Panic! At The Disco: The Ballad Of Mona Lisa [official Video] [UPDATED]
Released in 2011, this track marked a massive turning point for Panic! At The Disco. It was the lead single from their third album, Vices & Virtues , and it served as a sonic homecoming after the psychedelic detour of Pretty. Odd. The Aesthetic: Steampunk Perfection
Brendon Urie’s performance shifting from a gentlemanly narrator to a gritty, shadowed figure. Released in 2011, this track marked a massive
A Victorian wake that feels more like a judgment than a farewell. Why It Still Slaps Released in 2011
Should we dive deeper into the of this track, or Vices & Virtues