Never Be The Same
Teddy Thompson
Never Be the Same is the eleventh studio album from London-born, Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter Teddy Thompson — son of Richard and Linda Thompson — released on May 15, 2026 via RPF Records/Royal Potato Family. It marks his first collection of original material since Heartbreaker Please (2020), returning after a stretch that included his 2023 country covers project My Love of Country. Produced once again by Grammy Award-winning musician David Mansfield and recorded at Hobo Sound, the ten-track record revisits Thompson's perennial territory of love, longing, and the uneasy passage of time — but with a notable sonic shift, PS Audio noting "a more consistent embrace of rock riffs, marking a departure from the country focus of his previous two releases." Americana Highways describes the sound as "Stax-inflected rhythm sections, country-soul phrasing, arrangements that leave space rather than crowd it" — a record built around restraint, and around the discipline of knowing when to hold back. The album's title revealed itself to Thompson only after he'd completed recording, having unconsciously used the phrase twice in the lyrics — "Don't ever be the same. Change. Grow!" — a message of forward motion he found threaded through the whole record.
The ten tightly constructed tracks move through familiar emotional terrain but with a quiet undercurrent of optimism that sets the album apart from Thompson's more mournful earlier work. The folk-rock opener "Come Back" sets the tone immediately — a vivid scene of romantic ambivalence that finds the narrator pleading for a return while admitting "when you were here I couldn't wait for you to leave." "So This Is Heartache" and "Worst Two Weeks of My Life" push the emotional center of the record, the latter arriving with an almost celebratory acceptance of inevitable change rather than pure grief. "Baby It's You" and "The Game" bring a more uptempo energy, while the closing "Same Old Song" pulls things back to something reflective and still. Thompson has described the album as being "about steady evolution" rather than grand reinvention — a suite of carefully constructed, lived-in songs from a singer who is increasingly comfortable treating simplicity and restraint as artistic virtues rather than limitations.
Never Be the Same is the eleventh studio album from London-born, Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter Teddy Thompson — son of Richard and Linda Thompson — released on May 15, 2026 via RPF Records/Royal Potato Family. It marks his first collection of original material since Heartbreaker Please (2020), returning after a stretch that included his 2023 country covers project My Love of Country. Produced once again by Grammy Award-winning musician David Mansfield and recorded at Hobo Sound, the ten-track record revisits Thompson's perennial territory of love, longing, and the uneasy passage of time — but with a notable sonic shift, PS Audio noting "a more consistent embrace of rock riffs, marking a departure from the country focus of his previous two releases." Americana Highways describes the sound as "Stax-inflected rhythm sections, country-soul phrasing, arrangements that leave space rather than crowd it" — a record built around restraint, and around the discipline of knowing when to hold back. The album's title revealed itself to Thompson only after he'd completed recording, having unconsciously used the phrase twice in the lyrics — "Don't ever be the same. Change. Grow!" — a message of forward motion he found threaded through the whole record.
The ten tightly constructed tracks move through familiar emotional terrain but with a quiet undercurrent of optimism that sets the album apart from Thompson's more mournful earlier work. The folk-rock opener "Come Back" sets the tone immediately — a vivid scene of romantic ambivalence that finds the narrator pleading for a return while admitting "when you were here I couldn't wait for you to leave." "So This Is Heartache" and "Worst Two Weeks of My Life" push the emotional center of the record, the latter arriving with an almost celebratory acceptance of inevitable change rather than pure grief. "Baby It's You" and "The Game" bring a more uptempo energy, while the closing "Same Old Song" pulls things back to something reflective and still. Thompson has described the album as being "about steady evolution" rather than grand reinvention — a suite of carefully constructed, lived-in songs from a singer who is increasingly comfortable treating simplicity and restraint as artistic virtues rather than limitations.
Never Be The Same
Teddy Thompson
Never Be the Same is the eleventh studio album from London-born, Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter Teddy Thompson — son of Richard and Linda Thompson — released on May 15, 2026 via RPF Records/Royal Potato Family. It marks his first collection of original material since Heartbreaker Please (2020), returning after a stretch that included his 2023 country covers project My Love of Country. Produced once again by Grammy Award-winning musician David Mansfield and recorded at Hobo Sound, the ten-track record revisits Thompson's perennial territory of love, longing, and the uneasy passage of time — but with a notable sonic shift, PS Audio noting "a more consistent embrace of rock riffs, marking a departure from the country focus of his previous two releases." Americana Highways describes the sound as "Stax-inflected rhythm sections, country-soul phrasing, arrangements that leave space rather than crowd it" — a record built around restraint, and around the discipline of knowing when to hold back. The album's title revealed itself to Thompson only after he'd completed recording, having unconsciously used the phrase twice in the lyrics — "Don't ever be the same. Change. Grow!" — a message of forward motion he found threaded through the whole record.
The ten tightly constructed tracks move through familiar emotional terrain but with a quiet undercurrent of optimism that sets the album apart from Thompson's more mournful earlier work. The folk-rock opener "Come Back" sets the tone immediately — a vivid scene of romantic ambivalence that finds the narrator pleading for a return while admitting "when you were here I couldn't wait for you to leave." "So This Is Heartache" and "Worst Two Weeks of My Life" push the emotional center of the record, the latter arriving with an almost celebratory acceptance of inevitable change rather than pure grief. "Baby It's You" and "The Game" bring a more uptempo energy, while the closing "Same Old Song" pulls things back to something reflective and still. Thompson has described the album as being "about steady evolution" rather than grand reinvention — a suite of carefully constructed, lived-in songs from a singer who is increasingly comfortable treating simplicity and restraint as artistic virtues rather than limitations.
Never Be the Same is the eleventh studio album from London-born, Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter Teddy Thompson — son of Richard and Linda Thompson — released on May 15, 2026 via RPF Records/Royal Potato Family. It marks his first collection of original material since Heartbreaker Please (2020), returning after a stretch that included his 2023 country covers project My Love of Country. Produced once again by Grammy Award-winning musician David Mansfield and recorded at Hobo Sound, the ten-track record revisits Thompson's perennial territory of love, longing, and the uneasy passage of time — but with a notable sonic shift, PS Audio noting "a more consistent embrace of rock riffs, marking a departure from the country focus of his previous two releases." Americana Highways describes the sound as "Stax-inflected rhythm sections, country-soul phrasing, arrangements that leave space rather than crowd it" — a record built around restraint, and around the discipline of knowing when to hold back. The album's title revealed itself to Thompson only after he'd completed recording, having unconsciously used the phrase twice in the lyrics — "Don't ever be the same. Change. Grow!" — a message of forward motion he found threaded through the whole record.
The ten tightly constructed tracks move through familiar emotional terrain but with a quiet undercurrent of optimism that sets the album apart from Thompson's more mournful earlier work. The folk-rock opener "Come Back" sets the tone immediately — a vivid scene of romantic ambivalence that finds the narrator pleading for a return while admitting "when you were here I couldn't wait for you to leave." "So This Is Heartache" and "Worst Two Weeks of My Life" push the emotional center of the record, the latter arriving with an almost celebratory acceptance of inevitable change rather than pure grief. "Baby It's You" and "The Game" bring a more uptempo energy, while the closing "Same Old Song" pulls things back to something reflective and still. Thompson has described the album as being "about steady evolution" rather than grand reinvention — a suite of carefully constructed, lived-in songs from a singer who is increasingly comfortable treating simplicity and restraint as artistic virtues rather than limitations.
