abbey Road Studios this month to finish their sophomore record, due in March. Fast forward to yesterday, when Pete Wentz (who signed the over-the-top Vegas quartet to his Decaydance imprint) put up a blog entry in defense of his pals: “Not too sure that anyone gets that the new Panic! song is a joke,” he wrote. “Sell me a sense of humor. The new record is different than whatever you are thinking.” What led to Wentz’s latest defense of the band? A chronology of recent Panic! developments (and a possible solution to the latest puzzle) after the jump. December 12th: After going completely blank, Panic! at the Disco’s official site is replaced by a Wheel of Fortune-style puzzle, solved two days later with the words “You Don’t Have to Worry.” On the same day, an open call for extras goes up for the video accompanying the new single, “Nine in the Afternoon,” which they performed live at several gigs during ‘07. December 18th: A jigsaw puzzle appears on Panicatthedisco.com, along with a timestamp referring to 01:01:08. Speculation mounts that an announcement is coming in the new year and rumors begin circulating that the band is headlining the 2008 Honda Civic Tour. December 22nd: Pete Wentz posts a photo from the set of “Nine in the Afternoon” and says “this band has blown me away again.” December 25th: As a Christmas surprise, the puzzle pieces on the official site are updated with short clips of a new song. January 1st: Panic’s MySpace is updated with “We’re So Starving.” The song is a marked change from the band’s sma
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Publicado: 2008-01-08 Proveedor: Rolling Stone Etiquetas: Rock News
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Interview Panic at the Disco at RollingStone.com! If you could ask Panic at the Disco one thing, what would it be? Want to know what their favorite coffee shop is in Las Vegas? Curious about a particular lyric? Figure it out and let us know, because we’ll be talking to the spunky theatrical punk band next week, and we want questions from you. Send us a YouTube video of yourself asking a question to the band, and the best of the lot will run in a special video Q&A with Panic at the Disco next week. Put that webcam to good use by February 21st at 9 AM EST. To submit your video question, you can either: Join our YouTube group here and upload your video to the group, or Upload your video to a video-hosting site (YouTube, MySpace Videos, Vimeo, etc.) and email the URL of your uploaded video to: askarockstar@gmail.com. Please: NO ATTACHMENTS! We will not accept video files. RollingStone.com reserves the right to edit videos for length and/or clarity. And there’s no use in asking what songs inspired their band name, either – no questions you can answer by looking at their Wikipedia entry! Related Stories: High School Musical Panic In the Mosh Pit Panic! at the Disco Dance [Photo: Getty]
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Publicado: 2008-02-14 Proveedor: Rolling Stone Etiquetas: Ask a Rock Star, Rock Daily
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RAW PANIC STEALS THE SHOWA youthful vibe reigned at the Honda Civic Tour at the Roseland Ballroom Thursday night as fresh- faced fans rocked out to optimistic music played by Motion City Soundtrack, Phantom Planet and headliner Panic at the Disco. With low alcohol consumption (most of the crowd was under 21) the party was fueled by music, dancing and togetherness. All of the acts played well, but clearly the night belonged to the Las Vegas rockers Panic at the Disco. Theirs was an abbreviated set, but they made the time count with well-selected songs tapped from their '05 debut, "A Fever You Can't Sweat Out," and the recently released "Pretty. Odd." There were no missteps or snoozy lulls. The show opened up with "We're So Starving," a theatrical song wherein the band talks directly to the fans, telling them Panic has been off writing new songs - but not to fret, because they're still the same. Wrong. Panic is better than it's ever been. In fact, this "Sgt. Pepper"-spiced opening song - as well as the band's growing dependence on psychedelic sonics - made you feel the weight of The Beatles' influence on this group. In contrast to the layered arrangements of the new record, Panic's live show is streamlined to a rawer sound. That hardly dampened their enthusiasm for waving the Fab Four's freak flag, especially on "Do You Know What I'm Seeing?" and the night's showstopper, "Northern Downpour." The band, which originally bowed with a gimmicky, makeup-heavy production, has evolved into a stunningly good live band, confident in themselves as musicians and in the quality of their songs. They're still underrated, but with shows like this - and an album like "Pretty. Odd." - that will change fast.
