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Teddy Thompson

Never Be The Same Tour

Friday 12th June 2026

Doors: 19:00


Beloved London-born, Brooklyn-based singer/songwriter Teddy Thompson has returned with the exquisitely crafted Never Be The Same, his first collection of original material since 2020. Across ten tracks, Thompson refines his craft via an exploration of music’s enduring preoccupations — love, longing, and the uneasy passage of time.

This album wasn’t built upon a grand narrative. There was no self-imposed exile, no forced reinvention. Instead, it is centered around an exhortation that is threaded through the songs like a refrain: “Never Be The Same,” its title only revealing itself to Thompson after he’d completed the recording.

“It’s a phrase that, unconsciously, I used twice. And when I saw it on the page, I realized, this is the message of this album,” says Thompson. “Don’t ever be the same. Change. Grow! Even when the sentiment is, woe is me, I’ll never recover after that love or loss. The message is still, change. Don’t get too comfortable. Everything is temporary, so evolve or perish!”

This pull and tension between comfort and change runs quietly throughout Never Be The Same, Thompson’s 11th album, which was produced by renowned Grammy Award–winning musician/producer David Mansfield. At the core is Thompson’s longstanding commitment to songwriting as a form, inspired by early influences like Chuck Berry, Hank Williams, and Crowded House, as well as the towering figures of the craft — Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, The Beatles, and, certainly, his parents, British folk icons Richard and Linda Thompson.

For Thompson, the search for this truth starts with authenticity and personal experience. “Songwriting is magical. You can hear one hundred people sing ‘I love you,’ and you know which one is telling the truth,” Thompson says. “If the root of the sentiment is authentic, it will resonate.”

“So This Is Heartache,” the album’s first single, is a bruised waltz for the broken-hearted. Reminiscent of the golden age of Stax Records, it weds Thompson’s keening tenor and soaring falsetto with a classic soul feel and a warm horn section.

“If you sit down to write the most raw emotion you can summon, most of the time it’s going to touch on some kind of loss,” Thompson says. “People will say, ‘Oh, you poor thing,’ but it’s not that I’ve had more heartbreak than anybody else; I just wrote it down.”

A crucial presence throughout the album is Mansfield, who also helmed My Love of Country, Thompson’s 2023 country covers project, of which the UK’s The Independent raved, “Thompson’s disciplined, almost reverent interpretations shun showboating; his vibrant tenor is more than enough to make the songs shimmer,” while the Associated Press called it “a polished and sincere homage to country music’s emotional depth and melodic richness.” Mansfield once again presents Thompson with a deft touch, framing his vocals with arrangements that are at once elegant and understated.

“He’s a big part of the aesthetic. We work very well together; we are simpatico,” says Thompson. “It’s a great feeling to put someone else in charge after having the songs rolling around in your head for ages,” he explains. “Once you’ve done the writing, you’re able to just be the singer. The sound of the record is down to him; he did an amazing job.”

On “Come Back,” Thompson begs for redemption with a departed lover whom he didn’t do enough to hold onto, alternately grappling with the need for self-improvement and pleading for a return.

“Baby It’s You” is the album’s tenderest moment, a yearning ballad juxtaposed by a chorus that could fill a stadium and punctuated by John Grant’s wicked, percolating synthesizers.

“I Remember” is the stuff of nostalgia, with Thompson recalling the angst of childhood and the soothing “pale, rock pool eyes” of the one who set him on his path.

There’s even an appropriately dry kiss-off to unnamed vices with “Worst Two Weeks of My Life.”

Ultimately, Never Be The Same is an album about steady evolution, a suite of deeply considered, carefully constructed songs rooted in lived experience. If there is a message, it’s that change is not only inevitable but essential — even when you’d rather stay exactly where you are.

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