On Center of Nowhere, Kacey Musgraves doesn’t a lot return to her roots as redraw the map fully — one the place solitude isn’t a pit cease between relationships however the vacation spot itself. Written within the aftermath of a breakup and formed by lengthy stretches of intentional aloneness, her seventh LP and debut for Misplaced Freeway finds her toggling between self-sufficiency, mischief and the occasional bout of well-earned chaos.
The opening title observe units the tone inside seconds: sunlit acoustic strums, a low-end thump and Musgraves calmly declaring, “It’s simply me and me and that’s all I want.” It’s each a mission assertion and, because the file unfolds, a thesis she retains testing. As a result of even within the wide-open emotional area she’s carved out, need — and contradiction — creep in rapidly.
Take “Dry Spell,” an LOL spotlight that doubles as a 911 name for bodily affection after “335 days” with out it. The music revels within the double entendres and deadpan punchlines at which Musgraves has lengthy excelled, delivered over a Western-tinged groove the place you may virtually hear the tumbleweeds (of romance) rolling by. That rigidity between independence and impulse runs deep: the woozy “Again on the Wagon” spins a probably delusional yarn a few reformed drunken ex, whereas the four-to-the-floor “Loneliest Lady” insists the whole lot’s superb just a bit too convincingly. Nonetheless, Musgraves makes a robust case that rolling solo will all the time beat the unsuitable form of firm.
Musically, Center of Nowhere leans into traditions formed in small-town Texas dancehalls (pedal metal, Norteño accordion and different border-blurring textures) however not often performs it straight. “Abilene” is a campfire story with an efficient twist, whereas “All people Needs To Be a Cowboy” pairs its barroom observations with a quietly pointed thesis about dedication in each love and life. Elsewhere, “Rhinestoned” will get giddy and excessive on a soft-focus, “Jive Talkin’”-style groove, and the almost rapped verses of “Mexico Honey” swerve into one thing way more free and sexy.
The visitor spots supply each texture and star energy. Miranda Lambert exhibits up for the amusing “Horses and Divorces,” a pure pairing of two artists who’ve lengthy thrived simply outdoors Nashville orthodoxy (and who as soon as had “grass-fed, grade-A” beef between them), whereas 93-year-old Willie Nelson drifts via “Unsure, TX” like a realizing ghost (bonus: listening to him utter the priceless bon mot “dumb ass”).
Nearer “Hell on Me” strips the whole lot again to Musgraves’ stunning voice, guitar and remorse, touchdown on a word of quiet readability slightly than decision. That’s the trick of Center of Nowhere: it by no means rushes to outline what comes subsequent. As a substitute, Musgraves lingers within the in-between, discovering humor, heartbreak and a shocking quantity of peace alongside the best way.

