Genius Lyrics
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – I Write Sins Not Tragedies
|
“I Write Sins Not Tragedies” is Panic! At The Disco’s second single from their debut studio album, A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out. This song is considered the most popular song of P!
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Crazy = Genius
|
Brendon makes a statement about whether there’s a link between insanity and creativity on the sixth song of Death Of A Bachelor. The song is framed as a conversation between
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – High Hopes
|
“High Hopes” is about seeking your dreams without hesitancy and seeing those dreams come to fruition beyond your wildest imagination. Having high hopes is a phrase that means to
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Nicotine
|
“Nicotine” is a song with a clever double-meaning, talking about both smoking and a toxic relationship. Brendon revealed the double-meaning in a track-by-track review with Rock
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Emperor's New Clothes
|
“Emperor’s New Clothes” is the fourth track and single from Panic! At The Disco’s fifth studio album, Death of a Bachelor, which was released on January 15, 2016.
The accompanying
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – House of Memories
|
“House Of Memories” is the tenth song off Panic! at the Disco’s fifth studio album, Death of a Bachelor.
Coinciding perfectly with the title of the album, the song’s dispirited
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Hallelujah
|
“Hallelujah” was released to iTunes on April 20th, 2015. It was the first song released without founding member Spencer Smith, who left the band on April 2nd.
Preceding the track’
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Victorious
|
“Victorious” is an upbeat, pop-influenced song about…Brendon Urie’s lack of athletic skills?
I was never really great at sports. Never picked first for the team. But what I missed
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Into the Unknown (Panic! at the Disco Version)
|
“Into the Unknown” is a cover of the soundtrack’s lead song from the animated Disney musical Frozen II (2019). The song was released by American band Panic! at the Disco as the
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Say Amen (Saturday Night)
|
“Say Amen (Saturday Night)” was one of two singles released to announce Panic! At The Disco’s sixth studio album Pray for the Wicked. The other single was “(Fuck A) Silver Lining.”
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Bohemian Rhapsody
|
Right off the soundtrack for Suicide Squad, Panic! At The Disco covers the Queen mega-hit, “Bohemian Rhapsody". Prior to their rendition, Panic! covered the song for roughly two
|
|
Panic! at the Disco (Ft. LOLO) – Miss Jackson
|
“Miss Jackson” is the lead single off Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!. It tells the story of a woman who manipulates the men who fall in love with her and then abandons them
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – I Constantly Thank God for Esteban
|
“I Constantly Thank God For Esteban” is a statement about hypocrites and liars, disguised as a criticism of religion. The second half of the first verse reveals the deeper meaning
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Intermission
|
“Intermission” marks a transition point in the music from a sort of Pop Punk/Electronic Rock feel to a more Baroque Pop/Rock style.
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – LA Devotee
|
“LA Devotee” is the fourth single off Panic! at the Disco’s fifth studio album, Death of a Bachelor.
The song focuses on a person who embodies the idea of the LA archetype—one who
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Far Too Young to Die
|
“Far Too Young to Die” is about a magnetic romantic connection and youthful urgency.
The concept of being ‘far too young to die’ is a feeling common to youth, and causes young
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – But It's Better If You Do
|
In this song, the narrator is at a strip club wishing that he didn’t have to be there because of loneliness.
The song is connected to the 7th track, “Lying is the Most Fun a Girl
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Valerie
|
Panic! At The Disco covered “Valerie” by The Zutons the BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge in 2008.
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – California
|
(Uh, uh, eh, uh) / [Verse 1] / Your daddy bought you a new black Jetta / A little something else to curb the pain / Waiting on a call, text, or whatever / Your life's a storm cloud
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Always
|
“Always” is a one-sided love story inspired by the events of The Great Gatsby. He’s in love with someone that doesn’t appear to offer as much attention as he gives to them. Brendon
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Sad Clown
|
[Intro] / Vincero / [Verse 1] / I thought that I had friends, I thought I even liked them / But now I'm thinkin' maybe not so much / I hit the spacebar, I cannot play guitar / They
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Let's Kill Tonight
|
“Let’s Kill Tonight” is a spiteful song about a past romance that ended bitterly. Their relationship has left Brendon with a “cold heart” and he vows to destroy her reputation to
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Casual Affair
|
“Casual Affair” details the secrecy and thrill of having a one-night casual affair. The song buzzes with high energy synths along with plenty of low end rhythm.
Urie discusses the
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Turn Off the Lights
|
“Turn Off The Lights” is a nod to the insecurities that plague almost everyone at some point. It’s these insecurities that bring us down and don’t let us achieve what we set out
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Praying
|
[Verse 1] / My love is all I need / A broken symphony / My love is all I need when it all falls down / Turn it up, turn the lights down low / Drift off in a world of our own / My
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – The Calendar
|
“The Calendar” is about both the end of a relationship and the departure of Ryan Ross and Jon Walker from the band. Brendon Urie told MTV News that the song started off as a
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Crosses
|
[Chorus: Brendon Urie] / Crosses all down the boulevard / Starin' back at me, another broken dream / Hold me close, I don't wanna be / One of these crosses / [Post-Chorus: Brendon
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Stall Me
|
“Stall Me” is a self-contradictory song about Brendon’s love for now-wife Sarah Orzechowski. It was co-written by Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz, who actually discovered Panic! At
|
|
Dutch Melrose (Ft. HARRY WAS HERE) – All Panic No Disco
|
[Intro: HARRY WAS HERE] / She said if I die with all my friends / Bring me back do it all again / No looking back if it's the end / Couple drop out kids / All panic / [Verse 1
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Golden Days
|
The eight track of Death of a Bachelor takes listeners on a nostalgic journey via vivid imagery and 70’s pop culture references.
The verses largely deal with happy memories – they
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Hurricane
|
“Hurricane” is a high-energy song about a passionate romance that unfortunately fizzled out. The vice embedded in the lyrics seems to be recklessness, with some possible virtues
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Don’t Let the Light Go Out
|
[Verse 1] / Stare at a wall that's told a thousand tragedies / Holding a hand that's loved every part of me / A lady comes and tells me that I got to leave / Right away, everybody
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Death of a Bachelor
|
“Death Of A Bachelor” was heavily inspired by Frank Sinatra. As a single, Death of a Bachelor released three days before the 100th anniversary of Sinatra’s birth.
Panic! singer/
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Roaring 20s
|
“Roaring 20s” describes Brendon Urie’s experience playing Charlie Price in the Broadway musical Kinky Boots.
Urie was “raised on musicals” and found himself infatuated with The
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – IDGAF
|
Panic! At This Disco covered Dua Lipa’s “IDGAF” in the BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge on May 29, 2018. This appearance followed their performance at BBC’s The Biggest Weekend festival on
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Vegas Lights
|
“Vegas Lights” was written as an ode to Sin City, discussing both its positive attributes and its negative ones. The intro samples a song from Sesame Street, which may be a nod to
|
|
Panic! at the Disco (Ft. fun.) – C'mon
|
[Intro: Brendon Urie] / It's getting late, and I / Cannot seem to find my way home tonight / Feels like I am falling down a rabbit hole / Falling for forever, wonderfully wondering
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Viva Las Vengeance
|
[Verse 1] / Pyramid of ones / Kids with loaded guns, / Plugged on a power strip (Power strip) / I'm already dead / Woodstock in the shed / I'm so out of it (Out of it) / Someone
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Collar Full
|
“Collar Full” seems to be a continuation of the story told in “Far Too Young to Die” — it’s all about going after this girl the singer has been chasing, making memories and how the
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Trade Mistakes
|
“Trade Mistakes” finds Brendon lamenting the mistakes he made in a relationship, wishing he could reverse them. While they were together, he probably committed numerous vices, ones
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Karma Police
|
[Verse 1] / Karma police / Arrest this man, he talks in maths / He buzzes like a fridge, he's like a detuned radio / Karma police / Arrest this girl, her Hitler hairdo / Is making
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – Starboy
|
Panic! At The Disco covered “Starboy” by The Weeknd in the BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge.
All annotations for “Starboy” can be found on the original page.
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – All By Yourself
|
[Verse 1] / If you give a listen / You sweet little kitten / Sittin' downstairs in your room / Wood panel walls / Rock posters from the mall / Playin' just for you / [Pre-Chorus
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – That Green Gentleman (Things Have Changed)
|
“That Green Gentleman (Things Have Changed)” is the third single from Panic! at the Disco’s second studio album, Pretty. Odd..
The band wrote this song about being in the band and
|
|
Panic! at the Disco – She's a Handsome Woman
|
“She’s a Handsome Woman” uses large amounts of dreamlike and nonsensical imagery, both things that are common tropes within the album, to tell the story of an affair between two
|