{"product_id":"ive_tried_everything_but_therapy_part_i","title":"I've Tried Everything But Therapy (Part I)","description":"\u003cp\u003eI’ve Tried Everything But Therapy (Part 1) is the first half of Teddy Swims’s debut studio album, released on September 15, 2023 via Warner Records. Consisting of 10 tracks and running just over 31 minutes, it frames Swims’s breakout era around the central idea that he’s “tried everything” to cope with his pain except actually going to therapy—a concept he says was inspired by promising himself he’d finally seek professional help, but wanting “a couple more months of freedom” as a self‑described “traumatised little shit.” The album includes his global hit “Lose Control,” as well as “Some Things I’ll Never Know,” “What More Can I Say,” “The Door,” “Goodbye’s Been Good to You,” “Last Communion,” “You Still Get to Me,” “Suitcase,” “Flame,” and “Evergreen,” and has been expanded by the Part 1.5 edition (adding “Hammer to the Heart,” “Apple Juice,” “Tell Me,” and “Growing Up Is Getting Old”). Commercially, Part 1 and its singles pushed Swims into true mainstream territory: “Lose Control” topped the US Billboard Hot 100 and reached the top ten in more than 20 countries, while the album itself charted in numerous markets across Europe, Oceania, and North America.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMusically, the record blends soul, pop, R\u0026amp;B, country, and soft rock, built around Teddy Swims’s old‑school, raspy crooner voice and big, cathartic hooks. “Some Things I’ll Never Know,” which Swims has called his favorite song he’s ever written, opens the album as a bittersweet meditation on unanswered questions and emotional loose ends. “Lose Control” is an “emotional anthem” about losing yourself and spiraling in the aftermath of obsessional love; “What More Can I Say” and “The Door” wrestle with communication breakdowns and the impossibility of going back once damage is done. Deeper cuts like “Goodbye’s Been Good to You,” “Last Communion,” and “Evergreen” fold in religious imagery and long‑term devotion, while “You Still Get to Me,” “Suitcase,” and “Flame” explore the tension between stability, wanderlust, and passion. Together, the songs form a confessional arc about trauma, love, addiction to emotional highs, and the slow realization that self‑medicating through relationships, partying, and work isn’t enough—setting up Part 2 as both a narrative and emotional continuation, and making the complete Therapy cycle feel like a career‑defining debut chapter for an “old‑soul” artist finally stepping fully into the album format.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Record Store","offers":[{"title":"CD \/ Album","offer_id":53671431897402,"sku":"38792","price":13.99,"currency_code":"CAD","in_stock":false},{"title":"Vinyl \/ Album","offer_id":53671431930170,"sku":"38793","price":40.99,"currency_code":"CAD","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0784\/2041\/0682\/files\/Screenshot_2026-07-01_at_6.42.29_PM.jpeg?v=1782945962","url":"https:\/\/recordstore.ca\/products\/ive_tried_everything_but_therapy_part_i","provider":"Record Store","version":"1.0","type":"link"}