Every Panic! At The Disco album ranked from worst to best (2024)

By Ali Shutler

last updated

As Brendon Urie announces his band's forthcoming seventh album Viva Las Vengeance, here's the Panic! At The Disco catalogue ranked

Every Panic! At The Disco album ranked from worst to best (1)

Panic! At The Disco started off as the ultimate Myspace-era emo band. The Las Vegas group bonded over Blink-182 songs, got signed after sending a LiveJournal message to Fall Out Boy’s Pete Wentz and quickly became the next big thing in alternative rock thanks to their flamboyant fashion sense and smart, genre-smashing songs about lust, love and coming of age.

In the years since, they’ve tried their hand at soulful ‘60s pop, urgent electro dance and even collaborated with Taylor Swift on the oh-so-sugary ‘Me!’. Panic! At The Disco have constantly evolved and now, with vocalist Brendon Urie the last man standing, the group are a festival-headlining, crossover giant on the verge of a brand new era with the forthcoming August release of new album Viva Las Vengeance.

Here's their story so far, told via their studio albums...

Every Panic! At The Disco album ranked from worst to best (2)

6. Vices & Virtues (2011)

For two albums, Panic! At The Disco had thrived on the collaboration between guitarist Ryan Ross and vocalist Brendon Urie, but Ross (alongside bassist Jon Walker) left the band after touring Pretty. Odd., with most people assuming that was the end of Panic!.

The group's third album Vices & Virtues sees Urie and drummer Spencer Smith fighting back with a whole lot to prove. From the theatrical Mona Lisa to the urgent disco punk of Let’s Kill Tonight, Vices & Virtues is perhaps the most aggressive, eclectic record Panic! have put their name to, as the band tried to figure out who they were and where they wanted to go next.

Buy from Amazon

5. Pray For The Wicked (2018)

Following on from the breakout success of Death Of A Bachelor, Pray For The Wicked saw Brendon Urie leaning into the shiny world of radio pop superstardom. Eternally optimistic and designed to soundtrack jubilant celebrations at gigs and in bedrooms at home, Panic!’s sixth album is a victory parade for everything the band (and Urie) had achieved.

However, with that said, it didn’t really push their story forward nor did it add anything new to the constantly evolving flavour of the band.

Buy from Amazon

4. Too Weird To Live, Too Rare To Die (2013)

For many younger fans, this album - a fearless, rebellious electro pop record about love, acceptance and isolation represented an entry point to Panic! At The Disco. It's full of swaggering songs like the party-starting Miss Jackson and the hammering Vegas Nights but it’s Girls/Girls/Boys, a funky ode to self-expression and sexuality, that is the record’s standout moment.

After the identity crisis of Vices & Virtues and Pretty. Odd., Too Weird... came as a return to confident form that’s been an unwavering mainstay of Panic! ever since.

Get the Louder Newsletter

The latest news, features and interviews direct to your inbox, from the global home of alternative music.

Buy from Amazon

3. A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out (2005)

The scrappy record that started it all. A collision of emo, electro, pop-punk and whatever vintage instruments the teenage band could get their hands on, A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out is an energetic ode to youthful excitement. Arriving at the same time as streaming, it spoke to a generation of kids who suddenly had access to all kinds of music without worrying about genre boundaries.

I Write Sins Not Tragedies is still an absolute rager while tracks like Build God, Then We’ll Talk leant into the melodramatic nature of that ‘00s scene perfectly. It’s rough around the edges but it captures that moment in time beautifully.

Buy from Amazon

2. Death Of A Bachelor (2016)

Panic! essentially became a solo project on this record and Brendon Urie really threw himself into the spotlight. Honing in on that sense of jubilance, tracks like Victorious, Hallelujah and Don’t Threaten Me With A Good Time saw the Panic! become the go-to-gang for feel good pop while the title track and House Of Memories saw Urie get vulnerable for the first time in a long while, bringing that emo tag back into the present day.

Every distinct, unique song on this record is an absolute hit.

Buy from Amazon

1. Pretty. Odd. (2008)

Now, hear us out. Over their six albums, Panic! At The Disco have been celebrated for their ability to evolve, surprise and go against what’s expected. That stunning debut album inspired countless copycat bands and it would have been so easy for the sudden superstars to come back with more of the same, but their desire to shock resulted in this - a Beatles-inspired record that traded in scrappy synths and urgent electric guitars for beautiful piano and soulful poetry.

Musically, Pretty. Odd. is the black sheep of the Panic! discography but the fearless, reckless spirit that inhabits every inch of this record is the very reason Panic! are so brilliant and so unpredictable even now, 17 years into their career. Without this album, there’s every chance the band would have faded into obscurity but Pretty. Odd. gave them the confidence to take risks and do whatever they want.

Buy from Amazon

Ali Shutler

More about louder

Looking back at their early years for inspiration, Smashing Pumpkins announce new album Aghori Mhori MeiWatch previously unseen videos of Chris Cornell covering Tracy Chapman's Fast Car and the Rolling Stones' Wild Horses

Latest

"The woody base of papyrus and patchouli leaves the senses longing for more in a rhythmic exchange of back and forth": Yes, Tony Iommi has released a new scent
See more latest►

Most Popular
"I always say, he’s from outer space somewhere": Prince's old bandmates on the otherworldly magic of being in his crew
7 new progressive metal albums that break all the genre’s rules
“We didn’t meander into obscurity and make records that I wasn’t proud of. None of that ever happened”: the epic story of Soundgarden, the superstar grunge band who didn’t want to be superstars
"I wasn’t concerned if people who liked The Downward Spiral would like this": Trent Reznor on the making of Nine Inch Nails' epic 1999 masterpiece The Fragile
The 15 best new metal songs you need to hear right now
Great new proggy music you must hear from Ulver, Simone Simons, Dark Sky Burial and more in Prog's Tracks Of The Week
“There are qualities of grandeur and flight in her music, yet it comes across as totally unpretentious and emotionally grounded”: Remembering Sandy Denny
“There’s going to be a feeling of loss but a huge sense of relief… I’ve had my time with them. I’m finding new friends now and they can move on”: When David Gilmour auctioned 123 of his guitars for charity
“I just couldn’t relate to him at all. It was a bad time for us to have met. I could see that he was thinking, Who is this weird guy?” When David Bowie and Bruce Springsteen first met in 1974, it did not go well
The 100 songs that changed metal
Every Sleater-Kinney album ranked from worst to best
Every Panic! At The Disco album ranked from worst to best (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Aracelis Kilback

Last Updated:

Views: 6487

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (44 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Aracelis Kilback

Birthday: 1994-11-22

Address: Apt. 895 30151 Green Plain, Lake Mariela, RI 98141

Phone: +5992291857476

Job: Legal Officer

Hobby: LARPing, role-playing games, Slacklining, Reading, Inline skating, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Dance

Introduction: My name is Aracelis Kilback, I am a nice, gentle, agreeable, joyous, attractive, combative, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.