Я смотрю вьетнамчатая болезнь везде...посмотрите...теперь и Ри присоединился...всё люди....я побежал покупать вьетнамы....и буду их носить
Боже что у БУ со штонами....такое чувство что на рыбалку собирается....я смотрю Ри опять надел на себя платок бабуси и эту сапочку....а ещё у БУси и Джосика одинаковые кулоны в виде сердца
ВАУ...как модам повезло...мне бы рядыфком с ним...какая-то у Буси сиранная улыбочка...и шкодный взгляд
Sasha_Zhuk (Panic_At_The_Disco-) все записи автора
Panic at the Disco may have taken a stylistic left turn with its new album, but the Las Vegas quartet lost none of its loyal fans, judging from the raucous response it earned last night before a near-sellout of 5,000 at the Bank of America Pavilion in Boston.
The PATD boys, led by songwriter/guitarist Ryan Ross and singer/guitarist Brendan Urie, both 21, delivered a dazzling 75-minute, 17-song show that ably mixed new and old material. The band’s debut, “A Fear You Can’t Sweat Out,” released in 2005, had a more punky-pop sound. The new “Pretty.Odd.”, released in March, ventures more into elaborately produced pop, in the spirit of the Beach Boys’ “Pet Sounds” album, or even the Beatles’ “Sergeant Pepper.”
Now that they're done with the online puzzles and have successfully weathered the storm of punctuation-gate, Panic at the Disco are finally getting down to the business of being a band.
Or, more specifically, a band on the road, promoting their second album and trying to convince the naysayers that they're more than just a flash in the pan. Which is why, in their current headlining slot on the Honda Civic Tour, they've ditched the 10-ring circus that accompanied them on their last jaunt, replacing all that ephemera with a stripped-down, focused set that showcases the music and not, say, the contortionist mimes.
When Las Vegas newcomers Panic At The Disco broke through with their commercially successful debut A Fever You Can't Sweat Out in 2005, the wordy song titles and theatrical videos were at times despised by critics but adored by fans.
However, after taking their time making their recently released second album Pretty.Odd., the new material might leave both friends and foes a tad confused.