With its accompanying church organ and airy production, this song is the closest the Imagine Dragons will ever get to belonging on a wedding playlist. “Follow You,” the first of the two singles, was described by lead singer Dan Reynolds as a song about “loyalty” and “sticking it out with whoever it is that you love.” Inspired by his reconnection and remarriage to singer Aja Volkman after the two had not spoken for over half a year, Reynolds sings “I’ll always be around wherever life takes you,” describing a love without expectations or demands. It shows where we’re going and that we’ve got a great future.What do church organs and whiteboard erasers have in common? Each is the intro to one of Imagine Dragons’ new twin singles “Follow You” and “Cutthroat.” After two years of waiting for the follow-up to 2018’s “Origins,” Imagine Dragons fans have gotten the double-single treatment as a teaser of the band’s upcoming album.
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Origins feels just right now we’re ten years into our career. “It’s a culture, and a community and lots of other things we’re involved with and mean a lot to us. “Imagine Dragons is more than just a band,” Dan Reynolds said in a YouTube video introducing Origins’ arrival. 2 on the Billboard 200, chalking up Imagine Dragons’ fourth successive US Top 10 and proving that there’s still room in the charts for great rock bands, providing they’ve got a forward-thinking approach and a universal appeal. Back home, meanwhile, Origins debuted at No. Keeping the Nevadan quartet intimately acquainted with their global public, the album went Top 10 in numerous territories, including the UK, where it peaked at No. That last observation rang especially true when Origins raced up the charts around the world. In one particularly cogent review, UK broadsheet The Independent declared it “further proof of Dan Reynolds’ songwriting capabilities and also his ambition when it comes to pushing the messages that matter.” Promoted with a memorably Gothic, Tim Burton-esque video, the album’s second single, “Natural,” also peaked inside the Top 20 of the Hot 100, while its third, “Bad Liar,” went on to become a substantial European hit.įirst released on November 9, 2018, 10 days before Imagine Dragons completed their Evolve world tour, Origins hit the ground running and picked up some of the band’s most positive press to date. 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 prior to Origins’ release. “Zero”’s lyrics also spoke volumes to Imagine Dragons’ burgeoning fanbase, with the song climbing to No. “Ralph’s internal struggle for self-acceptance really resonated with us, and this song speaks to that.”
#IMAGINE DRAGONS ALBUM 2018 MOVIE#
“It’s a pretty timely movie in a lot of ways in that it addresses some of the issues of identity and loneliness unique to this internet generation,” Reynolds said at the time of the film’s release, in November 2018. To his credit, Reynolds also continued to address deeply personal issues like depression and mental health on songs such as “Bad Liar” and “Zero.” Though allied to the most straight-ahead, radio-friendly rock track on Origins, the latter song – which also featured in Disney’s animated film Ralph Breaks The Internet – included some of Reynolds’ most poignant lyrics yet (“Let me show you what it’s like to never feel/Like I’m not good enough for anything that’s real”), delivered with an unstinting passion.
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“It identifies some of the issues unique to this generation” With their stomping, stadium-friendly choruses, “Natural” and the defiant “Machine” (“I’ve been wondering when you’re gonna see I’m not for sale”) quickly marked their territory out as potential standalone singles, though elsewhere the tracklist zig-zagged wildly from the explosive, drum’n’bass-tinged “Digital” to the bucolic, mandolin-flecked folk-pop of “West Coast” and the poignant, neo-hymnal ballad “Love.” Reynolds and his team emerged with a feverishly eclectic bunch of material.