She currently performs with Aerosmith in their "Deuces Are Wild" residency at The Park MGM Theater on the Las Vegas Strip. Sarah "Cellobat" Chaffee earned her bachelor's degree in cello performance from the Cleveland Institute of Music and is now based in Las Vegas.
Click "Watch" near the item details at the top of the page for full video of "High Hopes." Crowd pleasing guaranteed. Hear the difference for yourself! Full videos of many Cellobat Charts arrangements are available on YouTube so you know exactly what you're getting. My arrangements are guaranteed to be energetic, fun to play, and enjoyable to listen to, whether or not you're familiar with the original songs.
That's why Cellobat Charts is here: to provide students and working string players alike with high-quality versions of highly requested music. But watch out - inferior arrangements not only make gigs less enjoyable to play, but they also make your group sound bad to your client and audience, no matter how great your players really are.
Every freelance musician has thrown hard-earned money away on questionable, error-filled charts by unknown arrangers from weird corners of the Internet. Why choose Cellobat Charts arrangements? For any musician who knows what they're doing, the answer is easy: just listen to them. There are a few tied rhythms in but nothing too complicated. There is nothing above first position in the V2, viola, and cello parts, and only a few notes higher than that in V1. This arrangement is dedicated to a good friend of mine who was in P!ATD's string section on their "Pray For The Wicked" tour - Kiara, it was so much fun watching you play this song with them! Rated intermediate, this chart will be playable for students and easily sightreadable for professionals. This arrangement for string quartet has the exuberant energy, rich harmonic layers, driving beat, and dynamic impact of the original, and it's absolutely as much fun to play as it is to listen to! Great for parties, corporate events, solo & ensemble contests, or even weddings and receptions, it's a guaranteed crowd pleaser and you're sure to get your audience singing along. We wanted to make that come through."High Hopes" was released by Panic! At The Disco in 2018 as a single from their sixth studio album, "Pray For The Wicked." This upbeat, catchy song soon became a smash hit, reaching number 4 on the Billboard charts and becoming their highest-charting single of all time. "We just felt it wouldn't be true to ourselves if we were still acting pissed off at the world, because we were having a great time and excited about writing. "Everything that happened in the past couple years for us has been a dream come true," drummer Spencer Smith says. Might as well be The Beatles."īut in addition to all these changes, the band also says it's growing up. We're just trying to follow in someone's footsteps. Ross quickly adds, "It's like Christians who want to be like Jesus. If you are going to be influenced by any band, what better band to be influenced by than The Beatles?" says vocalist, guitarist and pianist Brendon Urie.
Now, Panic at the Disco seems more prepared as a band.Īlong with those changes is the band's new sound, which is clearly reminiscent of The Beatles' oddball pop masterpiece Sgt. Much has changed since A Fever You Can't Sweat Out: Bassist Jon Walker joined the band, and they've all ditched the "guyliner" (that's eyeliner worn by guys), as well as the onstage carnival act with dancers and elaborate costumes. In many ways, Panic at the Disco feels like it's starting from square one. Odd features lush orchestrations and production, but in an interview with host Andrea Seabrook, the band performs stripped-down versions of its songs in NPR's Studio 4A, including "Nine in the Afternoon," "That Green Gentleman (Things Have Changed)" and "Northern Downpour." I think most of the pressure we had came from ourselves, just trying to outdo the first one." I don't know, maybe we're just a little bit cocky or something, but I think we were ready to do more songs. "I think I had more pressure to get good grades in high school," guitarist Ryan Ross says. But will the band's of teenage fans grow with them?Īt 18 and 19 years old, there must have been a great amount of pressure to duplicate the success of Panic at the Disco's debut CD, but the band seems good-humored about it. Now Panic at the Disco is back with Pretty. Most of the material on the group's first CD, the double-platinum A Fever You Can't Sweat Out, was written while the band's members were still in high school. The rock band Panic at the Disco is learning what it means to grow up in the public eye.