Why The New Kacey Musgraves Wal-Mart Partnership Feels … Off Brand

Country music is better off with Kacey Musgraves directly engaged with it, and doing her Spacey Kacey best to liven things up, stir discussion and intrigue, if not a little bit of controversy. Country music for all it’s beauty and strength sometimes can be a little too stuffy and uptight. So you need someone who fundamentally respects the genre, its history and its sounds, but who is also not afraid to subvert it all a little bit to stir the pot.
Kacey’s new album Middle of Nowhere may not be a masterpiece, but it is most certainly a strong move towards traditional country, and helps shift the entire genre in the right direction. It might go on to be one of those albums that dominates awards and conversation for a while, and in a good way. Yes, there’s better stuff out there in the ranks of independent artist, but Musgraves is so much better than many of the mainstream alternatives.
Yet it’s hard to not side-eye Kacey’s new exclusive partnership with Wal-Mart and Lee Jeans to bring her “Kacey Lee” line of merch to Wal-Mart stores. The line features more than 100 pieces, including denim, tops, sleepwear, swimwear, accessories, and pet items both in Wal-Mart stores, and online. Some have criticized the line for not carrying enough plus-sized pieces. Musgraves has responded that sizing was “not in my control.”
Now generally speaking, getting too hot and bothered about country performers launching brands or doing endorsement deals is a fool’s errand. If you want to start criticizing performers for partnering with corporate brands, the line forms to the right. Kacey has partnered with cosmetics companies and other stuff in the past already, while barely being supported on country radio. If developing merch deals is a way for Musgraves to get her paper, more power to her.
But there is something specific about Wal-Mart that makes the whole thing feel, well … icky. One of the underlying messages of Kacey’s new album Middle of Nowhere is how the center and rural stretches of the United States have gone forgotten. It happens to be that in so many of these locations, Main Street has been hollowed out because of Wal-Mart specifically. Ironically, this also makes the Musgraves partnership make sense to reach the rural market because often in forgotten America, Wal-Mart is the only game in town.

Granted, now that everybody is off criticizing AI data centers, Amazon, and retailers like TEMU that are undermining all brick-and-mortar stores including Wal-Mart, the massive big box store is no longer the apex enemy of responsible American consumerism. But Wal-Mart is most certainly still up there near the top, and rightfully so. Incidentally, Wal-Mart has started selling more music again, including vinyl records. This has made them one of the few places you can still buy physical music. But again, this helps put the squeeze on the mom and pops.
For any other country artist, partnering with Wal-Mart would be expected. But Kacey Musgraves? She’s supposed to be the ultra-progressive left-wing activist of country music, or at least that how the fawning media loves to portray her, even though this has always been more of a projection upon her as opposed to her actual politics. Basically they took her song “Follow Your Arrow” and ran with it when Kacey was simply trying to be quirky and inclusive as opposed to agro and animated about social justice issues.
It turns out Kacey Musgraves is a red-blooded Capitalist like most mainstream country stars, trying to exploit the moment for every greenback dollar she can. It really helps put into perspective things like the viral Eli Rallo rant where Musgraves was praised for her “human rights” and “environmental justice” stances. There’s few companies with worse records exploiting products made with slave labor, junking up the planet up with cheap plastic baubles, and taking advantage of hourly workers that Wal-Mart. Frankly, this Kacey Lee partnership completely and forever undercuts any and all arguments about Kacey’s activist leanings.
Is any of this a hanging offense for Kacey Musgraves? Of course not. Should it affect the way we think of her music, either Middle of Nowhere or anything else? Absolutely not. Could it, or should it color what people think about Kacey’s personal character? That’s up for each individual to decide. But if nothing else, it does validate that Kacey doesn’t care for you using her as a vessel for your online virtue signaling over social justice issues. She’s just doing what she wants to do, and sees herself in 2026 as not just an artist, but a businesswoman.
Ultimately, it feels like Kacey simply wanted to reach people where they were with the message of Middle of Nowhere, while making a little scratch in the process. And if you’re living in the proverbial “Middle of Nowhere” on the North American continent, Wal-Mart is probably where shop, because there’s nowhere else to go. There’s no shame in shopping at Wal-Mart if you have no other choice, any more than an artist that isn’t supported by mainstream radio and other conventional avenues finding alternative routes to reach their fans.
But make no mistake about it. The Kacey Musgraves of the Eli Rallo and elite media class is not the real Musgraves. The real Musgraves is a maverick, bucking all conventions, full of unexpected turns, and doing whatever the hell she wants to do.
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May 24, 2026 @ 8:11 am
I’m no fan of Wal-Mart – though I would note that for a lot of areas their other shopping options are Target or Kroger-owned entities that (bluntly) are just as evil as Wal-Mart or at best very close.
And while this is gonna sound elitist – lets be honest here. The people buying Musgraves line of clothing are very likely not people who would shop at “Mom and Pop” shops for their clothes even if they had that option.
The people buying these clothes are gonna be mostly Mom’s in middle America who bitch all day on Facebook, Instagram, or TikTok about the state of their lives, while their kids are scouring the Dark Web on their iPads that Mom shoves in front of them because she is “tired” and doesn’t want to parent while she shops Temu.
May 24, 2026 @ 8:12 am
Hard to blame someone for making hay while the sun shines. I’m more surprised that the marketing analysts who must have run the numbers on this think there’s value in the pairing for Wal-Mart. It doesn’t seem to me at first blush that there’s a lot of overlap between the Wal-Mart shopper and the Musgraves fan,
May 24, 2026 @ 8:16 am
I expect better from you than to do a hit-piece on Wal-Mart. Stay out of politics.
May 24, 2026 @ 8:26 am
There is nothing “political” about speaking out against the hollowing out of communities and independent business, and homogenizing culture coast to coast in rural America that has been wrought by the proliferation of Wal-Mart. It also very much fits in line with the values Saving Country Music has espoused going two decades.
That said, I feel like I was very fair talking about the economic realities facing consumers, and even an artist like Kacey Musgraves. I don’t shame people for shopping at Wal-Mart. I shame Wal-Mart for giving them no other choice. And I don’t even really shame Kacey Musgraves for putting her products there. I just feel the need to point out that it’s completely conunterintuitive to the way much of the media portrays her.
May 24, 2026 @ 8:26 am
This is relevant, and Kacey’s partnership with Wal-Mart is fair game. I thought that it was incongruous pairing and Trigger thinks likewise. Kacey has to understand that it’s going to be scruntinized given her generally left-wing posturing.
May 24, 2026 @ 11:53 am
Walmart is as American as it gets. What’s incongruous with that? Lol
May 24, 2026 @ 12:37 pm
The whole ‘Spacey Kacey” thing has elements of the leftist, sustainablity, ecology, Earth Mother, New Age ethos. Wal-Mart is none of those.
Wal-Mart is American. Kacey isn’t really an “American” artist. She’s kind of seen as a borderless, Bohemian in my eyes. Dolly Parton, Johnny Cash, Merle, Clint Black, Reba – they’re distinctly American although they’re distinctive artists and their politics (to the extent they’re known) aren’t alike.
Luke Bryan stuff at Wal-Mart? I could envision that. I’m not a fan of his but his kind of vanilla, middlebrow image would fit in with the corporate mold. Kacey and her “Mercury in retrograde”, stoner poetry vibe seems odd at a place where I buy socks and double-kneed work pants along with canned beans, soup, milk, soft drinks, toilet paper and the like.
May 26, 2026 @ 6:54 am
walmart is as american as it gets? i agree.
the waltons profit while they pay their employees next to nothing, forcing them to utilize other government options to make ends meet (read: handouts).
nothing more american than rich people relying on the government for their wealth at the expense of everyone else.
May 26, 2026 @ 9:08 am
Kind of reminds me of the partnership of Eagles and Walmart to sell their album, “Long Road Out Of Eden.”
They stand for everything Walmart doesn’t, and yet, wanted to get their albums in front of the people that would buy them.
I don’t blame Eagles or Musgraves, by the way. But people can see the irony.
May 24, 2026 @ 10:36 am
Won’t somebody think of the poor Wal-Mart shareholders!?!
Holy hell man, the level of IQ required to defend Wal-Mart on the internet has to be a negative number.
May 28, 2026 @ 8:20 am
I haven’t listened to any of her new albums since Golden Hour, they’re total crap
May 24, 2026 @ 8:21 am
She has real talent but, ultimately, she’s a hypocrite. She had a few fallow years and she’s cashing in now. Nevermind the funky, granola, Earth mother posturing. The Walmart money is real, and she’ll get her fill while she can. It’s no surprise.
May 24, 2026 @ 10:18 am
She is the John Mellencamp of country music.
June 6, 2026 @ 10:18 am
That is doing Mellencamp a huge disservice.
Mellencamp is much bigger. And, much more sincere.
May 26, 2026 @ 9:10 am
100%. Just like Eagles with their album, “Long Road Out Of Eden.”
Long road indeed…all the way to Walmart where their audience still bought records in 2007.
Again, I don’t blame these people. Make money where you can. But don’t preach to me, which they do. Hypocritical, indeed.
May 24, 2026 @ 8:38 am
Wal-Mart is my no means my favorite store, but I think it gets too bad of a wrap. It was just the latest in a series of chain stores that helped doom mom and pop shops. Sears and its gigantic catalog were a big blow to local hardware stores a generation before Wal-Mart. JC Penny had 2,053 stores at it’s peak in the 1970’s, hurting all the small-town clothing shops and tailors.
May 24, 2026 @ 1:46 pm
Good point.
May 24, 2026 @ 8:01 pm
What do you mean by you think Walmart “gets too bad of a wrap”? I’m not familiar with the idiom. Do you mean the truth about it is covered up in some way? I know that idioms aren’t literal, but figurative. I am baffled. I’ll probably get a bad rap as a pedant for posting this, but I am honestly curious and want to understand. Thank you.
May 25, 2026 @ 3:26 am
I think it gets a lot of unwarranted hate for killing small, local businesses when it is just the latest in a series of chain stores to do so
May 26, 2026 @ 9:13 am
Great point, Ben. Wages haven’t increased in 30 years. If I need milk, a roll of crapper paper, and a screwdriver at 10:30PM, Walmart it is! Not gonna get to the mom and pop by 5:30 to buy the same thing for four times as much.
I hate Walmart. If anybody wants to create an alternative, the market is open for them to do so.
May 24, 2026 @ 9:30 am
As Bill Hicks said: Do a commercial, you’re off the artistic roll call. Every word you say is suspect, you’re a corporate whore. End of story.
May 24, 2026 @ 12:10 pm
Absolutely the perfect quote. You nailed it. RIP Bill.
May 24, 2026 @ 2:29 pm
Rolling Stones (Kellogg’s), Bob Dylan (Pepsi,Apple, Chrysler, and more), Aretha Franklin (Snickers’ McDonald’s, and more), Louis Armstrong (Schaefer Beer, Ford, and many more), Johnny Cash (Nissan, Standard Oil, and more), Willie Nelson (Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, and more), Waylon Jennings (Pizza Hut, Nike, and more), Kris Kristofferson (Duracell), Dolly Parton (T-Mobile, and more), Tanya Tucker (Pontiac)…
So many artists – inside and outside of country music – have done commercials. Your playlist and record collection, purged of all those “corporate whores”, must be truly sad and meager.
But nevermind the music – the only thing that matters is being ideologically rigid and pure, right?
May 25, 2026 @ 8:44 am
I didn’t think I’d have to point out that I’m not Bill Hicks, primarily because he’s been dead for a long time, but this is where we are!
May 25, 2026 @ 1:06 pm
Yes, but you brought that quote and I referred that quote. A free society entails both artistic freedom and commercial freedom. And artists should have the freedom to operate profitably or to make as much money as possible – even with commercials – without being labeled “corporate whores.”
May 25, 2026 @ 1:13 pm
It was a great moment in the show delivered with his trademark venom, and also a very valid point. However I do appreciate you replying as a human and not with the use of ChatGPT this time though 🙂
May 26, 2026 @ 9:16 am
Dole paid Kenny Rogers $17 million to endorse pineapples and juice.
I would take $17 mil to say pineapple is good.
I bet the “corporate whore” guy would, too.
May 26, 2026 @ 6:40 pm
He likely would. So would I, but I’m a nobody with, relatively speaking, nothing. People that are already famous and wealthy saying to buy shit that they probably don’t even use is unseemly to me. How much money do people fucking need? Gross. Samuel L. Jackson is only one of numerous examples. He is arguably the greatest actor of his generation and he uses his name and talent to sell shit. Disgusting.
May 24, 2026 @ 10:01 am
I shop at Walmart all the time. From sewing to photos and the garden center it has everything. Now they actually have some appealing clothes and I am all about it. I just got a tank top of this line and although most of the styles are not for me, it is nice to have some cool clothes at Walmart.
May 24, 2026 @ 10:09 am
Nothing wrong with being “an artist”.but if it were me I would prefer not being a starving one.i have no problem with her doing this.
May 24, 2026 @ 10:21 am
As I said in the article, I’m not against Kacey Musgraves going to get her paper. But she was far from “starving” before the Wal-Mart Partnership. Internet puts her personal wealth somewhere between $12 and $24 million.
May 24, 2026 @ 7:29 pm
“Internet puts her personal wealth somewhere between $12 and $24 million.”
I doubt she’s made that kind of money.
About five years ago I came upon a site that pegged my personal wealth at $5 million. Lol. They are always way off.
May 24, 2026 @ 11:23 am
Starving?
May 24, 2026 @ 11:24 am
This whole article feels like lazy outrage journalism in a rhinestone hat.
1. It’s merch, not a manifesto
Artists sell shirts, hats, jeans, dog bowls. Wal-Mart has 4,700 stores and is where a huge chunk of rural America actually shops. Kacey puts her “Kacey Lee” line there so fans in the Middle of Nowhere can actually buy it. That is not hypocrisy. That is distribution. The piece even admits “Wal-Mart is the only game in town” for forgotten America. So which is it? You want her to reach rural fans, but not use the only retailer they have?
2. The “activist” strawman
The article drags her for not living up to an image the media invented: “the ultra-progressive left-wing activist… even though this has always been more of a projection”. You cannot blame Kacey for failing to meet standards she never claimed. She wrote “Follow Your Arrow”, not a political treatise. The writer admits she was “simply trying to be quirky and inclusive”. So why spend 800 words scolding her for not being a revolutionary in denim?
3. Lazy double standard
The piece says, “For any other country artist, partnering with Wal-Mart would be expected”. Exactly. Luke Bryan has beer. Dolly has cake mix. But Kacey does jeans and suddenly it becomes a character indictment. That is not analysis. That is just singling her out because she is interesting. The article even says it is not “a hanging offense” and should not affect how we think of her music, then writes 66 lines anyway.
4. Manufacturing controversy
The headline calls it “off brand” then spends half the article explaining why it actually makes sense. “There’s no shame in shopping at Wal-Mart if you have no other choice, any more than an artist… finding alternative routes to reach their fans”. So the argument defeats itself. You are just mad there is nothing juicier to write about this week.
Bottom line:
It is a clothing collab. Not an endorsement of global supply chains. If we start demanding ideological purity from every retail partnership, there will not be a single artist left who can sell a sticker without a thinkpiece.
Kacey is not selling out. The article is just selling clicks.
May 24, 2026 @ 11:55 am
Yeah, this comment and others tell me that it is no longer possible to conduct conversation with nuance. Kacey Musgraves is not being dragged in this article, and is definitely not being held to a double standard. I feel like I very fairly explored the complexity of this issue, giving both the fair criticisms of it, and the obvious defenses.
“It is a clothing collab. Not an endorsement of global supply chains.”
With this, I respectfully disagree. We’ve been told for years that SILENCE is tantamount to violence. Actively partnering with Wal-Mart is very much endorsing global supply chains, and even profiting off them. As i said in the article, hey, let Musgraves make her paper. But let’s not contort ourself into believing this is something that it isn’t.
Kacey Musgraves is getting dragged for this by multiple folks. There is a whole thing about her not offering the line in plus sizes, and her supposedly tone deaf response. I really tried to be fair here, but I also appreciate folks leaving detailed rebuttals like this. Just please don’t act like this was a hit piece. It is was, you would have known it.
May 24, 2026 @ 3:09 pm
You can still discuss this with nuance. You just have to expect that some “special” subset of your readers won’t get it and without any self awareness of that fact are going to put this much effort into looking down on you.
May 26, 2026 @ 1:24 pm
The plus size complaint is ridiculous.
No one wants to see the outfit in the photo on a fat individual.
It is telling and sad sign the biggest outrage stems from that segment.
May 26, 2026 @ 1:22 pm
Well, I don’t expect anything better from Dolly and Luke. They are been franchises for years. But Kacey marketed herself differently.
She traded her integrity for dollars. It happens. You should have expected it.
May 24, 2026 @ 11:27 am
Hmmm.. a beautiful woman, great musician, selling her line of clothing, at Walmart.
Making a big deal about absolutely nothing.
May 24, 2026 @ 11:43 am
The oddest celebrity/retailer pairing to me was the Kardashian Kollection at … Sears.
May 24, 2026 @ 12:03 pm
An article on SCM about country artists and brand partnership leads me inevitably to the question: Has anyone tried out “Be Her” jet?
May 24, 2026 @ 12:34 pm
The same thing happens with the boycotts against Zionism. Nobody does it against OnlyFans
May 24, 2026 @ 12:43 pm
We haven’t shopped at WalMart or Target in years (we always seek out made in USA products whenever possible), but it just sounds like an artist cashing a check to slap their name on a line of products they had no hand in developing (hence the “no sizing” comment)…similar to the Lady Antebellum collection at Bed, Bath & Beyond several years ago. These celebrity lines never seem to have a long shelf life anyway, with the exception of Wrangler.
May 24, 2026 @ 1:36 pm
As a lad,I see Ms. Musgraves as capitalizing on her obvious non-singing assets to reach Walmart customers.
May 24, 2026 @ 2:05 pm
There may be a few artists who are really socially and politically committed to the point of it governing their lives, but the majority of commercial artists are committed in the moment. Don’t expect it to carry over to the next. Alan Jackson leveled a pretty direct blast at Wal-Mart (not by name) and inf favor of independent Main Street businesses in “Little Man,” but did those concerns affect how he markets his multimillion dollar organization and who he partners with? Heck, he and Georgre Strait even blasted the country music industry for shunting aside Jones (pretending not to know that he was shunted aside…..for them)!
“Follow Your Arrow” made a statement at the time. If you like th statement, then praise Kacey Musgraves for making it. But to think that that should preclude her from patnering with Wal-Mart on a clothing line is silly.
May 24, 2026 @ 4:19 pm
The Eagles were heavily criticized for selling their last album, Long Road Out of Eden primarily at Walmart and Sam’s Club stores in 2007. (I’m not 100% sure, but it may have been an exclusive deal.) Don Henley subscribed to left-leaning politics before, during and after that CD became a hit. Eden had several political songs on it, and because of where it was sold, I’m sure a lot of conservatives helped make it the #1 hit it became even though they didn’t subscribe to Henley’s point of view. Kacey’s business deal proves nothing.
May 24, 2026 @ 8:29 pm
“The Eagles were heavily criticized for selling their last album, Long Road Out of Eden primarily at Walmart and Sam’s Club stores in 2007.”
Exactly. So I’m not sure why some are criticizing Musgraves for selling a product line at Wal-Mart too. It’s pretty par for the course.
May 24, 2026 @ 4:50 pm
I saw this and figured, Kacey is trying to make nice with the crowd who didn’t follow her after Golden Hour. It rings a bit flat but it makes some sense. Frankly can’t be mad about stars trying to make a buck in a really tough time. In other words, no big deal.
May 25, 2026 @ 7:06 am
I didn’t buy her stuff after Golden Hour because Golden Hour was really good and the following two albums weren’t.
May 24, 2026 @ 6:06 pm
https://share.google/Vp47oCz9aAlqTUDWv
May 24, 2026 @ 6:13 pm
Ah walmart was just one of those that did that. In my little area, at first it was some places that were more local but still expanded to other towns. Then came k mart. Then came walmart which knocked out k mart. So you cant just lay it on walmart. People just naturally always looking for best deals. In onr way or another its always been going on.
May 24, 2026 @ 8:10 pm
When you go to the source, Walmart is not the reason mom-and-pop shops have closed down. The blame falls squarely on the American consumer. The consumer makes the choice. All Walmart is doing is giving the consumer an option. It has been proven over and over again that Americans will stick by their principles– until it costs them a few dollars.
May 25, 2026 @ 7:22 am
While what you say has some truth in it (All Walmart is doing is giving the consumer an option), Wal-Mart had a nasty edge to it.
After the company got big and wealthy, they would open stores in an area and identify the businesses they wanted to crowd out of the town. They’d price the products that the local stores had not just lower, but even as a loss-leader to get people in the store. Local businesses would fold. It’s not unusual, but Wal-Mart was perceived to be a lot nastier in their practices.
OK, capitalism at work. Eventually, Wal-Mart ended up closing stores in those areas where the local places were eliminated, leaving communities with diminished local options. Wal-Mart has just short of a quarter of America’s grocery market.
Yes, I do shop occasionally at Wal-Mart to save money and for convenience.
May 25, 2026 @ 1:07 am
I am not really sure what the fuss is about. No doubt it is all to do with money but I cannot see it impacting on her music. Maybe it will bring her to the attention of more. I did get around to giving her new album a listen after 2 albums I found rather boring. It is better. Not a bad album. Not great either.
May 25, 2026 @ 4:05 am
This critique is quite rich if you ask me… Dolly was literally born in a one-room cabin coming from about the most rural background there is… and there she is doing Walmart products for years at this point. She has every trinket imaginable on the shelves, especially for the holidays. So Dolly does it and nobody says shit about shit. Kacey does it… omg she’s destroying rural America and contributing to some crap about global supply chains. As someone else said, lazy double standard. You would never say these same things about Dolly, so don’t do it for Kacey.
May 25, 2026 @ 10:40 am
Dolly is a capitalist and makes no bones about it. She has joked forever about why she’s worked so hard for so long because, to quote her, “It takes a lot of money to look this cheap.” She’s always been a brand and that involves merchandising. She’s gone full throttle into everything she’s ever tried. The interesting thing is that she’s always maintained a down-to-earth persona in spite of being an aggressive professional.
Kacey’s whole vibe is this Earth mother, new agey thing that is most identified with a more minimalist approach and things like farmer’s markets and the like. And here she is with the business most identified with mindless consumerism. Actually, where I live, farmers markets are largely frequented by folks driving Range Rovers, Teslas and luxury sedans.
Her association in Wal-Mart is indeed “off brand”. I don’t think she’s evil for it. It just goes against the things generally connected to the ethos that she’s embraced. Trigger’s choice to write objectively about this makes sense given her attempt to get back to the space she moved away from several years ago. When this news came out, I found it to be a strange pairing. I’d expect her to attach herself to something products made from hemp, sustainable local agriculture or increased composting of food waste.
May 25, 2026 @ 10:04 am
I don’t know, to me it feels spot on.
May 25, 2026 @ 10:11 am
There are LOTS of lazy double standards,Beav959. I’ve lived them for 72 years,10 months and 20 days.
May 25, 2026 @ 10:33 am
There’s also a subset of people upset that these clothes don’t come in Parachute size. As if anyone wants to see that. Go figure.
May 26, 2026 @ 9:24 am
I kind of like the fact she is selling her shit at Walmart, likely for a reasonable price (I’m not bothering to verify this. lol).
Better than selling it at some high-end store that costs a fortune. That would be much more off-brand.
Eh. I appreciate Trigger writing about this because I wouldn’t have known otherwise. Thanks, Trig!
Some of ya’ll really getting your panties in a twist over this. No worries though…you can buy new ones at Walmart! HA HA HA HA
And also…Kacey is HOT. ha ha ha ha
May 26, 2026 @ 11:13 am
So some social justice warriors worry about the lack of “plus-sized” clothing in Kacey’s line?
Well, I can attest with great certainty and as a member of the shallow male of the species that the last thing I think about when I see Miss Musgraves is “plus-sized.” The world is better for it, too.
May 26, 2026 @ 11:21 am
I’m old enough to remember when Walmart wouldn’t have sold a Musgraves album unless it came in a plain brown wrapper.
Can I hate Musgraves’s politics *and* Walmart’s practices and politics?
May 26, 2026 @ 1:21 pm
Hippies love money, too. They just aren’t honest about it.
C.S. Lewis has a perfect quote about robber barons and moral busybodies.
June 3, 2026 @ 6:17 pm
Walmart way more Lainey Wilson. Kasey would have been more Target before it got tarnished .
June 6, 2026 @ 7:42 am
Do you think the price tag for the album flickers and changes based on the time of day or your capacity to spend money on non-necessities?