

Urie is a chatty fellow between songs, too, sometimes serious, often quite funny, and seemingly self-aware of his over-the-top persona. Other big numbers that make dads and daughters alike stand and sing along – the daughter with much greater lyrical accuracy than the dad, in our case – included “Girls/Girls/Boys,” “LA Devotee,” and “I Write Sins Not Tragedies,” the first big hit by Panic! way back in 2006. By the numbers, if you will, and so we begin with …

Both get booked a lot lately on the same radio station festival dates around the country.Īnd then there’s Panic! frontman, Brendon Urie’s, longtime self-admitted fanboy crush on Weezer and its frontman, Rivers Cuomo, which he described to the Register’s Kelli Skye Fadroski backstage at KROQ’s Weenie Roast at the Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre when both bands played there in May.Īll that came together Saturday at Irvine Meadows for the final date of 41 summer shows Weezer and Panic! have played this summer, a terrifically fun night that featured 80-minute sets from both bands after a half-hour from Orange County native Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness to warm up the sold-out amphitheater.īecause we’ve seen these two bands a lot over the past year – the we being me and my daughter Anna Lily, a super fan of both bands, we’ll review the show in a slightly different manner.

The track follows other recent joint projects the award-winning megastar has worked on, including Post Malone’s “One Right Now”, Swedish House Mafia’s “Moth To A Flame” and Rosalía’s “La Fama”.From the moment it was announced, Weezer and Panic! At the Disco made a whole lot of sense as a co-headlining summer tour: Both have a knack for catchy, melodic sing-along tunes.

Meanwhile, The Weeknd has also shared another new collaboration this week, this time teaming up with FKA Twigs on “Tears In The Club”. I wanted her adoring fans to get a special gift before the holidays and felt it was the perfect time to release a never-before-heard offering.”Įarlier this year, Aaliyah’s back catalog was released on streaming services for the first time as part of a new partnership with the label EMPIRE. In a press release, Barry Hankerson, founder of Blackground Records, said: “I’m so excited to share this new song by Aaliyah and the very talented The Weeknd. The Weeknd responds with his thoughts on the chorus, singing: “ You’re so cold, I can see your breath, I swear/They told me not to fall in love/Wondering where it all went wrong/You were my poison all along.”
