Kacey Musgraves Finds a New Path Forward on Deeper Well
The country heiress returns with a balanced, serene new album that draws in equal measure from the sounds of ‘70s folk and adult contemporary radio.

Doesn’t it feel like the Grammys never get it right? Year after year, music’s most prestigious awards body eagerly crowns inconsequential works from titans of centrist pop and aging rock stars, showing little regard for the masterpieces that are nominated alongside them. That’s why it felt so good to watch Kacey Musgraves glide on stage in 2019, a vision in bright red silk, to take home Album of the Year for her magnum opus, Golden Hour.
One of the most impressive records in recent memory, Golden Hour sent Musgraves’ conscious country through bright pink, kaleidoscopic psychedelia. “Love is a Wild Thing” and “Slow Burn” saw her filling out more traditional moments with elegant, airy electronics, while “Lonely Weekend”—and especially the disco-leaning “High Horse”—were meaningful expansions into the pop space. The real success of Golden Hour, though, is how firmly planted in its center Musgraves feels, her colloquial lyrics and indelible charm anchoring her no matter how much she broke her own mold. After having established herself as a singular figure within country music, someone who, on songs like “Follow Your Arrow” and “High Time”, flouted Nashville’s rigid structures, Golden Hour felt like an underlining of that: She wasn’t playing by anyone’s rules, and she didn’t have to.
Though the successes of Golden Hour raised her profile to new heights, it also raised the stakes surrounding her next project. After divorcing her husband Ruston Kelly, Musgraves penned a breakup album alongside Daniel Tashian and Ian Fitchuk—the same team who helped craft Golden Hour, and who have since written songs with MUNA and Maggie Rogers. Her split from Kelly fueled Star-Crossed, a proper pop pivot delivered alongside a Lemonade-esque, feature-length music video. Critics and fans alike met Star-Crossed with a cooled reception, with many bristling against the anonymous production and heavy-handed writing. You will find it marked down at the record store for years to come.
Earlier this year, during a commercial break at yet another Grammys ceremony, Kacey Musgraves teased her return. The verdant clip saw her looking serene, gazing out over vast fields and the New York skyline. The only time we heard her voice was at the end, as she sang “My Saturn has returned.” That astrological acknowledgement of life’s next stage opens “Deeper Well,” the title-track and centerpiece of Musgraves’ fifth album. Grounded and graceful, Deeper Well serves as a much-needed course correction for Musgraves—both personally and artistically. She’s shed the baggage of Star-Crossed, no longer writing with bitterness, ego or pop aspirations. Instead, Musgraves’ latest offering is refreshing, rife with clear-eyed songs about morality, personal growth and new love.
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