Deeper Well is the sixth studio album by American singer-songwriter
Kacey Musgraves. It was released on March 15, 2024, through
MCA Nashville and
Interscope Records. The album was preceded by the release of two singles: the title track and "Too Good to Be True". To support Deeper Well, Musgraves embarked on the
Deeper Well World Tour in April 2024.
Commercially, the album became her best project in terms of sales in the first week of sales worldwide. In the United States it debuted at number two on the
Billboard 200 while in the United Kingdom it debuted at number three on the
Official Albums Chart, becoming the singer's highest entry on both charts.
Background
Deeper Well was co-produced and co-written by Musgraves, with
Daniel Tashian and
Ian Fitchuk, with the exception of the tracks "Sway", which includes songwriter
Tommy English, and "The Architect", which was crafted with
Shane McAnally and
Josh Osborne.[5] Musgraves recorded the album at the
Electric Lady Studios in
New York City, which she thinks "has the best mojo" while she was "seeking some different environmental energy".[6] It reflects on the changes and priorities that occurred in her life after the age of 27, spurred by the "cosmos as Saturn's return".[7] Musgraves previously teased the project on February 4, 2024, during a
66th Annual Grammy Awards commercial titled "My Saturn Has Returned".[8] The eponymous lead single was released with an accompanying music video alongside the album announcement on February 8, 2024.[9] Inspiration for the song came through change in feelings and sentiments that might be off-putting at first but equips one with "new insight and deeper love somewhere else".[10] It was followed by the second single, "Too Good to Be True", on February 29, 2024. The music video of the second single premiered on March 15, 2024, the same day the album was officially released.[11]
Promotion
On February 29, 2024, Musgraves announced she would perform shows in Europe and North America in support of the album. The
Deeper Well World Tour commenced on April 28 in
Dublin, Ireland, and is set to conclude on December 7, in
Nashville, Tennessee.[12]
On March 2, 2024, Musgraves performed "Too Good to Be True" and "Deeper Well" on Saturday Night Live.
Commercial performance
Deeper Well debuted at number two on the US
Billboard 200 chart with 97,000
album-equivalent units, including 38.06 million on-demand streams and 66,000 album sales in its first week, behind
Ariana Grande's
Eternal Sunshine. It became Musgraves' fifth top-ten album on the chart and her biggest week ever by both equivalent album units and traditional album sales.[13] The album also debuted at number one on the
Top Country Albums and
Americana/Folk Albums, respectively becoming Musgraves fifth and third project to achieve it.[14]
In the United Kingdom the album debuted at number three on the
UK Albums Chart, becoming Musgraves highest charting album and her third consecutive top-ten project after
Golden Hour (2018) and
Star-Crossed (2021).[15]
At
Metacritic, which assigns a
normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 78 based on 20 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[17] The review aggregator site
AnyDecentMusic? compiled 21 reviews and gave Deeper Well an average of 7.3 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus.[16]
Tony Clayton-Lea of The Irish Times dubbed Deeper Well "another jewel in the crown" describing it as "politically aware" and "personally revealing".[20] Thomas Bedenbaugh of Slant Magazine praised the concept of the album and considered the lyrics mostly live up to Musgraves' standards, even though some "fall flat".[25] Mary Siroky of Consequence called the lyrics of the album "poetic" and saw the album as a "conversation with a friend" and a "great companion listen" to Musgraves' fourth studio album, Golden Hour, praising the "dreamy mood" of the album.[28]
In a review for Paste, Eric Bennett called Deeper Well her "most sonically cohesive album to date" describing the album as "refreshing" and "rife" with "clear-eyed" songs.[23] Roisin O'Connor of The Independent also praised the cohesive sound of the album, calling the album a "revelation".[19]
Pitchfork's writer Laura Snapes described the album as "sympathetically fame-agnostic and focused on steadying Musgraves' axi" but the songs "aren't particularly satisfying when you know what she's capable of", comparing the project as "the latest addition to a canon of refusenik pop records from young women burned by the spotlight".[24] Sophie Williams of NME praised the "assertiveness" of Musgraves on the "sparse compositions that run through this thoughtful, imperfect, down-to-earth record", described as "the excitement of a fresh start".[21]