Gulf News

Kacey hits the sad notes

Singer breaks down the breakdown of her marriage through ‘Star-crossed’

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Kacey Musgraves breaks down the breakdown of her marriage on starcrosse­d, her follow-up to 2018’s Grammy winning album of the year Golden Hour.

Musgraves delivers the story in roughly three acts of tightly woven pop/country songs: the optimism of falling in love, the sadness of drifting apart and everything that comes from the realisatio­n there is no going back.

You don’t have to have suffered through a divorce to connect with the feelings Musgraves expresses about seeking and holding onto love, loss, anger and hope for a better future.

She credits a guided psychedeli­c trip with helping her organise and execute the record.

On What Doesn’t Kill Me, Musgraves gives a nod to the smash that immediatel­y preceded this challengin­g, but accessible, record: ‘I’ve been to hell and back/ Golden hour faded black.”

On the standout track Camera Roll, Musgraves describes scrolling through old pictures on her phone and the memories they trigger.

“Chronologi­cal order and nothing but torture,” she sings. “Scroll too far back that’s what you get/I don’t wanna see `em but I can’t delete ‘em/It just doesn’t feel right yet.’

Who can’t identify with that?

“This hookup scene ain’t all that it’s made out to be,” she sings on another confession­al, Hookup Scene.

“A pretty face might get you far/But still it can’t replace the kind of real connection that I crave,” she sings. “The kind we don’t have anymore.”

Star-crossed is a brave and brutally honest take on her marriage to singer-songwriter Ruston Kelly that now joins the long list of records detailing break ups. It’s a story of courage and honesty and a stark contrast to the warm glow of Golden Hour, with Musgraves showing a vulnerabil­ity and willingnes­s to grow artistical­ly that is often in short supply among artists at her level of popularity.

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