Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Build God, Then We'll Talk

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Released
  
March 26, 2007

Recorded
  
2005

Length
  
3:40

Format
  
Digital download

Genre
  
Pop punk, baroque pop

B-side
  
"Build God, Then We'll Talk (Live in Denver)"

"Build God, Then We'll Talk" is the fifth and final official single from Panic! at the Disco's 2005 album A Fever You Can't Sweat Out, including the radio-only single "The Only Difference Between Martyrdom and Suicide Is Press Coverage".

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Build God, Then We'll Talk" – 3:40
  2. "Build God, Then We'll Talk" (Live in Denver) – 4:27

Song information

The song is the final song on Panic! at the Disco's debut album A Fever You Can't Sweat Out.

The bridge melody of "Build God, Then We'll Talk" is a derivative of the melody of the chorus of "My Favorite Things" from The Sound of Music. The lyrics in the bridge also directly satirize the lyrics of "My Favorite Things".

Panic! did not play the song on the Honda Civic Tour in 2008 following the release of Pretty. Odd., their second album, nor on the Rock Band Live Tour. The song was, however, performed live in Denver and covered in the studio by the Vitamin String Quartet on the album Strung Out! The String Quartet Tribute to Panic! at the Disco.

Music video

The video director is unknown, but rumoured to be Andy Soup. The music video depicts the story of a "pornomime" and a girl who falls in love after she watches one of his performances. Their relationship is a mimed one. Both "relationships" encompass a false feeling of intimacy and are essentially devoid of meaning.

The mime and his girlfriend both walk in on each other having affairs (mimed, of course), again symbolizing the emptiness of their mimed relationships. They are not having sex with real people—it is an illusion. The video is the first from the band to be web-exclusive, mostly because they felt it was too vulgar for television, but it aired on MTV2 in the UK and on A1 in Russia. It was also available on Music Choice On-Demand.

The band does not appear in this video. Ryan Ross has also stated that he was annoyed that the video did not get any MTV airplay.

There have been several interpretations of this video, including references to a bad relationship by band member Brendon Urie.

References

Build God, Then We'll Talk Wikipedia