

According to Dan Reynolds, the song is about becoming a little ruthless, or callous, as time progresses- realising you have to stand up for yourself. Opening with a gentle harmony from the band, it quickly escalates into feral drums, passionate cries of triumph and anger, and a deceptively quiet third verse culminating in a screaming acclimation that he’s ‘gonna make it’. ‘Natural’ is exciting, almost dangerous in its sound- it echoes the pain of Transformers’ ‘Battle Cry’, the darkness of ‘Radioactive’ and the anger of ‘Warriors’ whilst being wholly it’s own track. Presently, they are the eighth most listened to band in the world on Spotify- and if these singles are any indication, the dragons are set to soar to new heights.įirst, ‘Natural’. Following on from this is their sophomore album ‘Smoke + Mirrors’, which resulted in two shows at London’s The O2 Arena- a big step up from their last two London shows at the O2 academy Brixton- and their most recent offering, ‘Evolve’, which produced the ferocious ‘Believer’, peaked at the top of both the US Rock Album chart and the US Alternative Album chart, as well as third in UK album charts. Their first album, ‘Night Visions’, spawned two monumental hit singles, the anthemic ‘Radioactive’- which won the Grammy for Best Rock Performance in 2014-and the contemplative and soulful ‘Demons’ both of which spent more than 60 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100.

Imagine Dragons need no introduction- hailing from Las Vegas, Nevada, they are Dan Reynolds, Wayne Sermon, Daniel Platzman and Ben McKee.

#NATURAL IMAGINE DRAGONS ALBUM FULL#
Imagine Dragons are back with two new singles preceding their recently announced fourth album, ‘Origins’, follow up to 2016’s Gold certified ‘Evolve’: ‘Natural’, a rock-fuelled endeavour of epic proportions, full of a seething rage over a brooding and raw instrumental backing, and it’s mirror image, ‘Zero’, taken from the upcoming Disney film, Ralph Breaks The Internet- a soft and oddly charming number about being downtrodden in life and trying to escape being a ‘zero’ in life- both metaphorically, in escaping feelings of worthlessness, and literally, in the case of the binary code of the arcade characters.
