Tom Grennan Finds His Pop Swagger on ‘Everywhere I Went, Led Me to Where I Didn’t Want to Be’

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Grennan arrives at the party fully formed: a pop gladiator, heart on sleeve, ready to claim his arena.

Tom Grennan has always flirted with the big leagues. Across three studio albums, the Bedford-born singer carved out a reputation as a gravel-voiced powerhouse, straddling indie grit and pop accessibility. But on his fourth LP — with its sprawling title, ‘Everywhere I Went, Led Me to Where I Didn’t Want to Be’ — Grennan kicks down the door to the arena and plants his flag as a full-throttle pop star.

Tom Grennan

Made up of 15 rousing tracks, this is without question Tom’s glossiest, boldest, and most unabashed record yet. Working with hitmaker Justin Tranter (Britney Spears, RAYE, Dua Lipa), the album trades smoky barroom intimacy for neon-lit maximalism: pounding choruses, slick funk basslines, gospel swells, and synths that shimmer like strobe lights. It’s Tom Grennan 2.0 — bigger, brasher, and determined to soundtrack your summer.

The record opens with ‘Full Attention’ a buoyant, radio-ready smash that sets the tone for the ride. ‘Boys Don’t Cry’ pushes Grennan’s voice to the rafters, a thunderous statement about masculinity and vulnerability that lands somewhere between Sam Smith and Freddie Mercury. ‘Dirty Dishes’ leans into playful funk, its bassline recalling Queen’s ‘Another One Bites the Dust’, while ‘Higher’ layers in gospel choirs and soaring hooks that beg for festival singalongs. The surprise gem is ‘Celebrate’, a flamboyant, theatrical strut that feels ripped straight out of Mercury’s playbook — Grennan has never sounded looser, or more fun.

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Tom Grennan – Full Attention (Official Video)

For Tom Grennan, this record isn’t just sonic reinvention — it’s survival. He’s been candid about the heartbreak, therapy, and sobriety that shaped these songs. That emotional grit is the secret ingredient: beneath the high-shine production, there’s a bruised, beating heart, turning pain into confetti cannons.

By the end, ‘Everywhere I Went, Led Me to Where I Didn’t Want to Be’ feels less like a mouthful and more like a manifesto. Grennan has built his most confident work yet — a maximalist, serotonin-charged ride that’s equal parts catharsis and spectacle. It won’t convert minimalists, but for everyone else, it’s a record that begs to be blasted from the biggest stage possible.

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