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Publicado: 2008-05-10 Proveedor: New York Post Etiquetas: Panic, band, night, show, songs, music
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Panic! At the Disco’s Ryan Ross Talks New Album As He Turns Legal at Pete Wentz’s Bar Last night Panic! at the Disco’s Ryan Ross turned twenty-one in New York City at Angels and Kings, the East Village “dive bar” owned by labelmates Fall Out Boy, Gym Class Heroes, the Academy Is …, Cobra Starship and their management, Crush. Ross was in town between last weekend’s gigs at the Reading and Leeds festivals and this weekend’s Bumbershoot Music and Arts Festival in Seattle. After that, it’s back to work on the band’s sophomore disc, which is Ross’ main focus: “We’re trying to finish up in the next month, month and a half,” he says. After Bumbershoot and San Diego Street Scene at the end of September the band plans to head into the studio with a release slated for February or March of 2008. The scene at the bar last night was suitably carnival-esque for the dramatic Panic! guitarist. Ross’ girlfriend, Keltie Colleen (of Pussycat Dolls-esque troupe Sugar and Spice) planned the ordeal: She hung mini versions of Ross’ high school yearbook photo (which she found on the Internet) from the ceiling by ribbon, commissioned Ross’ friends to wear T-shirts sporting the image of a twelve-year-old Ross holding a fish, and planned her own midnight surprise: having fellow Sugar and Spice members wheel her out in a wrapped box. Though Ross and his bandmates chose not to invest in Angels and Kings when it opened because they were underage, the band is now halfway to legality (singer Brendan Urie and drummer Spencer Smith still have to hit the twenty-one milestone) and Ross says its possible the band would buy into the investment in the future. Some of the current owners were also in attendance last night: Gym Class Heroes’ Travis McCoy, whose band is heading out on the Young Wild Things Tour with Fall Out Boy this fall, and Gabe Saporta and Ryland Blackinton of Cobra Starship, whose next album comes out October 23rd.
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Publicado: 2007-09-01 Proveedor: Rolling Stone Etiquetas: Rock News
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Panic at the Disco Debut Stripped-Down Set, Sound on Honda Civic Tour There were some jarring product placements at the opening night of Panic at the Disco’s North American outing — even for something called the Honda Civic Tour. Motion City Soundtrack, the Hush Sound and Phantom Planet opened, and between sets automobile commercials alternated with videos from acts on the record label that distributes PATD’s music. (Click here for photos from last night’s show.) The Las Vegas quartet finally took the stage more than two and a half hours after the show began, opening with the salutary “We’re So Starving” and the current hit “Nine in the Afternoon.” The band alternated considerably less aggressive versions of tracks from A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out with stripped-down selections from its elaborate new album Pretty. Odd. Whether it was first-night jitters, a lack of sufficient rehearsal time, or the simple fact that their music is dependent on dozens of overdubs both from themselves and a myriad of outside players, Panic’s live presence was decidedly tentative. Drummer Spencer Smith proved himself the most confident musician: While other members cautiously approached what was essentially an entire set comprised of new and daunting arrangements, he supplied a momentum otherwise lacking from older album tracks like “Camisado” and intricate new cuts like “She’s a Handsome Woman.” Singer Brendon Urie furrowed and arched his brow to signify emotions he couldn’t fully articulate with hands occupied with guitars, while guitarist Ryan Ross looked uncomfortable and affable bassist Jon Walker acted as spokesman. Despite the fact that Panic had traded its burlesque dancers, frilly costumes and androgynous makeup for muted beige outfits and facial hair, the largely teenage and female audience screamed as if attending a boy-band spectacle. And to some degree, they were: Walker chided Urie for taking a sip from a beer, as the frontman was two days shy of his twenty-first birthday; an event Smith won’t celebrate for several m
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Publicado: 2008-04-11 Proveedor: Rolling Stone Etiquetas: Rock News, Live Shows
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Photo Gallery: Paramore, Snoop Dogg and Others at Bamboozle 2008 Paramore, Snoop Dogg, Bret Michaels, Jimmy Eat World, Panic at the Disco and a bevy of other bands stormed East Rutherford, New Jersey over the weekend for the annual Bamboozle festival. Click here for live shots from the festival, including Coheed and Cambria, Gym Class Heroes and Cobra Starship. [Photo: Ryan Muir for RollingStone.com]
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Publicado: 2008-05-05 Proveedor: Rolling Stone Etiquetas: Rock News, Festivals, Bamboozle
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Panic At The Disco Know Punctuation Better Than They Think.Panic at the Disco will no longer be able to call bands like the Academy Is ..., Enuff Z'Nuff and (hed) p.e. their titular peers.
