New Kacey Musgraves Album to be More Country, and … Horny

Kacey Musgraves has a new album on the way May 1st called Middle of Nowhere, and it stands to be at least a partial return to her country roots, even if that’s not exactly reflected in the album’s lead single, the hot and bothered “Dry Spell.”
Musgraves signed with the recently relaunched Lost Highway Records in May of last year, and released a version of the Hank Williams classic the label is named after. This was the first indication that Musgraves might be going more country again.
The promotional blurb Musgraves released to coincide with the album announcement and single release states,
“The bulk of this record was made during the longest single period of my life. I found that for the first time, it actually felt incredible being alone and existing in a space not defined by anyone else. I became fascinated with the concept of liminal space, both geographical and emotional. We don’t linger in these transitional, empty spaces long enough and rush to define where or whatever is next. I became so at ease with being in the ‘middle of nowhere’ in many senses and sitting in the un-comfort of the undefined.”
Just like all of her albums since 2018’s Golden Hour, Middle of Nowhere will be produced by Daniel Tashian and Ian Fitchuk. However, in the songwriting department, it will see the return of Kacey’s more country collaborators like Shane McAnally, Luke Laird, Josh Osbourne, Brandy Clark and Natalie Hemby.
Middle of Nowhere also features guest appearances by Willie Nelson, Billy Strings, and Miranda Lambert, speaking again to the more country-leaning nature of the effort. Gregory Alan Isakov also collaborates on a track.
But just how “country” can we expect Middle of Nowhere to be? Will it be a return to early Kacey Musgraves with clever turns of phrases and kiss offs backed by sensible country roots with mainstream impact? An in-depth interview Musgraves agreed to with Jewly Hight of NPR clears up a lot of this.
“I love traditional country music,” Musgraves says. “It might sound cliche, but when I am in a period of sadness or heartbreak, I really do turn to old school country music, the traditional side of the genre. It’s so comforting because it’s all depressing songs about being heartbroken. So you feel very seen … I grew up singing Western swing, yodeling — very traditional country music. Those sounds are baked into what feels like home to me. And so exploring them doesn’t feel like I’m trying on a hat that doesn’t fit. It just feels like part of me.”
Okay, but will we hear this on Middle of Nowhere?
“It’s always there to some degree, but it felt good this time to really lean into it,” Musgraves says. “For me it’s always about finding the balance. If a lyric is going in that direction really hard, maybe the track isn’t, so it’s never too on the nose … I think it’s gonna be really tempting for a lot of people to say that it’s a return for me. I agree with some of that. I’ve never taken some stand saying I’m leaving country. It’s a huge part of me. I don’t think I could shake it if I even wanted to.”

Musgraves also says,
“For me, sonically, it’s always about exploring the borders of country music. I think this album has a lot to do with borders, and honestly, [so does] every album of mine, because country shares fence lines with so many other styles. I’m really interested in [looking] where those two meet and then making something new. I love bluegrass and there’s a little bit of that breezy ’70s, ’80s, ’90s country that I love so much and then there’s also a lane where country meets traditional Mexican music, norteno and even zydeco down in Louisiana. So in a way, I don’t think the record is any different than anything else I’ve done, but it does lean a little harder into the country palette.”
She also says of the writing process, “I was just like, ‘Hey, would you guys want to get together and write some like super country s***? Even just for fun, just see what we can get.'”
With the album’s debut single “Dry Spell,” we definitely get the strong return of Kacey’s kitschy, campy, racy, clever, tongue-in-cheek type of approach that’s willing to get near borders, but doesn’t cross them, instead relying on innuendo, and what’s not said directly—all seductive lyrical mechanisms that can work very well in country music. This is also all well-illustrated in the video for the single.
However, the song itself just doesn’t come with any of the musical country bonafides you were wishing or hoping for, especially with all the rhetoric from Musgraves. Maybe there’s a little bit of a Western favor with it. But overall the sound is just, dry. Granted, it’s just an opening single, meant to stir attention and conversation (which it certainly has), and not necessarily serve red meat to the traditional country constituency.
But “Dry Spell” does serve up something that’s been mostly missing from the country music diet ever since Musgraves went in a more demure, indie rock direction. Middle of Nowhere is not going to be a traditional country record. But don’t be surprised if we hear some straight traditional country songs on it, similar to the new record from Megan Moroney.
This is a more country moment for country music. Artists who are smart and don’t worry about the radio like Musgraves, this is the moment to pivot back to their roots, and what they do best. Hopefully Middle of Nowhere brings Kacey Musgraves back where she’s excels the best: somewhere in country.
Middle of Nowhere is now available for pre-save/pre-order.
TRACK LIST:
01 “Middle Of Nowhere”
02 “Dry Spell”
03 “Back On The Wagon”
04 “I Believe In Ghosts”
05 “Abilene”
06 “Coyote” (Feat. Gregory Alan Isakov)
07 “Loneliest Girl”
08 “Everybody Wants To Be A Cowboy” (Feat. Billy Strings)
09 “Horses And Divorces” (Feat. Miranda Lambert)
10 “Uncertain, Texas” (Feat. Willie Nelson)
11 “Rhinestoned”
12 “Mexico Honey”
13 “Hell On Me”

March 11, 2026 @ 6:17 pm
My most anticipated album of 2026! Great article with NPR, thank you for mentioning it.
I’m not familiar with Gregory Alan Isakov, but definitely looking forward to the other 3 features.
March 11, 2026 @ 7:04 pm
Jewly Hight at NPR did a great job getting a lot of good info out of Kacey.
March 11, 2026 @ 6:27 pm
That’s a mighty campy video for sure with lots of non-verbal imagery-filled innuendoes and a little spaghetti western guitar served on the side. A conversation started for sure. Musically, its kinda like kin to “Choosin’ Texas.” And it leaves me wonderin’ if radio will bite? It’s not a horrible song, but I’ll wait for the album.
March 12, 2026 @ 7:37 am
I’m playing it today. WUSH, Norfolk, VA.
March 11, 2026 @ 7:42 pm
I’m curious for this new album, although I have to say Daniel Tashian and Ian Fitchuk’s production style has really gotten long in the tooth for me going back to “Star Crossed”.
It worked overall for “Golden Hour” because the simple, romantic, sun-kissed glow of Musgraves’ songwriting at the time matched the tone of their production. But with “Star Crossed”…………for as overwhelmingly hyped as the album was in advance and Vanity Fair and other publications making it out to be some creatively ambitious tour de force akin to a modern Shakespearean play in multiple acts……………it was just bland and uninspired all around and a large part of what made it so can be directly attributed to the production. And those tendencies carried over into “Deeper Well”, despite Musgraves’ songwriting being more inspired for that album.
So with that duo returning for her fourth consecutive project…………..doesn’t inspire the utmost confidence. Still I’m hoping to be pleasantly surprised.
March 12, 2026 @ 1:45 am
I caught the Dry Spell video tonight and it’s a hoot.
March 12, 2026 @ 5:11 am
Dry Spell gives me a quirky John Prine type sound to the writing. I’m always intrigued by what Kacey puts out but her last album was not my cup of tea. Hopefully this is a bit of a return to something closer to her first 2 albums resembling what Margo Price did with her latest release.
March 12, 2026 @ 5:57 am
Grotesque and staggeringly stupid. Any of these “country traditionalists” that she speaks of, or really anybody before 30-40 years ago, would be repulsed by this. Speaks to a real degeneration of the culture. Late stage vibes. We fell all the way from coal miners daughter and angel from Montgomery to sitting on the washing machine. Nothing on the nose about that.
March 12, 2026 @ 6:12 am
Yeah, it’s wild how singers just started singing about sex in the last couple years. In my day songs were about Polk Salad and Chooglin’
March 12, 2026 @ 2:02 pm
I did not know Polk Salad was a sexual reference but now I want to use “gator got your granny” in the heat of the moment
March 12, 2026 @ 6:15 am
Yeah, imagine Loretta Lynn singing a song about gettin’ laid. Unfathomable.
March 12, 2026 @ 6:44 am
None of the “Country traditionlists” were prudes – there were strict cultural and artistic boundaries they had to work with to hint at sex. I 100% believe that boundaries and restrictions is the best counterpart for creativity. The “sitting on the washing machine” line is way more subtle than other lines in this song. This song and music video feel more like a Bloodhound Gang song. (If you don’t know what I’m talking about look up their Foxtrot Unicorn song on Youtube)
March 12, 2026 @ 6:56 am
Right. Classic country artists never sang about sex before…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HTTrcI_hh94
March 12, 2026 @ 7:21 am
The phrase “rock’n’roll,” invented within the blues, was a euphemism for sex. Blues, which became a popular music with the rise of the recording industry in the 1920s, was in significant part erotic content, thinly covered in metaphor (and metaphor was typically dispensed with in rowdy live performance). Before that, bawdy folk songs were widely and commonly sung, sometimes in places where drinkers gathered, in what one day would be called honkytonks.
