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HomeCELEBRITYKacey Musgraves Checks In With The People Who Call Nowhere Home

Kacey Musgraves Checks In With The People Who Call Nowhere Home


Kacey Musgraves directed a question at her Instagram followers on Wednesday: “How’s it going in your middle of nowhere?” The message came without a promotional hook or additional context. It was a brief, unadorned check-in.

The phrasing fits her catalog well. Musgraves has released four studio albums, all circling versions of this same territory. Small-town life, the longing to leave it, and the pull that never entirely disappears have been central to her songwriting since the start.

Her debut, “Same Trailer Different Park,” arrived in 2013 and opened at number one on the Billboard Country Albums chart. The record produced “Merry Go ‘Round,” a clear-eyed look at small-town stagnation. That song earned her a Grammy for Best Country Song. It also established her as a writer with little interest in romanticizing rural life in the way Nashville radio typically expected.

Musgraves grew up in Golden, Texas. The town has a population of fewer than 200 people. That background has never drifted far from her public identity. Her sound has expanded considerably over the years, but the small-town thread has held.

Her 2015 follow-up, “Pageant Material,” continued on similar ground. Songs like “Biscuits” and “Dime Store Cowgirl” reinforced her reputation for capturing the specific feeling of places that rarely make anyone’s destination list.

“Golden Hour,” released in 2018, was a different kind of record. Warmer and more romantic in tone, it swept the 2019 Grammy Awards. The four wins included Album of the Year, Best Country Album, Best Country Song, and Best Country Solo Performance. That result was remarkable. Musgraves had limited presence on country radio at the time. Very few artists in that format had taken Album of the Year without the commercial footprint to support it.

Her fourth album, “Star-Crossed,” arrived in 2021. It chronicled the breakdown of her marriage to singer-songwriter Ruston Kelly and drew significant critical attention. The record confirmed her audience had followed her well beyond the country format she came up in.

Following “Star-Crossed,” Musgraves continued performing and maintained a visible presence in music. She’s drawn listeners across country and indie-pop, reflecting a cross-genre appeal rooted in her songwriting.

Five years have passed since that release. No new studio album has been publicly announced.

Wednesday’s message, without any promotional intent behind it, reads as exactly what it appears to be. It’s a casual acknowledgment of a specific kind of listener – one who’s spent time somewhere truly small and carries that with them.

Musgraves has treated Instagram as a relatively low-key space rather than a promotional platform. This message fits that approach. There’s no indication of a forthcoming project tied to it.

Her catalog has always been for people standing at crossroads. They watch life happen somewhere else and hold onto a kind of dignity in that. She asks how things are going in your middle of nowhere. For a certain listener, it’s enough that she asked.




This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider

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