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Publicado: 2008-01-15 Proveedor: VH1 Etiquetas: Artist, Panic!, Album, Disco, Fever, Sweat, Cant, Out, the, VH1, You, At, A, Punctuation, Ringtones, Tragedies, Playlist, Caillat, Awards, Better, Colbie, Crunch, Movies, Photos, Videos, Group, Music, Panic, Radio, Think, Video, Write, 2006, Know, News, Rock, Sins, Than, They, 100, A-Z, Big, MTV, Not, Top, 06, In,
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In the Studio: Panic! at the Disco (With Bonus Pete Wentz Video Interview) Panic! at the Disco guitarist-lyricist Ryan Ross is tired of computer-tuned vocals and software-tweaked drums. “People have taken technology so far, to the point where music is almost sterile these days,” he says from the studio in Las Vegas’ Palms Hotel, taking a break from recording sessions for the band’s second album. “With all those old rock & roll records, you can really feel there’s a character to them, because it was played by real people. I feel like a lot of that’s missing now.” It’s a common argument these days, but Ross is an odd person to be making it: His own band’s platinum debut, the Fall Out Boy-plus-synth-style A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out, was a prime offender, overflowing with maxed-out pitch-correction and baroque Pro Tools trickery. “That’s a valid point,” Ross says. “That record is basically programmed to a T. I mean, everything is lined up and perfect.” Click here to watch Pete Wentz talk about the new Panic! songs he’s heard so far, his favorite new lyrics and how he’s watched the band grow up and evolve. For their second album, everything is different: The band is writing songs on acoustic guitars, not on computers. And even though the group members have a far higher budget at their disposal than the $10,000 they spent on the first one, they’re recording the album live in the studio. “We do take after take until we get it right,” Ross says. “It’s a lot harder, but it’s making us play better.” They were still in high school when they recorded Fever, and it seems like they’re faintly embarrassed by it: “I think that everybody kind of changes a lot between the time they’re seventeen and when they’re twenty-one or twenty-two,” says Ross. The growing process hasn’t been easy. The band discarded ten or so songs for what would have been an entirely different v
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Publicado: 2007-11-17 Proveedor: Rolling Stone Etiquetas: Rock News, In the Studio
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Smashing Pumpkins, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Fall Out Boy Storm the U.K. for Reading and Leeds Festivals Over this past weekend, the twin premiere U.K. festivals known as Reading and Leeds overtook the English countryside as acts like Smashing Pumpkins, Nine Inch Nails, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Fall Out Boy, Panic! at the Disco and dozens of British buzz bands took turns rocking out in the two cities (more than 150,000 people packed the events, known as Carling Weekend, combined). Festival-goers and bands were treated to uncharacteristically sunny weather, which meant that celebrity attendees like Kelly Osbourne got to wear snazzy heels instead of wellies. And despite some artists exchanging words before the concerts even got underway, the event went off almost totally violence- (and beef-) free. The three-day weekend’s standout moments: Billy Corgan crooning an acoustic version of “1979″; Fall Out Boy delivering covers of Michael Jackson’s “Beat It” and Huey Lewis’ “The Power of Love.” Less electric moments: Anthony Kiedis accidentally unplugging a crucial cable resulting in sound problems for the remainder of his band’s set; Panic! at the Disco getting pelted with detritus for the second fest in a row. Last year, Panic! frontman Brendon Urie was briefly knocked out after being hit by a bottle; this year bassist Jon Walker received only a mild nick. “I was happy to take one for the band,” Walker told the NME. Take our bottle-free visual tour of the action at Reading and Leeds via our Carling Weekend photo gallery.
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Publicado: 2007-08-28 Proveedor: Rolling Stone Etiquetas: Rock News
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Pretty.Odd. by Panic At The DiscoThe follow-up to their platinum debut album finds the band dropping the exclamation point from their name. [Rock, Alternative, Pop]
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Publicado: 2008-03-26 Proveedor: Metacritic
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Ask a Rock Star: Panic at the Disco Panic at the Disco stopped by Rolling Stone last week, and we bombarded them with questions sent in by you, the readers, to see what makes this young quartet tick. Click above for the band’s favorite Beatles songs, what they sing in the shower and what inspired the tracks on their upcoming album Pretty.Odd. Related Stories: Album Preview: Panic at the Disco On Tour: Panic at the Disco Panic at the Disco Drop Exclamation Point [Video by Jennifer Hsu]
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Publicado: 2008-02-28 Proveedor: Rolling Stone Etiquetas: Rock News, Videos, Ask a Rock Star, Panic at the Disco
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Panic At The Disco Exclusives: Sneak-Peek 'Afternoon' Video, Hear SongPanic at the Disco exclusives: Catch a sneak peek of the band's new "Nine in the Afternoon" video and hear the song in its entirety.
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Publicado: 2008-01-24 Proveedor: VH1 Etiquetas: Artist, Album, Disco, Fever, Panic, Sweat, Cant, Out, the, VH1, You, at, A, Exclusives, Sneak-Peek, Afternoon, Ringtones, Tragedies, Playlist, Caillat, Awards, Colbie, Crunch, Movies, Panic!, Photos, Videos, Group, Music, Radio, Video, Write, 2006, Hear, News, Rock, Sins, Song, 100, A-Z, Big, MTV, Not, Top, 06, In, My,
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