On top of all the renewed worry about COVID, Kacey Musgraves faces what seems like another daunting hurdle heading into her tour this week: singing the ultra-personal, heartbreak-filled songs off her latest album night after night.
Like a Texan caught in a squall, though, the Grammy-winning country-turned-pop singer is shrugging off the latter concern — and a lot of other headline-making news related to her 2021 record "Star-Crossed."
"I'm in a happy place now," she said firmly. "I'm comfortable sharing the pain, and showing I got through it."
"Comfort" was the word du jour as the East Texas native talked by phone two weeks ago on a day when snow pelted her Nashville home — a scene she relished.
"I'll be ready for you," she quipped to the journalist in Minnesota, which somehow wound up being the spot she chose to launch her tour in mid-January.
Musgraves, 33, returns Wednesday to St. Paul's Xcel Energy Center, the same venue where she had her breakthrough gig in the Twin Cities, opening for Harry Styles in 2018 just as her album "Golden Hour" arrived. ("It was such a good feeling being embraced by Harry's fans," she remembered.)
Loaded with the clever wordplay, small-town agitation and self-deprecating humor that permeated her two previous albums — 2013's "Follow Your Arrow" ranks among the top 5 country radio hits of the past decade — "Golden Hour" traded Musgraves' rootsier country sound for synth-tinged dance-pop and up-tempo, Southern California-breezy twang-pop.
The musical change-up worked like a charm. "Golden Hour" got picked up by pop and adult-contemporary radio stations on its way to being named the Grammys' album of the year in 2019.