Latest Release
- 19 JUL 2024
- 1 Song
- Stereotype · 2012
- Stereotype · 2021
- You Should Be Here · 2016
- Some Habits - Single · 2020
- Cole Swindell · 2014
- Forever To Me - Single · 2024
- You Should Be Here · 2016
- Things That I Can’t Change (feat. Cole Swindell) - Single · 2024
- One Day - Single · 2024
- 3 Feet Tall - Single · 2023
Albums
- 2022
Artist Playlists
- R&B-infused beats meet widescreen country ballads and more.
- The Nashville hitmaker’s feel-good vibe knows no borders.
More To Hear
- Nick welcomes Cole Swindell to The Broken Jukebox Society.
- Cole Swindell on new album 'Stereotype,' taking risks, and more.
- Cole Swindell and Lainey Wilson team up for "Never Say Never."
- Keith Urban speaks to Zane, plus 03 Greedo x Kenny Beats' “Maria."
More To See
About Cole Swindell
It was Cole Swindell’s songwriting talent that found him a place in Nashville, but it was his natural charm as a singer and his knack for blending old and new elements that made him a bona fide country star. Born in a tiny town in Georgia in 1983, he befriended fellow local boy Luke Bryan in advance of making his way to Music City in 2007. Before busting out as a recording artist, Swindell got a gig with a publishing house and wrote tunes such as Scotty McCreery’s “Water Tower Town”, Craig Campbell’s “Outta My Head” and Luke Bryan’s “Shore Thing”. The year 2013 brought a new chapter to Swindell’s story, when his DIY release of the unmastered demo recording “Chillin’ It” earned enough attention for Warner Nashville to snap him up. An easy-rolling, good-time tune that mixed programmed beats and R&B-inflected vocals with banjo and twangy guitar, “Chillin’ It” was his first single for the label, and it became a No. 1 country hit. It started a long march of hit singles on the U.S. country charts, like the bittersweet power ballad “Ain’t Worth the Whiskey”, the tender romantic plea “You Should Be Here” and the driving, danceable “Love You Too Late”.
- HOMETOWN
- Bronwood, GA, United States
- BORN
- 30 June 1983
- GENRE
- Country