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  1. At The Disco frontman Brendon Urie penned this slow and elegant piano ballad about his wife. He told American Songwriter magazine that it was something he'd never done before on a record. "It was very honest, very confessional," he said.

  2. Oct 8, 2013 · Brendon chose “The End Of All Things” as the final track because he “wanted to end [the album]… on a somber note” as opposed to concluding in a bombastic manner. The happy couple Expand

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    "The End of All Things" is a song by American rock band Panic! at the Disco. It is the tenth track on their fourth studio album, Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!, and was released on October 8, 2013, through DCD2 and Fueled by Ramen.

    [Verse 1]

    Whether near or far

    I am always yours

    Any change in time

    We are young again

    [Chorus]

  3. The album, Brendon explains to PopCrush, is inspired by his desire to celebrate life. And from the album's lead single, 'Miss Jackson,' to the emotional 'The End of All Things,' he does...

  4. I did find it weird at first, but as time went on I came to love it more and more. If I'm remembering it all right, Brendon reportedly wrote the song for his wife Sarah and sang it to her on their wedding day.

  5. “There’s never air to breathe, there’s never in-betweens, these nightmares always hang on past the dream” are my favorite lyrics of all time. And Brendon delivers those lines so perfectly. It’s the perfect song for late night listening, for when you’re sad, or just when you’re in the mood for slower songs.

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  7. But, why did Brendon kill them? It's clear by the song lyrics, he still loves her, well, what if they were holding him back from passing, all the freaking out in the room was him denying what he had to do before finally killing the memory of her, much how the stories of ghosts with unfinished business being able to move on.

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