Quotes from Kacey Musgraves


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You can't beat Freddie Mercury. He was a mad man in the best sense possible.


I didn't necessarily grow up in a trailer park, but there is a brief part of that in my life. So I can make fun of it a little bit. I'm not too much of an outsider, where I'm just making fun of someone.


I love Lee Ann Womack and John Prine. That's kind of my ideal cross point. If I can sing it like Lee Ann would and say it like John would, then I feel like I've gotten somewhere.


Lee Ann Womack is from near where I grew up in East Texas, so I've always looked up to her. I sang a lot of Dolly Parton as a kid and a lot of traditional western swing, like Patsy Cline and Roy Rogers.


Loretta Lynn was one of those ladies a long time ago that opened a lot of doors and paved the way for a lot of ballsy singer-songwriters who weren't just cute.


My parents have always had a great sense of humor. And I really appreciate good humor in songs, witty lyrics that sneak up on you and then you listen again, and say: 'That's so funny.' John Prine's songs have always had this really witty tone.


When I started out, I wanted to be the kind of artist who could play the CMA Music Festival and then turn around and play Bonnaroo, and I've managed to do both.


When I was nine, I was singing western swing: Roy Rogers and Patsy Cline. It got me noticed because no one my age was doing it, but it made me feel inferior because none of my friends could relate to it.


I'm thrilled that country music fans like my stuff, but so do a lot of people outside of country music, people who just love music. My goal is more to reach music lovers than to appeal to a genre. I love country music, and I'm proud to represent it, but I don't obsess over it as a category.


Certain kinds of people will always have an issue with my music. But that's fine; it's OK. I don't want to be the McDonald's of music. I don't want to not turn anyone off. If you were everybody's cup of tea, you'd probably be boring.


I always draw from things around me that people around me have gone through... The story that could be taken really literally is not from my life exactly. But bits and pieces are, and the sentiment behind it is.


Too many people focus on writing what they think they should write, what should be in a song, what radio would want.


Of course I get angry, but I want to use my brain a little bit and not just smash things.


It's weird, because the ideas in my songs aren't controversial to me. I feel like I should be able to sing about anything.


It's hard to remember a time when I wasn't writing.


In the beginning, I wrote OK songs, but they didn't have a unique perspective.


If the lyrics are something new, then maybe I want to give it a more traditional form, or the other way around, but not have all one or the other.


I'm just observing. I don't ever want people to think I'm preaching at them or wearing them out.


I'd rather have 100,000 people who really get what I'm doing and like it for what it is than a million who can take it or leave it.


I realize that I'm not going to be everybody's cup of tea, and that's okay. I think that's the point of music.