Brendon Urie, the frontman of the rock band "Panic! At The Disco", has reportedly purchased a home in Encino, Calif., for $1.17 million.
The Los Angeles Times broke the news of the purchase, noting that Steven Tipp of Ewing Sotheby's I.R. represented Urie in the transaction. JB Fung of John Aaroe Group was marketing the house.
Property records of the home show that it listed for $1.99 million in May, this year. Urie closed on the home for a discount, late in July.
The residence is a 1,935-square-foot single-family home, comprised of three bedrooms and three bathrooms.
The house gives off a roomy-airy feeling with a spacious floor plan. Boasting of hardwood flooring, beamed ceilings and large glass windows and arched hallways, the residence is a contemporary pad - perfect for the 27-year-old and his wife. The couple got married in a beautiful intimate ceremony in Malibu, last November.
Living spaces of the house include a formal living room, a separate dining room and a modern kitchen with stone-tiled flooring, custom cabinetry and a marble mid-rise island. The master bedroom has a dressing room and there is an office too.
Outside, the house has a swimming pool with a waterfall feature and ample lounging areas. There is parking space as well.
The listing described the house as a "beautiful gated and private 3 bedroom-3 bath home, located moments away from shops and restaurants."
Urie's band "Panic" formed in 2004 and since then, the genre-bending group has released five albums, their latest being "Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!"
The band was founded by Urie and his childhood friends, all of whom hailed from Las Vegas. In an exclusive earlier interview with MTV, Urie recalled the band's initial days:
"...when we left Vegas, we were 17, 18 and we were pretty bitter because we couldn't do all the things everyone else could. We couldn't play gigs, we weren't allowed in the bars, so we were pissed off," he said.
"But in the past couple years I've visited Vegas quite a bit, and I started doing things I never thought I would do, like going out to clubs, and for some reason that really struck a chord with me. People go there to lose themselves in the moment, and drop their guard, and it hit me in a way. Like, 'Wow, I want to do that. I want to make music like that, that moves people, that's a party, that makes you feel good," he added.