Not only does Cole Swindell have something of a hot streak working, but heâs also striking while the iron is hot.
The hot streak? His first five singlesââChillinâ It,â âHope You Get Lonely Tonight,â âAinât Worth the Whiskey,â âLet Me See Ya Girlâ and âYou Should Be Hereââhave reached No. 1 on the Billboard and/or Mediabase charts. And Cole ainât ready for that streak to end just yet.
His sixth single, âMiddle of a Memory,â is currently No. 3 on Billboardâs Country Airplay chart. On top of that, Cole has co-written each of the aforementioned six tunes, which is part of the reason he recently won the Songwriter/Artist of the Year award from the Nashville Songwriter Association International on Oct. 9.
Striking while the iron is hot? Less than six months since releasing his sophomore album, You Should Be Here, Cole is dropping a new EP, Down Home Sessions III, today (Oct. 28), which runs in tandem with his headlining Down Home Tour that launched on Oct. 26.
Cole stopped by the Nash Country Daily office to talk about hot streaks, his Georgia roots, familiar ball cap, new EP and tour and much more.
NCD: I see youâve got your trademark Georgia Southern University ball cap on.
Cole: Yeah, man. Itâs where I went to college. Itâs where I started singing and I fell in love with being onstage. Iâm a big Georgia Southern Eagles fan, so Iâm always representing.
Do you have just one Georgia Southern hat, or do you have like 50 of âem?
Note quite 50. For a while, when I started I really did just have one, you know? It got to be kind of too much. It was sweaty. The fact that I was wearing it around, on TV, all that stuff, so they sent me a lot. Now Iâve got one for every occasion, different colors, all that stuff.
Have you retired the original one?
Itâs actually in the little exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame from when I won the ACM New Artist of the Year. That was the one that was in the âChillinâ Itâ video. I retired that one and weâve moved on to newer lids.
You grew up in Glennville, Georiga, right?
Up until about fifth grade, then I moved over to southwest Georgia. Bronwood, Georgia, is where I call home, but I was born in Savannah. That side of the state, man. Iâve always been a Georgia boy.

Georgia is such a diverse geographic place. Itâs got the mountains to the north, youâve got the coast to east, the big city of Atlanta and youâve got farmland. Why is so much country music coming out of Georgia right now with guys like Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean, Zac Brown, Kip Moore, Sam Hunt, Billy Currington?
I wish I knew. I remember right when I was hoping things were about to take off for me, I was just praying there was room for one more Georgia boy because I feel like thereâs a lot of folks [in Nashville] from Georgia. I think all the things you just brought up. Iâve never thought of it like that, but it is. Thereâs so many different things in Georgia. Even when youâre talking about music, everybody likes a little bit of everything. One of the things I would say, honestly, is just having people from your home state make it and influence you. I grew up an Allan Jackson fan. When I was in college, Luke Bryan was just making it big in Nashville and Jason Aldean was from Georgia. Just seeing people from your home state that grew up not far from where you grew up, I think that helps you a lot. I think it gives you some confidence. If me being up here helps influence anybody that wants to chase a dream then thatâs awesome. Iâm glad to be from Georgia and just glad they had room for me in here.
You released your second studio album, You Should Be Here, in May. Itâs been doing very, very well. The title track has already gone No. 1, which is your fifth consecutive No. 1. Your second single, âMiddle of a Memory,â is Top 5 right now. If it doesnât go No. 1, youâre not going to know what to do with yourself, are you?
Hey, the streak has got to end at some point but, man, Iâm just so thankful. I think having your first five songs go to number one is something that you only dream of. That doesnât happen in everyday life. Iâm just glad to be here and have âMiddle of a Memoryâ my sixth Top 5. Weâll see what happens. Itâs cool getting to see the reaction every night. Itâs growing every night. Weâll see where it ends up. Iâm happy with everything right now.
But youâre not ready to see the streak end yet, right?
No, Iâm not saying that, now. Nobody wants to do that. Iâm just realistic. Having five in a row isnât realistic, so Iâm already ahead of the game.
