
EP Review: Suzuki/Method – Native
Suzuki/Method’s debut EP release ‘Native’ is packed full of Indie-Electro soundscapes, melodic verses and confident choruses that defy you not to dance along to.
Lead track ‘Sherbet’ screams 80s Pop disco yet with the added guitar swirls, it creates a certain depth that makes it all the more credible.
‘Country Cousins’ boasts an addictive walking bass line before vocals from frontman Adam Leishman provide an anthemic singalong vibe. Lyrics explore the woes of youth, which are subsequently contrasted with the synth-laden, upbeat backdrop provided by the instrumentation created by the Mancunian five-piece.
‘Native’ puts Suzuki/Method on the map for sounding original in a time where both Indie music and Electronic music respectively have a tendency to blend into one. Above all, Suzuki/Method create an intriguingly original sound that respects the Dance music history from which they have emerged yet incorporates all the right elements of Indie-Pop to make the EP completely approachable by all audiences.
Listen to ‘Country Cousins’ below: