Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Panic at the Disco





Panic! at the Disco is an American rock duo, formed in Las Vegas, Nevada in 2004. Since its conception, the band's line-up has included Brendon Urie (lead vocals, guitar, piano), and Spencer Smith (drums). Original and former members Ryan Ross (guitar) and Jon Walker (bass) left the group in 2009. The band has been described by critics as a variety of genres, most commonly pop punk, alternative rock, and baroque pop.

The band formed and recorded their first demos while they were all still in high school. Shortly after graduation, the band recorded and released their debut, A Fever You Can't Sweat Out (2005). Bolstered by the lead single "I Write Sins, Not Tragedies", the album eventually was certified double platinum and met with much success. The group then wrote and recorded their second record, Pretty. Odd., released in 2008. Marked as a drastic change in tone from their debut, it undersold commercial expectations but met with critical success.

The band released their third album, entitled Vices & Virtues, on March 22, 2011,[3] while the record's first single, "The Ballad of Mona Lisa", was released February 1, 2011.
 The band was formed in 2004 in the suburban area of Summerlin, Las Vegas, by childhood friends Ryan Ross on vocals and guitar and Spencer Smith on drums. Both teens attended Bishop Gorman High School, and the two began playing music together in ninth grade. They invited friend Brent Wilson from nearby Palo Verde High School to join on bass, and Wilson invited classmate Brendon Urie to try out on guitar.[5] The quartet soon began rehearsing in Smith's grandmother's living room.[6] Urie grew up in a Mormon family in Las Vegas and early on skipped rehearsals to go to church.[7] Ross initially was the lead vocalist for the group, but after frequent late-night visits with Urie, they unanimously decided to move him to lead.[8] The teens initially worked solely as a Blink-182 cover band.[9]

The monotonous nature of local Las Vegas bands influenced the members of the band to be different and creative, and they soon began laying down experimental demos. The band had not even performed a single live show when they were signed. "We never went out and played shows before we got signed because the music scene in Las Vegas is so bad. There's not a lot going on," Smith said. "In our practice space, there were something like 30 bands, and every day we'd walk into that room and hear the exact same death-metal bands. So it kind of influenced us to be different. And to get out of Las Vegas."[10] Urie began working at Tropical Smoothie Cafe in Summerlin to afford rent for the band's new practice space.[11] The four left their education behind to concentrate on music, with Ross falling out with his father for leaving college after his first year.[6] Upon telling his parents of their intentions to quit high school in favor of being in a band, Urie was kicked out, forced to stay at friend's homes and eventually affording a one-bedroom apartment.[12]

Ross and Urie soon began to commit to their laptops the demos they had been developing, and posted three early demos ("Time to Dance," "Nails for Breakfast, Tacks for Snacks" and "Camisado") on PureVolume.[5] On a whim, they sent a link to Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz via a LiveJournal account. Wentz, who was in Los Angeles at the time with the rest of Fall Out Boy working on their major-label debut, From Under the Cork Tree, drove down to Las Vegas to meet with the young, unsigned band.[10] Upon hearing "two to three" songs during band practice, Wentz was impressed and immediately wanted the band to sign to his Fueled by Ramen imprint label Decaydance Records, which made them the first on the new label. Around December 2004, the group signed to the label.[8] As news broke that Wentz had signed Panic! (who had yet to perform a single live show), fans on the Internet began to bash the group. "Almost right away we knew what was going to happen," Ross explained in a 2006 interview. "We had two songs online and people were already making assumptions on what kind of band we were and what we were going to sound like."[13]

Meanwhile, Wentz began to hype the band wherever possible: from wearing "Pete! at the Disco" T-shirts onstage to mentioning them in interviews. Wentz gave a quick shout-out to the band during a press junket on the day before the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards: "I've got a couple of bands coming out soon on Decaydance, one being this band called Panic! at the Disco," Wentz said. "Their record is going to be your next favorite record. It's called A Fever You Can't Sweat Out — get it before your little brother does."[13] At the time of their signing, all of the band members were still in high school (with the exception of Ross, who was forced to quit UNLV). Urie graduated in May 2005 and Wilson and Smith finished school online as the band left for College Park, Maryland to record their debut record.[5]


 Band members

Current members

    * Brendon Urie – lead vocals, guitars, bass guitar, keyboards, piano (2004-present)
    * Spencer Smith – drums, percussion (2004-present)

Current touring

    * Ian Crawford - lead guitar, backing vocals (2009-present)
    * Dallon Weekes - bass guitar, synthesizers, backing vocals (2009-present)

Former members

    * Ryan Ross – vocals, lead guitar, keyboards (2004–2009)
    * Jon Walker – bass guitar, guitars, backing vocals (2006–2009)
    * Brent Wilson – bass guitar (2004–2006)

Former touring

    * Eric Ronick – keyboards, backing vocals, percussion (2006–2008)
    * Bartram Nason – cello, keyboards, electronic drums, percussion (2006–2007)
    * Bradley Potter – lead guitar, backing vocals (2006)

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