Their first album, Bruce Lee (independent), included the songs Fútbol, Yendo al hipermercado and No me digas que no, si quieres decir que sí.
They then released their second album, Canciones para aprender a cantar, also independent, which contained a collection of low-fi tracks that would become some of their best-known classics, such as: Las cosas van más lento and El choclo.
Panico started to work on the album Rayo al ojo that brought together new and old Pánico tracks and mixed rock style with keyboard sounds.
They released the single Las cosas van más lento (Things are going slower), which would become one of the band's classics, still played today in their live shows.
In 1999, Pánico released their new sound, named by Edi Electro Tropical Destroy, on the local radio station "Rock and Pop".
Once relocated in France, they released Telepathic Sonora[3] an album produced in New York City with the collaboration of Yuka Honda (Cibo Matto lead singer), Money Mark, Arto Lindsay and Señor Coconut (Atom Heart).
When the group announced a comeback tour to Chile in March 2006, nostalgic Pánico tribute shows had already started to appear in Santiago, with the participation of local bands like Gameover and Tio Lucho.
The same year, they traveled through the north of Chile crossing the Atacama nitrate mines and desert locations for the documentary movie "Pánico.
La banda que buscó el sonido debajo" (Pánico, the band that found the sound beneath),[8] directed by James Schneider and Benjamín Echazarreta and released the following year.