
Personally, we can’t help but think the answer to that last question is ‘yes,’ because the first thing Urie and Smith did after Ross and Welker left the band was put that goddamn exclamation point back into their name. Odd, the band’s Beatleriffic sophomore album? And was their departure due to insistence by Urie and Smith that they ditch the retro stuff because it didn’t sell as well? Does that mean Ross and Welker were the brains behind Pretty. It’s more in line with the band’s debut album, A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out, in that it’s wordy and contemporary. had to have high, high hopes for a living.

it was this tale of triumph over adversity that set the tone for the album. After a quick spin of the Young Veins song “Change” on their MySpace page, the sound of “New Perspective” makes much more sense. Panic at the disco mainman brendon urie has seen the trials and tribulations of the music industry firsthand over the years as the other band members gradually left, leaving him the last remaining member. Urie and Smith will continue as Panic, while Ross and Welker have formed a group called the Young Veins, which will be more ’60s oriented in sound. Guitarist Ryan Ross and bassist Jon Welker left the band in July, citing the age-old musical differences. What is of major significance is the fact that Panic! is literally half the band they were the last time we heard from them. Truth be told, the video is not of major significance to us. When Megan isn’t eating boys alive, anyway. More and more I start thinking in that regard. A couple cat fights break out, as the action cuts from the high school to the clips from the film, where Megan Fox and Amanda Seyfried are either fighting or making out. Brendon was chatting to Billboard when he was asked if he fancied making a visual album in the style of Beyoncé, an idea he seemed pretty up for. Of course, the majority of the video for “New Perspective,” the lead single by Panic! at the Disco from the soundtrack to the Diablo Cody-penned horror flick “Jennifer’s Body” (which is not being screened for the press, by the way), consists of singer Brendon Urie and drummer Spencer Smith, along with what we’re guessing are body doubles, walking in slo-mo through a high school. Devotee Death of a Bachelor, 2016 Vegas birthed Panic, but the version we know today is very much an L.A. They only have to do a tenth as much work.

Bands must love making videos for songs on soundtracks.
