The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cole Swindell will never surrender his Georgia roots

- By Melissa Ruggieri mruggieri@ajc.com

Cole Swindell is an unabashed fan of the Atlanta Falcons and Braves, but he reserves his deepest devotion for the football squad of his alma mater, Georgia Southern, the same university that graduated Swindell’s mentor, Luke Bryan.

The country hitmaker, 35, grew up in Bronwood (population 377 in a 2017 census), which he still calls home even though he relocated to Nashville in 2007.

Having written dozens of hits for country VIPs — and fellow Georgia natives — such as Bryan, Florida Georgia Line and Thomas Rhett, Swindell branched into the performanc­e side of the business in 2013 with his independen­tly released single, “Chillin’ It.”

A chain of country radio hits followed — “Ain’t Worth the Whiskey,” “You Should Be Here” and “Middle of a Memory” among them — and Swindell is now

among the regarded crop of twang-rockers filling major venues with high-energy performanc­es and low-key sex appeal.

“Reason to Drink … Another,” the extended leg of Swindell’s inaugural headlining arena tour that launched in February, pulls into Infinite Energy Arena on Thursday with Dustin Lynch and Mitchell Tenpenny sharing the bill (fellow Georgian Lauren Alaina was originally slated for the entire run, but due to a scheduling conflict will now join the tour Friday in Mississipp­i).

On a recent call from Nashville, the gregarious musician raved about his love for Georgia and respect for its musical history and chatted about his current album, “All of It.”

The first time we ever talked was on the red carpet at the CMA Awards a few years ago, and you were wearing a Georgia Southern cap. I take it you’re a lifelong supporter?

I am! Being from Georgia, my whole family went there, so I grew up going to those games. I was on tour with Luke (Bryan) and threw on the baseball cap and got a lot of online comments, like, look at this guy. A lot of people ask if I’m a (Georgia) Dawgs fan and I’m like … not exactly. But a lot of my friends and family are Dawgs fans. I’m gonna pull for any Georgia school over anything, but I represent where I went to school. That’s where I started playing my first shows. I love college towns, no matter where it is. I was a huge music fan growing up, but I didn’t grow up singing on stage — I was just bugging my mom singing Alan Jackson around the house.

Another Georgia guy.

I didn’t know how far Newnan ( Jackson’s hometown) was. But no matter if it was Alan or ( Jason) Aldean, having people succeed from where you grow up makes it seem more attainable. People ask me what’s in the water from Georgia. You can’t tell me it’s not because they saw somebody just like them from an hour away. A lot of people have those dreams, but they might not chase them until they see somebody else has done it. (The influences came) from all different points in my life as a kid, seeing Alan, Tricia (Yearwood, from Monticello), Aldean, meeting Luke and hearing his songs. It was a combinatio­n of a lot of people from around where I was from.

You spent a lot of time with Luke in the early part of your career. What have you learned from him as a performer?

When I saw Luke play the first time, he had already moved to Nashville. He played at Legends with his old college band and he was mostly playing covers and I could tell he loved what he did, and that’s contagious as a music fan. He wasn’t just sitting on a bar stool like I was doing! From 11 years of living here, that is why I wanted to do it, because I wanted to make other people feel like I did (watching live music). I have to be able to make people have that kind of fun. I certainly looked up to him at that aspect, but you have to put your spin on it.

Your third studio album, “All of It,” recently came out. What is the meaning behind the title?

“All of It” was the last song I recorded. But I had to have this song. We went in and recorded it and we were picking titles, which is a hard thing. I wanted this to reflect all of the whole album, and now I find myself saying “all of it,” not even talking about the album.

 ?? KEVIN WINTER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Country singer Cole Swindell will perform Thursday night at Infinite Energy Arena.
KEVIN WINTER / GETTY IMAGES Country singer Cole Swindell will perform Thursday night at Infinite Energy Arena.
 ?? JASON KEMPIN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Country singer Cole Swindell, shown at the 52nd annual CMA Awards on Nov. 14 in Nashville, Tenn., will perform Thursday night at Infinite Energy Arena.
JASON KEMPIN / GETTY IMAGES Country singer Cole Swindell, shown at the 52nd annual CMA Awards on Nov. 14 in Nashville, Tenn., will perform Thursday night at Infinite Energy Arena.

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