To celebrate the release of his new record – Country Again (Side A) – we’re breaking down our personal ranking of every Thomas Rhett record, from least to most favourite.
5. Center Point Road (2019)
Rhett’s last favourite was perhaps his most forgettable, sonically it did not feel completely consistent and even more magical tracks like ‘Remember You Young’ and ‘That Old Truck’ were not enough to mask the weaker tracks like ‘Don’t Threaten Me With A Good Time.’
4. Life Changes (2017)
There were enough commercially catchy moments on this record to make it enjoyable – including ‘Marry Me’ and ‘Craving You,’ yet the record felt like a slightly weaker form of Tangled that made it pale in comparison.
3. It Goes Like This (2013)
Rhett’s debut album was sonically coherent and a phenomenal introduction to the singer, full of catchy moments, gritty and honest songwriting and fun up-tempo bangers and we were hooked from the first line.
2. Tangled Up (2016)
Tangled Up was full of banger after banger, including the mammoth track ‘Die A Happy Man’ that was the perfect introduction casting Rhett as the ultimate swoon-worthy country singer. The album was full of tender moments and heavier bangers to make the record feel balanced, fun, joyous and euphoric.
1.Country Again (Side A) (2021)
It’s no secret that we already believe Rhett’s newest record is his best to date, winning our ranking of every Thomas Rhett record. It’s full of tender and authentic songwriting, making it everything we love about country music – sonically coherent, allowing his vocal to breathe and show its full emotion.