Suki Summer’s ‘Lovesick and Sick of Love’ is a quiet revolution in a noisy world. With an EP drenched in electro-pop hues and golden melancholy, Suki doesn’t just write songs—she crafts atmospheres. Think open skies, soft regrets, and lyrical honesty that pierces like a sunbeam.
Opening with ‘Summer Crush’, we’re invited into a glittering memory of queer summer love—awkward, thrilling, and utterly alive. The tone then shifts in ‘Marianne’, where wanderlust and wistfulness swirl into a cinematic ballad of what might have been. The title track punches hardest, blending sharp social critique with playful melody, as Suki dissects modern love with a knowing smile.
There’s a softness throughout—’used to you’ whispers of emotional fatigue, ‘i still want u’ pulses with longing, and the outro (it’s nvr gbye it’s jus c ya l8r) gives us a quiet place to exhale. Through it all, her voice—gentle, ethereal, disarmingly close—guides us like a lighthouse in a fog of feelings.
This isn’t heartbreak for heartbreak’s sake. It’s a reclamation of tenderness, a meditation on self-worth. ‘Lovesick and Sick of Love’ is Suki Summer’s lyrical spell—and we’re happily under it: