

Setlist highlights: Higher Ground, Living For the City, Superstition Stevie Wonder – Beat Club, Germany (1974)
Panic at the disco music midtown 2019 setlist full#
Here are 75 full concerts, old and new- spanning from the 1970’s until now- to feed your daily music fix. But in the meantime, we have the magic of the internet and thousands of hours of archived footage to live vicariously through! We’re counting down the days until we can safely pack into a sweaty club or stadium and sing arm in arm to our favourite songs once again. It’s safe to say, we won’t be taking those experiences for granted ever again. I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve found myself spiralling down a YouTube wormhole, reminiscing the old gigs, new gigs, festival sets, concert films, and everything in-between. We’d say there’s a 99.99% chance that’s NOT the new album title though.Current life without the thrill of attending live shows is very strange. Seeing as the album hasn’t been finished yet, it’s unlikely we’ll be getting a confirmed name any time soon.īrendon Urie DID however joke earlier this year on Twitter that their new album would be called ‘Fanic Ot The Bisco’, after the internet tried to guess what the acronym ‘FOTB’, the title of Vampire Weekend’s latest album ‘Father Of The Bride’, stood for. What is Panic! At The Disco's next album called? Who knows, I might even put that out on SoundCloud on a whim some time soon!” he said. It’s like 90 seconds long and is really fun. I actually just played something for my bandmates recently - we have an old song called ‘The Calendar’ and I made a metal version of it from years back.

“I want to do a metal project in particular. Surprisingly, Brendon has expressed interest in experimenting with a metal sound. I still have so many different things that I want to do, particularly in terms of genres.” Even from song to song within one album I feel like things could change even more drastically, and maybe that’ll happen as time goes on. “Yes, all of the Panic albums do sound different and have their own vibe, their own aesthetic and imagery, but I still feel like I can do more. The long answer is that Brendon explained in a recent interview with Rocksound that he wants to diversity the band’s sound. Panic! have been pretty great music shapeshifters throughout their music career, so the short answer is - who knows! What's the concept of the seventh album going to be? That being said, an album of some sort is definitely in the works! In the same interview, Brendon explained: “Some are two minute long just instrumentals, some are 30 second voice memos, gibberish, some are inside jokes written on napkins at bars.

Their last album Pray For The Wicked was released in June 2018, so there might be a bit of a wait yet. The band have always released albums pretty regularly, releasing a new album approximately every two years since their first in 2005. I can’t help myself so I don’t think it’ll be too long before another Panic record.” Not with anything planned in mind but just working on some ideas. Speaking to Billboard in May 2019, he explained: “I’m home now and we’re taking some time off and I’m chilling and I’m streaming and I’m hanging out with my fans online and it’s amazing but I thought I would take a little more time off and I’m already starting music. There’s no set date for the release of Panic! At The Disco’s seventh album yet, but Brendon Urie did recently reveal that he’s already started working on some ideas for it. Via GIPHY When will Panic! At The Disco's next album be released?
