Since their last album Cruel Guards (2007), The Panics played sold-out shows in Australia and the UK, won an ARIA Award, were declared Triple Js album of the year and had the song Dont Fight It featured on Ugly Betty and Underbelly. Now they are back with a new album, and to celebrate - they are coming to The Gov.
THE PANICS
rain on the humming wire
Music critics and fans often say the same thing about The Panics: listening to their songs is like immersing yourself in the soundtrack to your own life. In their albums and EPs, people discover the cinematic score to their own lost Australian summers: the bittersweet Antipodean road-trips where they found first love and made new friends, only to lose it all on the way back. Underneath the elegant pop-rock tracks are modern hymns for a generation, anthems of rash joy and quiet heartbreak: all the songs you would have written yourself, if only you had the right words on hand.
For frontman and songwriter Jae Laffer, it makes complete sense that his listeners have forged those personal connections with the bands music over the years. After all, The Panics albums have always been written as time capsules of the bands own evolution. Each song is another chapter in the story of their lives, ever since banding together in high school all those years ago in Western Australia.
Since their last album Cruel Guards (2007), The Panics played sold-out shows in Australia and the UK, won an ARIA Award, were declared Triple Js album of the year and had the song Dont Fight It featured on Ugly Betty and Underbelly.
However, they were also busy crafting something new: an ambitious album that somehow embraces both stark intimacy and unapologetic grandeur. Written on one side of the Atlantic (Salford, England), recorded on the other (Woodstock, New York), and mixed in the iconic, Jimi Hendrix-built Electric Lady Studios (New York City), The Panics are now finished with their fourth record, and have brought it down across the Pacific and back home to Australia. After years away from their base in Melbourne, the album is a document on Jaes feelings about transatlantic distance, homesickness and life away from loved ones.
Its a record where Im questioning what direction I want to head in next. Its me, looking back at where Ive been, laughing and crying. On the back of their new rallying, rousing first single Majesty comes The Panics most bracing, panoramic and poetic record yet: Rain on a Humming Wire.
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Sat 5 Apr 2025, 8.00pm | Crown and Anchor Hotel, SA
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