Joe Nichols discography
The discography of Joe Nichols, an American country music singer, consists of 31 singles and eleven studio albums.
At age 19, Nichols made his debut in 1996 with a self-titled album on the independent Intersound label. It was not until the release of his 2002 single "The Impossible" on the Universal South Records label that Nichols first reached the top 40 on the country charts. The single, which peaked at number three on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks charts, was followed by the release of his platinum-certified second album, Man with a Memory, released in 2002. This album also produced the number-one single "Brokenheartsville".
Nichols followed up Man with a Memory in 2004 with Revelation, and a Christmas album, A Traditional Christmas. His fourth album, 2005's gold-certified III, produced the number one single "Tequila Makes Her Clothes Fall Off". Real Things followed in 2007, and Old Things New, which produced Nichols' third number one hit in "Gimmie That Girl", was released in 2009. Following the release of Old Things New, Nichols' label went through a merger to become Show-Dog Universal Music, through which he released his seventh album, It's All Good, in 2011. It produced only one chart single in "Take It Off", and he parted ways with his label.
In late 2012, Nichols was signed to Red Bow Records as the flagship artist for the new label. Under Red Bow, Nichols released his eighth album, 2013's Crickets. The album produced two Number One hits in "Sunny and 75" and "Yeah". He released his ninth album, Never Gets Old, and his lone EP, Never Gets Old: Traditional Country Series, in 2017 and 2018, respectively, before being dropped from the label.
In 2021, Nichols signed with independent label Quartz Hill Records. In 2022, he released Good Day for Living, his first album for the label, which featured his first top-20 single, "Good Day for Living", since 2014's "Yeah". The record failed to chart. Like its predecessor, Nichols' eleventh album, Honky Tonks & Country Songs, failed to chart, but did feature "Better Than You", a duet with Annie Bosko, which peaked at 44.