The dirty song has always been as ubiquitous as the dirty joke. Someone who thinks he’s criticizing her as a cultural degenerate is actually giving Musgraves way too much credit for being an inventive artist. Carry on, Kasey. You’ve got a lot of history behind you,
March 12, 2026 @ 7:24 am
You never listened to Conway Twitty, did you?
March 12, 2026 @ 7:48 am
Tell me you’ve never listened to the country traditionalists without saying you’ve never listened to the country traditionalists.
March 12, 2026 @ 8:18 am
Bonnie Raitt was notorious for [muffled grinding noises] “on the nose”…
March 12, 2026 @ 9:37 am
you would have hated “the pill”.
March 12, 2026 @ 10:59 am
I’ve got a good woman, what’s the matter with me?
What makes me want to love every woman I see?
I was triflin’ when I met her now I’m triflin’ again
Every woman she sees looks like a place I came in…
— Waylon Jennings, Waymore’s Blues, 1975
March 14, 2026 @ 8:00 am
Good call, all the more on point because this is the one wholly original verse in “Waymore’s Blues,” otherwise a reworking of the traditional hobo song “Milwaukee Blues.” I suppose some here will see this as proof of just how monstrous a threat Waylon posed to decent society.
March 15, 2026 @ 8:58 pm
Proving you don’t know shit about country music and especially the “traditionalists”. Don’t buy it, don’t listen to it. I love the prude, overly sensitive people that don’t have a sense of humor that cry about it. Boo-hoo.
March 12, 2026 @ 7:10 am
The Grammys will be all over this. Predictable
March 12, 2026 @ 8:42 am
Not sure if there’s any “country” artist more thirst trappy than Kacey. But she found a way to kick it up a notch lyrically while wearing more clothes than she’s been seen in for years.
March 13, 2026 @ 3:10 pm
Is she a thirst trap, or just ridiculously hot no matter what she does?
March 12, 2026 @ 8:43 am
…seriously? this is boring beyond belief every which way you look at it. fair enough, perhaps not for those that never managed to see beyond mama.
gosh, even maduro sported that look better and came across more lively handcuffed (no innuendo intended).
March 12, 2026 @ 8:58 am
A little underwhelming for me personally. We can only hope the rest of the album sounds more like the early version of Kacey
March 12, 2026 @ 9:07 am
Do you think she knew about Slaid Cleaves, “Horses and Divorces?”
March 12, 2026 @ 9:41 am
I was wondering if she is covering it. She has a song called Rhinestoned, which could be a cover of the Maggie Antone song of the same name, but I guess not maybe.
March 12, 2026 @ 10:36 am
We’ve all been there, sorta.
Pro production, full of innuendo, porny video, should do really well in California.
Naturally she turns away from Average Guy. What’s the matter with Average Guy, Kacey? He’s tall enough. If it’s just relieving yourself, you can always turn the lights off.
Obligatory: the old days were a lot more fun.
March 13, 2026 @ 7:10 am
I don’t think she was turning away from him at all. It was implied that all that stuff was going through her mind when she saw him, but in the context of everyday life in the grocery store of course nothing was going to happen.
March 12, 2026 @ 1:12 pm
Dry Spell is quite catchy which provides some hope for the new album. Not so sure about the production though. I was disappointed with her last 2 albums so will give it a listen before purchase.
March 12, 2026 @ 2:35 pm
‘With the album’s debut single “Dry Spell,” we definitely get the strong return of Kacey’s kitschy, campy, racy, clever, tongue-in-cheek type of approach that’s willing to get near borders, but doesn’t cross them, instead relying on innuendo, and what’s not said directly—all seductive lyrical mechanisms that can work very well in country music. This is also all well-illustrated in the video for the single.’
Innuendo? Trigger, the song and especially the video are about as subtle as a freight train. Going into a tunnel. At night. Get it?
March 12, 2026 @ 9:35 pm
There’s a difference between subtlety and innuendo. No, Kacey is not very subtle in this song. Is she using innuendo, meaning implying things without saying them directly? Yes she is.
March 13, 2026 @ 9:10 am
To me, innuendo requires subtlety. This song, and more so the video, barely qualify.
Merriam-Webster on “innuendo”: “an oblique allusion : hint, insinuation”. There’s nothing oblique about “ain’t no tool up in my shed, ain’t no boots underneath my bed.” And more so “Orgy Juice.” Come on.
Innuendo should make the audience feel clever for figuring it out. I could have figured out this song when I was 12.
If she’d taken the imagery of a dry spell and used that as an extended metaphor, that could have been interesting and clever. As written, however, aside from the “dry spell” metaphor itself, there’s just one reference to a drought.
March 13, 2026 @ 9:55 am
“Ain’t no tool up in my shed” is innuendo for “No penis up in my vagina.”
“No boots underneath my bed” is innuendo for “No man is in bed with me.”
Yes, it’s pretty obvious. But it’s still innuendo by definition.
March 13, 2026 @ 11:38 am
Nothing on “Orgy Juice”? LOL.
Yeah, I get you. I think it’s terrible innuendo, but I grant that it’s a type of innuendo. Thank you for the detailed explanation of the metaphors in question. LOL.
March 13, 2026 @ 11:13 am
This is what I was talking about with sturgills new album and you and others seemed to have no issue at all with it. Sex is fine to discuss in country music, and the real clever artists and songwriters can hide some stuff that adults can chuckle about yet their kids can sing along to and the sexual meaning isn’t explicit and overt. That’s art to me. Multiple meanings and hidden. For me personally I don’t get much out of sturgill promoting orgies as it’s not on my itinerary for the foreseeable future, but it’s also just not something I view as good to be promoting. I’d of respected sturgill and Kacey more If their feelings were hidden and couched more expertly. The Beatles for example are the GOATs of this, they talk openly about sex but do so in a way that the song can be played for kids and it’s not inappropriate but the parents get what’s being said.
Beyond sturgills horrendous politics, I had an issue with how the sex meanings in the songs weren’t hidden at all or subtle. Personally I find that gross.
As I’ve said before there’s a raspy voiced blonde country singer I find to be drop dead gorgeous but if I was writing a song about her, I’d never in a million years make a song like Dry Spell or anything on sturgills new one about her. You can convey love, lust, sex, desire, intimacy without being explicit and as I said the greatest songwriters in our genre and outside it to have been able to do this. My hypothetical song would be way less blunt, more tasteful and something adults would understand but kids could enjoy too free of worrying that you are corrupting the youth. Subtlety is an art form and neither sturgill nor Kacey seem able to do this.
Ultimately dry spell and sturgills newest are cheap and base desire songs and albums when you could write a very intelligent or interesting or exploratory song about the feelings they have.
And ultimately I think for me, maybe I’m just vanilla, but I don’t get turned on by Sturgills view Of sex, nor do I get turned on by what kaceys saying and that goes outside our genre too, if I’m hearing rap or r&b it’s not getting me in the mood if it’s explicit.
I find both kaceys song and sturgills album to be representative of our collective moment that things are overtly sexual, devoid of subtlety, things are shared that don’t need to be (society wouldn’t be a less spectacular place if I didn’t know sturgill enjoys orgies and Kacey hopes she doesn’t die from her issues), and there’s a forced upon-ness of it all where artists seem to think we need to know about their bedroom habits and in graphic detail. Contrast that with my crush Megan Moroney, she feminine, confident, and wears outfits that clearly are meant to grab the attention of someone like me. Yet she’s talented, fun, flirty, but isn’t overt in sex talk. One of her most famous singles is where the listener themselves fills in the blanks, and the blanks isn’t even a dirty word, it’s “bed”. You can be attractive to men and still keep mystery too, as she’s wears girly clothes that show some skin, but she’s not Miley or Britney either, she leaves things to imagination. Which is such an underrated quality. There is no thing left to the imagination with Kacey or sturgill. As I said maybe I’m just a vanilla person but I find the left to imagination even MORE attractive than stuff a lot of pop stars do.
March 13, 2026 @ 11:46 am
“I don’t get much out of sturgill promoting orgies”
If you cringe at a middle-aged dad singing about orgies, you risk becoming the butt of the joke.
March 13, 2026 @ 12:37 pm
I don’t know, man. In that sturgill thread trigger and others seemed to view the lyrics as mediocre but not overly offensive. Some poster even asked me if I was such a prude that I didn’t think she’d should even be discussed in song. There’s a middle path though where you can express your desires but do it in a subtle way. Trigger didn’t discuss this at all and it’s a missed opportunity because I think it’s an overlooked reason why republicans won’t be playing that album. Obviously the politics are a huge reason but I don’t personally want my kids listening to songs about orgies and gender identities or feeling so desirous in a dry spell would wonder if you will die. That’s just not content I want my kids consuming. And it’s a shame trigger didn’t explore that aspect. On the other hand as I said I can play other artists for Them that are fun for them but have hidden meanings they won’t be picking up on!
It just was laughable because triggers MO when discussing any right wing song like Aldean or John rich or Aaron lewis is that it’s worrisome how some might view us all as racist and ignorant because of the content of those songs. Yet trigger seems unbothered and not worried at all but the type of impact overtly sexual songs have on the perception of us. That seems more than a contradiction and hypocrisy it’s kind of alarming.
I’d hope just as we as a genre and community would reject the perception that we are ignorant and racist and don’t want that view to be prevalent, we also shouldn’t want the public to view us as overtly sexual in a way that demeans the art. Any pop starlet of the moment in 2026 has had her sex appeal subsume the art, and I think that’s sad. Sex is valid to talk about in art, but when it’s your entire aura as the kids say, or where it’s the only thing you are selling it’s problematic.
So no, I view sturgill going beyond being cringe. I don’t view orgies as something we as a community should promote and it’s funny how the hyperventilating of trigger about how the media might view edgy tweets about gender ideology are something that warrant having a conniption about and having a breakdown about what NYT polemicists say about the genre, yet overly sexual lyrics that serve nothing and don’t enhance the art are praised. Seems like an issue of hypocrisy. Orgies are not something country music should be in the business of promoting.
March 12, 2026 @ 3:34 pm
When dreams of pop stardom fail, they always return to the country genre. I agree that this track isn’t all that country, more on the pop side like “Choosin’ Texas” (which blows this song away in my opinion).
March 13, 2026 @ 6:39 am
Was she trying to go pop with her last album? I only ask because there is a lot of very catchy easy to listen to women in the pop category that I like. Kacey’s last album put me to sleep after the 3rd or 4th song and was a slog to get through.
Her previous album felt more like boring adult contemporary that was designed to win at the awards ceremonies and to gain NPR or current Rolling Stone praise.
March 13, 2026 @ 4:50 pm
I think interscope had some idea she’d be a pop queen. You should watch the MTV music awards star crossed performance. KM looks super uncomfortable. I think after the success of GH, they kind of tried pushing her in weird ways that really didn’t align with her strengths. Unlike a lot of people, I don’t regard her as a traditional country artist. She’s definitely in the pop country lane and always has been, but IMO best in class when she’s on, and working with the right people. I think she’s just someone that likes whatever she likes and does that, and her vocals align better with country aesthetics than anything else more often than not. But her vox and delivery are top notch IMO. She’s mastered a certain kind of unassuming emotional transparency.
March 15, 2026 @ 9:10 pm
Kacey’s “dream of pop stardom”? That’s more Maren Morris you fool. Did you listen to Kacey’s last album, Deeper Well? If you call acoustic guitar being a “dream of pop stardom” you clearly don’t understand what makes “pop” stardom? It sure as hell isn’t a folky, mostly mellow, acoustic album. Which, also won a Grammy for best country song, Architect. Have you listened to that album at all?Have you listened to that song or Dinner with Friends”?
Yes, I do not like Starcrossed, that was a bad album and a bad departure, but artists are allowed to try something new once in a while, even if most of us hate it. Live and learn, right?
Saying she’s running back to country after “failing as a pop star” is just a massive incorrect statement.
March 13, 2026 @ 5:02 am
The video is hilarious, if a bit on the nose. I don’t know if it’s worth being put off by the overt, not-all-that-clever lyricism, because is she really chasing radio at this point?
I hope this album is another step back in the right direction. Deeper Well was a course correction, even if it wasn’t a return to form.
From afar, Kacey Musgraves is a puzzling individual. In a way, that makes her more relatable, though.
March 13, 2026 @ 7:58 am
Dry Spell is genuinely awful. One of her worst songs.
March 13, 2026 @ 11:24 am
I thought the guitar sounded really nice
March 13, 2026 @ 12:30 pm
Friends once took me to one of her concerts. I have never seen a show that was more fake.
March 14, 2026 @ 9:44 pm
I never listened to Kacey’s music before but after hearing this tune, I’m hooked. The video is a hoot. Love it. I’m ordering her first 2 albums and pre-ordering this new one. Thanks for this feature. As a former country programmer, I want to hear more from this artist that “doesn’t fit radio” but after hearing this track, radio really needs her. I’m very impressed and want to hear more.
March 17, 2026 @ 6:48 pm
I just watched that video
Kacey musgraves, “Go to Horny Jail BONK,”
March 30, 2026 @ 7:14 am
I told ya, she officially sell out since Golden Hour