The country singer and songwriter Kacey Musgrave‘s fifth album of original songs is a study in quiet thoughtfulness rooted in gratitude.
Contentment makes for tricky songwriting territory. Songs thrive more often on extremes: desire, heartache, rage, despair, striving, longing, ecstasy. But Kacey Musgraves has now made two superb albums suffused
On Golden Hour, Musgraves sang about the gratification and relief of blissful romance in songs like Butterflies. With Deeper Well (Interscope/MCA Nashville) — which follows her divorce album, Star-Crossed — Musgraves finds more comfort in a wistful self-sufficiency. She savours small pleasures, personal connections and casual revelations, with a touch of new-age mysticism.
In the album’s title song, Musgraves calmly notes how she’s setting aside youthful misjudgments. She’s moving away from people with “dark energy” and no longer getting high every morning (although her Instagram account is still @spaceykacey). At 35, she’s glad to be more mature. “It’s natural when things lose their shine,” she sings, “so other things can glow.”
Musgraves grew up in a small East Texas town and she’s nominally a country singer. Her 2013 debut, Same Trailer Different Park, won a Grammy as best country album, as did Golden Hour, and she has won multiple Grammys for best country song.
But while mainstream country has leaned into booze, trucks and arena-scale bombast, Musgraves prefers delicacy, detail and wryly upending small-town expectations. The title song of her second album, Pageant Material, explained: “It ain’t that I don’t care about world peace/But I don’t see how I can fix it in a swimsuit on a stage.”
Her music prizes understatement, bypassing standard Nashville sounds and often harking back to 1970s Laurel Canyon folk-pop. Like that era’s songwriters and producers, Musgraves is steeped in folk music and seemingly diaristic, but also unassumingly savvy about pop structures and studio possibilities.
On Star-Crossed, Musgraves sang about marital pressures, professional jealousy, coping with memories and moving on. The music pushed well beyond country, incorporating surreal electronics and sultry R&B. Deeper Well is leaner and less determinedly eclectic. Written and produced with Musgraves’ longtime collaborators, Daniel Tashian and Ian Fitchuk, the album spotlights acoustic guitars and organic, seemingly transparent arrangements; every instrument sparkles. While the album was recorded in New York City (at Electric Lady Studios), it’s a world away from urban hubbub; the music always feels pastoral.
Gratitude is at the core of the new songs. Musgraves may be contented, but she’s not complacent. She finds omens in nature in Cardinal, the album’s opener, which harks back to the modal folk-rock of the Byrds, complete with 12-string guitar. Seeing a cardinal after the death of a friend, she asks, “Are you bringing me a message from the other side?”
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Advertise with NZME.In Dinner With Friends, she lists small things that please her — “the way that the sun on my floor makes a pattern of light” — and plants a political barb, appreciating, “My home state of Texas/The sky there, the horses and dogs,” before adding, “But none of their laws.” And in The Architect, a crystalline string-band waltz, she marvels at both natural phenomena — an apple, the Grand Canyon — and the miracle of finding a new love, making her ponder the existence of a God: “This life that we make, is it random or fate?” she asks. “Is there an architect?”
Deeper Well is committed to understatement. It rarely flaunts its 21st-century sonic resources, and when it does, it stays humble about them. In Sway, Musgraves wishes for resiliency and a respite from anxiety — “Like a palm tree in the wind/I won’t break, I’ll just bend” — over a gently tapped beat and subdued acoustic guitar picking.
But the track’s last 30 seconds flaunt technology with multiple a cappella Musgraves vocals: low, high, reverberating, sustained, wordless or intoning “I’ll sway.” It sounds reverent and meditative, computerised yet still human, revealing — only by contrast — how carefully restrained the album is. Modesty is an underrated virtue, but Deeper Well cherishes it.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Written by: Jon Pareles
Photographs by: Marta Bevacqua
©2024 THE NEW YORK TIMES
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