Death Of A Bachelor Panic! At The Disco

Album info

Album-Release:
2015

HRA-Release:
15.01.2016

Label: Warner / Atlantic Recording

Genre: Alternative

Subgenre: Indie Rock

Artist: Panic! At The Disco

Composer: Alex Deleon, Brendon Urie, Christopher J. Baran, Jake Sinclair, Mike Viola, Morgan Kibby, Rivers Cuomo, Alex Deleon, Christopher J. Baran, Mike Viola, Morgan Kibby, Rivers Cuomo, Aron Wright, Imad-Roy El-Amine, Morgan Kibby, Robert William Lamm, Dan Wilson

Album including Album cover

I`m sorry!

Dear HIGHRESAUDIO Visitor,

due to territorial constraints and also different releases dates in each country you currently can`t purchase this album. We are updating our release dates twice a week. So, please feel free to check from time-to-time, if the album is available for your country.

We suggest, that you bookmark the album and use our Short List function.

Thank you for your understanding and patience.

Yours sincerely, HIGHRESAUDIO

  • 1Victorious02:59
  • 2Don't Threaten Me With A Good Time03:33
  • 3Hallelujah03:01
  • 4Emperor's New Clothes02:39
  • 5Death Of A Bachelor03:24
  • 6Crazy=Genius03:18
  • 7LA Devotee03:17
  • 8Golden Days04:14
  • 9The Good, The Bad And The Dirty02:52
  • 10House Of Memories03:29
  • 11Impossible Year03:23
  • Total Runtime36:09

Info for Death Of A Bachelor

Panic! at the Disco returns with its fifth full-length. But it’s not the Panic! fans first met back in 2004. As the collection’s accompanying booklet reads: “Panic! at the Disco Is: Brendon Urie.” After a long series of lineup changes, the former quartet of childhood friends is now a one-person act. This shows on the new album, its meditations — mainly about love and loneliness — feel more personal to Urie. That its sonics so often reference Frank Sinatra and Queen, two heroes of Urie’s, is also pronounced.

Produced by Jake Sinclair (Taylor Swift, Fall Out Boy), Death Of A Bachelor marks the first release from Panic! At The Disco in nearly two years, following 2013’s acclaimed TOO WEIRD TO LIVE, TOO RARE TO DIE!

The first single off DOAB, “Hallelujah,” made chart history for the band with a Top 40 debut on Billboard’s “Hot 100” – Panic! At The Disco’s second Top 40 hit and first since 2006’s breakthrough classic, “I Write Sins, Not Tragedies.”

Brendon Urie, vocals, backing vocals, guitars, bass, keyboards, synthesizers, drums, percussion

Produced by Jake Sinclair


Panic! At The Disco The members of Panic! at the Disco had barely graduated high school when their full-length debut, A Fever You Can't Sweat Out, transformed the suburban Las Vegas teens into national emo-pop stars. The band had materialized several years earlier, when 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 its 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 its 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! pressed on with their friend Jon Walker on board for a full summer tour that culminated with appearances at the Lollapalooza, 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 group 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 in the studio as a duo, though they did fill the holes in their touring lineup with Ian Crawford and Dallon Weekes. In 2011 the band released their third studio album, Vices & Virtues.

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO