Kacey Musgraves You Win Again Lyrics

Kacey Musgraves, whose follow-up to her Album of the Yr-winning Golden Hour, titled Star-Crossed, was released Sep. 10, 2021. Courtesy of the artist hide caption

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Courtesy of the artist

Kacey Musgraves, whose follow-up to her Album of the Year-winning Gold Hour, titled Star-Crossed, was released Sep. 10, 2021.

Courtesy of the creative person

Kacey Musgraves wrote her last anthology, Golden Hr, when she was falling in love. It won her a Grammy for Album of the Year and all-time country album, and spurred what was a fast-growing career into beingness (maybe beyond) fully-grown. But when that dearest started to fade, what else? She began writing some other.

Today, she releases the results of that soul-searching: Star-Crossed. It'south a breakdown tape, sure – simply not one driven past bitterness. It's well-nigh, or completely, and remarkably anger-free. To find out how that happened, Musgraves spoke to us from her domicile in Nashville, as cicadas sang their ain song in the background.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. To hear the broadcast version of this story, use the audio player above.

Noel King, Morn Edition : This is a actually specific kind of album; this is a record in 3 acts. And past your ain clarification, a tragedy – the end of your marriage.

Kacey Musgraves: Aye, this record is inspired largely past some major life changes, but also it'southward post-obit me chronologically over the last probably ii-and-a-half, three years since Golden 60 minutes came out. It'southward kind of picking up where I left off in that location.

Yous were married to Ruston Kelly , who'due south a singer and songwriter, for about three years. A lot of people are referring to this, kind of casually, equally a "divorce anthology." Is that a fair characterization, do you lot think?

Musgraves: I think that all albums are kind of an amalgamation of where you've been since people last heard from you lot. And for me, that was about that. So, so much has happened. It's well-nigh hard to even encapsulate everything that I've experienced and learned through this last chapter.

But at first I was like, OK, and so people may know me as "the Golden Hour daughter." I think that a lot of people got to know my music through my last record, and information technology was shaped past this point in time where I was falling in love and it's really cute. I think that the magic of that album does not accept to end with that relationship. I can still detect a lot of gratitude and a lot of dazzler and meaning in that tape. And I'g going to go along singing it for years to come up. This is no different, I think that this album is full of love and gratitude.

I think it's interesting that nosotros're all taught that the success of a relationship has to somehow correlate with the length of information technology – in that it could be a friendship, a business relationship, a marriage or any. I only don't think that that's fully accurate.

You can easily say it is a post-divorce album, which yes, information technology is factually on newspaper. Merely this anthology is full of a lot of honey and gratitude for that person, for Ruston, for my life and my power to explore all the emotions as a songwriter.

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The divorce is a big function of it, right? Because information technology'due south a big part of your life, as you said. I know yous accept the ability to write angry songs. There's not a lot of acrimony on this album. Did you lot find yourself consciously leaving anger out of this?

Musgraves: I wanted to honor myself as a songwriter, beingness able to convey the wide range of emotions that I take felt over my healing journeying. I've been doing a lot of reading virtually the stages of acceptance, the stages of grief and healing. And I've found out a lot about the fact that healing is non linear... I mean, I felt like a rubber bouncy ball, bouncing from emotion to emotion. One twenty-four hours I would feel extremely validated in where I was going. Then some days I'd wake upward and exist similar, 'What the hell am I doing?'

It's a feeling of confidence and empowerment mixed with extreme fear and sadness and guilt and depression, but promise for the future. Just then, yeah, a little flake of anger, a little scrap of bargaining, a piddling flake of struggling to accept where yous are. I don't think that any i emotion or song can actually speak for how I feel. That's why I felt like this anthology had to be 15 songs. It does unfold in my heed in three acts. That's kind of the best affair y'all can do is effort to convey how yous experience over such a complicated matter.

I listened to "Good Wife" once again and once more and once again. That song felt very real to me. I imagine it will feel very real to a lot of women. You're essentially asking yourself in this song, "What did I do wrong? What could I have done differently?" And this is a thing that humans tend to exercise subsequently a breakdown.

Musgraves: This song is earlier the life event in the album – information technology's really simply kind of a personal prayer to myself and to the universe, to God, to Goddess or whoever, saying: 'Delight assistance me come through and be the kind of person that I demand to exist for this other human that I've committed my life to.' There is a little scrap of humor in that song, but also I am humbling myself to inquire for help, because I might not have all the tools that I need to be who I need to exist for this person. Information technology'south kind of idealistic, like, I could bring him coffee and I could pack him a bowl when he comes home. Please, God, help me be a good married woman, because he needs me and I demand him too, y'all know?

What did spousal relationship teach you?

Musgraves: That'southward a good question. I come from a long line of long marriages, relationships that I really admire. My grandparents met in 2d and tertiary grade, and they're withal together. They're in their 80s and are genuinely happy. They're and so beautiful. Darrell Gene and Barbara Dean, they're similar a archetype American love story. And then you've got my sister and her husband, who have been together since they were 14 and 16. They take a infant now, and my parents are withal together. They ran a business concern adjacent for xxx years together with two kids.

I don't know. I mean, I only don't think that spousal relationship is for everyone. But I call up that it's beautiful. If that's how you work best and you lot find fulfillment in that, I think that it's a very beautiful thing. I don't think that it'south the end-all exist-all, though, you know?

And length, as y'all said earlier. Length is not necessarily the yardstick by which we should measure success.

Musgraves: Yeah. I mean, on one mitt, I think that matrimony is beautiful because information technology keeps you accountable in all seasons to someone that yous love. But it's likewise unrealistic in my mind on many fronts, considering we practise change so much over the years. And there are seasons in which nosotros may not chronicle to someone that we previously related to so closely earlier. That'southward with any relationship. And then I think that equally long as you lot have the room to expand and shrink, every bit you exercise over fourth dimension, and go on grace for each other - I think that's a really important ingredient, having the grace to allow someone to aggrandize and contract and non accept information technology personally.

Golden Hr won you a Grammy for Album of the year. And I would imagine your life must have inverse after that to some caste.

Musgraves: My life has changed quite a flake since Gilt Hour in largely cute means that I'one thousand very thankful for. I feel like by and large that tape allowed me to get closer to total creative freedom and merely feeling the confidence in following my creative gut and non feeling the need to stick to one sound or anything. I remember that information technology was really gratifying to alter up the game sonically for myself so much and take information technology received so positively. It made me feel, at the very least, following what makes you lot feel really good will always connect with people, you know.

What's a new thing that you learned about yourself? What was the matter sonically that you learned about yourself on this record?

Musgraves: I'yard pulling from a wider range of influences on this record. I'm playing with a lot of different textures and a lot of different sounds that I haven't really tried earlier. And I even learned a little scrap of Spanish for this record. It was really fun for me. I grew up in Texas; I've been effectually Castilian speakers my whole life. I only actually respect the language. I retrieve it'due south gorgeous. Just kind of as a fan, I've been taking Spanish lessons for several years. Merely I heard the song "Gracias a la Vida," and I knew that I had to record it for this.

You know, the last time I heard that song was in the context of a Chilean protestation vocalizer who sang information technology in the 1970s. I wondered if yous knew about the song'due south history and why you wanted to include it on this album.

Musgraves: The song was written by Violeta Parra. She's a Chilean folk singer, activist, songwriter and very well-respected. The version that I heard, though, was recorded past Mercedes Sosa some years afterwards Violeta died. And I think information technology's interesting that this song was on the last album she had written; she did commit suicide. I call up that adds to the intense, tragic and sorrowful nature of what this vocal is saying 'thank you' to life. You lot've given me so much. You've given me the beautiful and the terrible. Yous've given me the pain and the laughter. And I'm thankful for all of it. It's proverb: 'I'yard grateful to be alive.' And I simply thought, what a beautiful way to end this record, this chapter where I've done so much self-exploration.

The album starts out with "Star-Crossed" so "Gracias a la Vida" ends the album. And I recall it sums up kind of where I'one thousand at perfectly.

You mentioned that yous've been studying Castilian. Has it taught you lot anything new about writing? Have y'all learned annihilation interesting?

Musgraves: I accept a goal to 1 day exist able to understand Castilian enough to be able to write a song using the language. There's all these colors that the English language, sadly, merely doesn't really utilize. There are all these other ways to explain something or to convey an emotion, only different shades and different degrees that English just cannot do. Fifty-fifty looking at the lyrics of "Gracias a la Vida" and translating them to English, they merely fall so apartment, they're so clunky and they're just not every bit special. And so information technology'southward been really interesting to see the difference there and to hope to get to a place where I could use that creatively. But my main goal is to exist able to have a conversation with somebody and not become embarrassed.

I'm sure there are people who are going to heed to this album after going through divorces or breakups themselves. What do yous want this music to say to them?

Musgraves: It's been really astonishing to hear from a lot of people who say, 'I've gone through the same matter' or 'I'm going through that right now, and this music ways a lot to me.' I think in going through the last chapter, and fifty-fifty through pandemic life, I feel a piffling bit more connected to humanity through my pain. And all of us over the last year connecting and sharing the kind of micro-frustrations of being a human in 2021, we experience closer to each other. I call back that's a actually beautiful thing that I'1000 thankful for.

I think that this tape is also a kind of a reminder that the people that you might come across on Instagram - be them celebrities or even people in your daily life - we're all putting our highlight reel on, putting our best face forward. And I think equally much as you can be "the Golden Hour girl," the girl in love and the girl experiencing this really beautiful facet of life, you can feel the complete antithesis of that, you know? And it's real. It's real life and I merely think that embracing the good and the bad and knowing that nosotros're all experiencing information technology, whether you lot're famous or non, is a really beautiful reminder that we're all in this together.

Andrew Flanagan, Vince Pearson

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Source: https://www.npr.org/2021/09/10/1035553570/kacey-musgraves-star-crossed-and-thriving

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