You just mentioned youâre out there playing songs from You Should Be Here live every night. Is the album living up to the expectations you had for it?
I think so. Debut single did pretty well. âMiddle of a Memoryâ is doing well. I think having the first two singles do what theyâre doing, I think itâs living up to what we wanted it to do. I tried to put nothing but singles on the albumâsongs that I would be proud to release to country radio if I had the chance. The hard part is youâre not going to get to release that many of them. Right now, we just want to keep saying something different, if I can.
For the third year in a row youâre releasing your Down Home Sessions EP. Itâs been less than six months since the studio album was released. How are these Down Home Session EPâs different for you?
Thatâs a great question. Thatâs something that was unique about this one, because on the first two the timing was a lot different. It was something that I had to talk to my team about. But to not put a Down Home Sessions out, to not do the Down Home Tour, it was something thatâŠI donât know. Thatâs why we started it. I wanted to build it. It took somebody telling me, you know, this is for the fans, because I know it is, but when you have music already out there and youâre putting more music out itâs kind of tough. I know that when I was college if Eric Church or Dierks Bentley wouldâve put out an EP of anything I wouldâve been the first on to get it. It really just opened my eyes. Iâm like, âHey, I donât care what I just put out. Iâm putting out the Down Home Sessions because this is for the fans.â Those are the people that buy it and support what we love to do. Iâm always going to give them as much music as I can.
The new EP also coincides with your Down Home Tour which runs through December. A bunch of cool venues. I donât know if youâve played all those places but I was just looking at some of them: Cainâs Ballroom in Tulsa; The Lyric in Oxford, Mississippi; Billy Bobâs in Texas.
The Lyric, I sold merchandise for Luke Bryan in that club years ago and now Iâm play it. Itâs unbelievable. That weekend my Georgia Southern Eagles are playing Ole Miss. I donât know how Saturdayâs going to work out for us, but Friday night weâre going to have a good time. Billy Bobâs, Joeâs in Chicago, Cainâsâthese clubâs, at this point, Iâm kind of handpicking. Itâs just a cool thing for the fans to get to come see me in some of my favorite clubs.
I caught your show in Nashville on Florida Georgia Lineâs Dig Your Roots Tour. Sold-out crowd at Bridgestone Arena with Kane Brown and The Cadillac Three. That place was just pandemonium. Was the whole tour like that? Is it just that insane every night?
The show is, yeah. The energy of that show is crazy. Iâve been on some big tours and it really is amazing. I think being in Nashville, having the hometown show, everybody bringing it. Thatâs the show you wait on all year. Thatâs the industry you move to work in. Itâs just cool having a lot of people you donât normally get to see unless youâre in town doing something else. Itâs been a great year and it really is an energy-packed show, but a great environment and one of the best Iâve been in on tour.
What can we expect from your new tour? Youâre playing some smaller venues, like you just mentioned, but is it going to be a little more stripped down, right?
Yeah, man. Being in a club the energyâs going to be . . . I mean, the fans are right there up against you. Our headline has been the same for about a year. Weâve been in rehearsalâs all week getting that changed up. We got a new set we get to play. The Down Home Session songs, you really donât hear those unless you come to a Down Home show so that makes it unique in itself. A lot of these fans are hardcore fans so theyâve seen us all year. Weâve got to give them something new. It just gives us another opportunity. The Down Home show, we want it to be a very special experience and thatâs our job as a band and crew, to set all that up and give them something new.
One more for you. You moved to Nashville to be a songwriter. Earlier this month you won Songwriter/Artist of the Year at Nashvilleâs Songwriterâs Association International. Thatâs a nice feather in your cap.
I said it before and Iâll say it again: itâs the biggest honor Iâve ever received since Iâve been to Nashville. Iâve been fortunate enough to experience some great things but when you move to town knowing that your songs are not near good enough to make it and you just want to move to town to be a better songwriter, to be recognized by the industry, something like that, man. Thereâs so many artists that are writers that couldâve been sitting there and for them to recognize me, itâs just motivating, man. Itâs humbling. I want to keep writing songs and helping others the way theyâve helped me.
main photo by Joseph Llanes