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Panic at the Disco’s Secret Influences

3/25/08, 5:01 pm EST

Panic at the Disco’s new album Pretty. Odd. hits stores today, representing a clear evolution in the band’s sound and vision. The group has talked a lot about the Beatles influence on this outing, but what else does Panic at the Disco draw upon to arrive at their unique aesthetic? For the guide to what makes the Panic boys tick, click here, and for the complete review of Pretty. Odd., click here.


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Comments

Finally... | 3/26/2008, 12:47 pm EST

An emo band that has the balls to alienate their base of scene kids and write a decent record.

jh | 3/26/2008, 10:21 am EST

they’ve got some nerves…

joe la | 3/26/2008, 2:05 am EST

This is the glam-rock era of the emo music revolution… the once “okay” idea of your Jimmy Eat World’s and new-age Blink 182’s jamming the rock radio waves with sugar pop rock songs is now over. You’ve got these puppets for musicians sitting on a bench in front of a old fashioned house with old fashioned clothes and top hats on and all this…

… I’m sorry but if you’re trying to be old fashioned, Panic! At The Disco, then try writing a good rock album for a change.

And stop using so much damn punctuation in your album titles/song titles/band names… please. Thank you.

joe schmoe | 3/25/2008, 11:48 pm EST

yup. typical corporate rock band with no originality picks bands that are standy bys that they sound nothing like.

People will remember them like they remember Candlebox and Crash Test Dummies.

pretty. predictable. | 3/25/2008, 10:42 pm EST

Those are their influences? really. can’t tell hardly any of those from listening to their music.

seems like they chose some pretty safe bets (who the hell hasn’t been influenced by the beatles, bob dylan, or the who).

What a joke.

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