For a second, forget everything you already know about Panic! At The
Disco. That means forgetting that the band’s 2005 debut A Fever You Can’t
Sweat Out has sold over 2.2 million copies to date; that their video for I
Write Sins Not Tragedies became a #1 hit on MTV and snagged one of the
network’s video music awards for best video in 2006; and, finally, erasing
from your mind all of the sold-out clubs the band have played over the past
three years and the ubiquity of Panic! At The Disco’s music—and mugs—on radio
stations, television programs and magazine covers all over the world.
These days, a sensation like Panic! At The Disco is something extremely rare
and impossible to invent and for those two reasons alone, most bands in
their position would stick to the same signature sound for their second disc.
However, Panic! At The Disco aren’t most bands. Instead, the band—guitarist
Ryan Ross, drummer Spencer Smith, vocalist Brendon Urie and bassist Jon
Walker—decided to make the album they wanted to make for their sophomore
release. While the album is equally as catchy and infectious as their debut,
Pretty. Odd. sees the band digging through their parents’ record crates to
craft an expansive pop album that channels the ghosts of Brian Wilson and the
Beatles as well as lesser-known pop sensations like the Zombies. However, for
a while even the band weren’t sure if Pretty. Odd. would ever come to
fruition.
Panic! At The Disco began writing the album a year ago, but after they’d
written a solid batch of concept-driven songs, they stopped to reevaluate
what they were doing and ended up deciding they were over thinking the
process. “Instead of really throwing anything away, we decided to just move
it to the side and approach the second record the same way we did the first
record,” Ross explains. “We tried to approach the songs individually and
write songs that didn’t sound like anything else we’ve written,” he
continues. “Now we’re finally at the point where we can sit down and listen
to the finished record and I know we’re happy with it, so I think it was a
really good decision—especially since we hope that we’re going to have
multiple opportunities to fully realize what our first idea was in the
future.”
That’s not too say Pretty. Odd. isn’t dripping with ambition—in fact, if
anything, the opposite is true. From the bouncy and psychedelic first single
(and accompanying video) Nine In The Afternoon to the spaghetti-western
shuffle of the horn-driven Pas De Cheval and the straight-ahead pop genius
of Northern Downpour, Pretty. Odd. sees the band stepping outside their
comfort zone to prove how much they’ve grown up since their debut, which was
written when the members were just seventeen years old. “It wasn’t a
conscious decision to have older influences show through on this record, it
just seemed like around the beginning of the sixties there were less
subgenres, so it wasn’t weird for songs to have a trombone part or violin
part,” Smith explains, adding that in some ways, his parents’ dusty old
records helped sonically liberate the band. “I think that will probably
something that will stick with us after this record.”
Another huge difference between these two albums is the fact that Pretty.
Odd.’s basic instrumentation was recorded at the Palms Hotel in the band’s
hometown of Las Vegas, while the strings and mixing was done at the legendary
Abbey Road Studios in London with the help of their producer, Grammy and
Emmy Award winning arranger/composer Rob Mathes. “It was an amazing
experience,” Smith says, adding that recording the strings in studio two of
Abbey Road was a pretty surreal experience for a band who had to call their
label’s owner John Janick to approve three hundred dollars to hire a trumpet
player to play on their debut. “We’re really happy with how the orchestration
turned out on this record and that’s probably the biggest change from the
last album,” Spencer confirms.
In the spirit of acts like the David Bowie and Pink Floyd, Panic! At The Disco
plan on continuing their tradition of elaborate stage shows and performances
for the subsequent touring. However this time around they’re finally
confident in having their music speak for itself, which is an achievement the
band have looked forward to since their inception. “I just hope that if
anything people are open to the idea that Pretty. Odd. may not sound exactly
like the first record,” Ross explains. “All we can ask for is that people
give it a chance because there are a lot of songs that sound very different,
but I think it’s more creative and more musically interesting than most of
what is at the top of the charts right now.” We couldn’t agree more—and we’re
sure you’ll feel the same. |