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Hallelujah (Panic! at the Disco song)

"Hallelujah"
Hallelujah by Panic! at the Disco.png
Single by Panic! at the Disco
from the album Death of a Bachelor
Released April 20, 2015 (2015-04-20)
Format Digital download
Genre
Length 3:00
Label
Writer(s)
Producer(s)
  • Imad Royal
  • Jake Sinclair
Panic! at the Disco singles chronology
"Girls / Girls / Boys"
(2013)
"Hallelujah"
(2015)
"Victorious"
(2015)
Death of a Bachelor track listing

"Hallelujah" is a song by American rock band Panic! at the Disco. It was released as a single on April 19, 2015 through Fueled By Ramen as the first single from the band's fifth studio album Death of a Bachelor. "Hallelujah" debuted at number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100 selling over 71,000 copies, becoming the band's second top-40 hit single and the first in nine years since "I Write Sins Not Tragedies" was released in 2006.

It has been digitally streamed over 18 million times. "Hallelujah" was nominated for Song of the Year at the 2016 Alternative Press Music Awards.

When asked about the meaning of the song, Brendon Urie responded saying, "I mean, I grew up in a religious family and, like, that was a very big part of my life, and still, very much, is even though I don't affiliate with any specific religion. It's just, for me, you know, the spirituality of being able to own up to your sins, as they're called, and take responsibility for your actions really hit me this time around, and so that song really is about that, it's, you know, taking responsibility for things that you felt guilty for in the past and just owning it, because, now, that's a piece of you and you can't get rid of that history, so, that's really what it was. But it was a chance to, kind of also, you know, there's a little tagline in there that I throw out to our fans, I like to call them 'my sinners', and I'm a fellow sinner, and so I think that's a little special little throw-out to them." Urie later stated, "When you have to own up to your mistakes, you know, praise that; as long as you take responsibility for your actions, everything else seems it can fall into place if you have that same attitude, so, that's really what it was, it's kind of a play on just, 'yeah, you know, hallelujah, I'm not a sinner', but we are, I mean the song is definitely about that".

The opening of the song is taken from the Chicago song "Questions 67 and 68".

It is the band's first song since the departure of drummer Spencer Smith.


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Wikipedia

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