Jess Glynne Albums Ranked

Jessica Hannah Glynne (born 20 October 1989) is an English singer and songwriter. After signing with Atlantic Records, she rose to prominence in 2014 as a featured artist on the singles “Rather Be” by Clean Bandit and “My Love” by Route 94, both of which reached number one in the UK. She has been considered one of the “Most Influential People Under 30” by Forbes magazine in 2019. Her debut studio album, I Cry When I Laugh (2015), debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart and saw the international success of the singles “Hold My Hand” and “Don’t Be So Hard Yourself”. Glynne’s second studio album, Always in Between (2018), also debuted at number one in the UK and saw continued success with the singles “I’ll Be There”, “These Days”, “All I Am”, “Thursday” and “One Touch”; the first of these made Glynne the first British female solo artist to have seven number-one singles on the UK Singles Chart, beating Cheryl with 5. Glynne has achieved multiple accolades throughout her career, including a Grammy Award and nine Brit Award nominations. Here are all of Jess Glynne’s albums ranked.

Don’t miss out on the music of Jess Glynne below! Click to find out why she is one of the most recognizable voices!

2. Always In Between, 2018

Always in Between by Jess Glynne Reviews and Tracks - Metacritic

“In my opinion, Jess’ second album exceeds her first in terms of songwriting, musicality, and emotional layers. While the first album explores her falling in love and being hurt by that love, this album, at least from what I surmise, strips away at her personally. This feels like her autobiography and sort of her, “This Is Me,” album. Each song was wonderful, No One, Thursday, Broken, Million Reasons, and Insecurities are some of my favorite tracks.”

1. I Cry When I Laugh, 2015

I Cry When I Laugh - Album by Jess Glynne | Spotify

“Soulful, compelling pop that is refreshing given the dearth of anything even remotely palatable that passes for pop music today. Thank heavens the Britons have brought pop music to soaring new heights, given the sorry grunts and “yeahs” and “uh uh uh” and other incoherent swaggering mumbling that make up most of what is on Top 40/pop radio today. No wonder people have shut it down and shut it out. Thankfully, artists like Jess Glynne fill the void joyfully and masterfully.”