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Too Weird to Live, Rare Die! [LP]
Barnes and Noble
Too Weird to Live, Rare Die! [LP]
Current price: $9.09
Barnes and Noble
Too Weird to Live, Rare Die! [LP]
Current price: $9.09
Size: CD
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Picking up where they left off on the synth pop and '80s new wave direction of their 2011 album,
Vices & Virtues
,
Panic! At the Disco
return with their fourth studio album, 2013's
Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!
Still focused around the songwriting duo of lead singer
Brendon Urie
and drummer
Spencer Smith
also feature bassist
Dallon Weekes
, who joined as a full-time member in 2010. Ever since the original lineup of
split in half just after the release of their
Beatles
-influenced sophomore album,
Pretty. Odd.
Urie
and
Smith
have carried the emo torch, finding new ways to keep their specific brand of high-energy, emotionally overwrought pop relevant to to whatever sound is happening in mainstream pop music. That said, clearly
have never been overly interested in pigeonholing themselves into just one genre, and their latest release does nothing to counter the band's reputation as pop mavericks. Whether it's the
Thomas Dolbyisms
of "Girls/Girls/Boys" or the malevolent
NIN-esque
pounding of "Girl That You Love,"
never settles too deeply into just one sound. Tracks like "Nicotine" and "Collar Full" even retain much of the anthemic rock bombast of the band's early work, despite the underlying dancefloor intimations coming from the rhythm section and synthesizers. Indeed, '80s synths and dance beats are a good fit for
's voice, and though the band sticks closer to its roots than emo class president
Fall Out Boy
-- whose own delvings into synthesizer pop nearly reach levels of '90s European techno --
paints an exciting picture of
's genre-bending career trajectory to come. ~ Matt Collar
Vices & Virtues
,
Panic! At the Disco
return with their fourth studio album, 2013's
Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!
Still focused around the songwriting duo of lead singer
Brendon Urie
and drummer
Spencer Smith
also feature bassist
Dallon Weekes
, who joined as a full-time member in 2010. Ever since the original lineup of
split in half just after the release of their
Beatles
-influenced sophomore album,
Pretty. Odd.
Urie
and
Smith
have carried the emo torch, finding new ways to keep their specific brand of high-energy, emotionally overwrought pop relevant to to whatever sound is happening in mainstream pop music. That said, clearly
have never been overly interested in pigeonholing themselves into just one genre, and their latest release does nothing to counter the band's reputation as pop mavericks. Whether it's the
Thomas Dolbyisms
of "Girls/Girls/Boys" or the malevolent
NIN-esque
pounding of "Girl That You Love,"
never settles too deeply into just one sound. Tracks like "Nicotine" and "Collar Full" even retain much of the anthemic rock bombast of the band's early work, despite the underlying dancefloor intimations coming from the rhythm section and synthesizers. Indeed, '80s synths and dance beats are a good fit for
's voice, and though the band sticks closer to its roots than emo class president
Fall Out Boy
-- whose own delvings into synthesizer pop nearly reach levels of '90s European techno --
paints an exciting picture of
's genre-bending career trajectory to come. ~ Matt Collar