Single Reviews: Kane Brown, “Woman” and Kacey Musgraves, “Dry Spell”

A heartfelt celebration of womanhood and a horny declaration of desperation just snapped me out of my dry spell, and they’re both immediate contenders for 2026 Single of the Year.

 

“Woman”

Kane Brown

Written by Kane Brown, John Byron, Ashley Gorley, Ben Johnson, and Taylor Phillips

 

“Dry Spell”

Kacey Musgraves

Written by Luke Laird, Shane McAnally, Kacey Musgraves, and Josh Osborne

I’ve been singing the praises of Kane Brown for six years now, and every time this man drops a record, he keeps proving me right. His ability to borrow from multiple genres while remaining primarily anchored in country music is, for me, the realization of everything I hoped nineties country would evolve into over time.

As great of a singer and songwriter as he is, though, why I’ve really gravitated toward him so much has been his fundamental decency and spirit of inclusivity, which is most evident on record when he sings about women.

“Woman” is one of his best efforts yet in that vein. On first listen, I immediately connected it to one of my favorite songs from last year:  “Little Lady,” the raucous Trisha Yearwood cut where she growls in the chorus about how her man “likes his woman full grown.”

Leave it to Brown to sing this from the guy’s perspective, as he dismisses his friends who want to go out looking for girls, all acting “like they ain’t gettin’ older,” because he’s got a full grown woman at home.  He loves his friends, but he’s not going out with them…and he can’t wait for them to head out so he can be alone with her.

When he sings “and she’s got a man,” he’s tapping into what I can only call domestic horniness, a specific kind of country song from back in the day that was done best by Conway Twitty and Charlie Rich (and worst by T.G. Sheppard and Trace Adkins.)

The PG-13 nature of “I’d Love to Lay You Down” and “Behind Closed Doors” are what made them subversive for their day.  “Woman” is rated PG at best. He doesn’t sing about what they’re gonna do at home, even though it’s implicit that he’s looking for the same happy ending as his buddies tonight.

But he sings about a woman, not a girl, and it’s clear he’s singing about a woman he respects and reveres. She’s not an ornament or a trophy. She’s not even wife number two. She’s a woman, W-O-M-A-N, and a real man won’t settle for anything less. In 2026, a man emphatically making that statement at all is what feels subversive, as the trad wife of today, celebrated for her submissiveness, is presented by most male radio acts as the ideal.

Brown, with a wide smile on his face and a real woman by his side, calls them out for what they are simply through the power of contrast.  This is authentic manhood, and these boys cosplaying as country outlaws look awfully small in comparison.

Brown is already spoken for, but he’s the kind of guy that Kacey Musgraves has been needing for 335 days on “Dry Spell,” especially since the last time wasn’t even good.

Where Brown draws on the sultry bedroom hits of his male predecessors and makes them a bit more family friendly, Musgraves revives the subtle double entendres of “Shake the Sugar Tree” and euphemistic carnal references of “Strawberry Wine” for a record that is far more direct in its demand for gratification than those earlier records could’ve dared to be.

“Dry Spell” is a flat out filthy record. Musgraves laments that she’s “lonely with a capital ‘H’” and that “ain’t nobody’s tool up in my shed.”  Musgraves’ fundamental disinterest in catering to country radio allows for such liberated songwriting, but don’t get it confused: this is what country radio should be playing today, had it not abandoned the legacy of the nineties women that dominated much of that decade creatively and commercially.

This is the same kind of “girl, I see you” record that goes back as far as “It Wasn’t God Who Makes Honky Tonk Angels.” Wells was chastised at the time for daring to sing about the kind of woman you’d find in a bar.  She certainly never imagined that one of her successors would say “girl, I see you” to those lonely ladies out there sitting on their washing machines, but you know what? It’s still three chords and the truth.

I don’t care much about what happens on country radio these days. It’s never been less significant in the role of an artist being successful. But I can’t help but imagine an alternative timeline where Brown and Musgraves are more representative of the genre’s gender politics, and where country music was still being made for adults, instead of being the holding pen for overgrown manchildren and their seen but not heard wives.

“Woman” and “Dry Spell” both get an A.

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8 Comments

  1. I wish Kane’s song had at least a little bit of detail about the woman he wants to spend his time with. The concept is nice and he’s certainly not ‘bro country,’ but the song is still vague in its depiction of a woman.

  2. I was smiling ear-to-ear while listening to “Dry Spell.” It is is unapologetically randy; it is a filthy song in the most horny and honest of ways. The video is even funnier. The produce scene! And the cake! It has been a while since a song made me laugh like this.

    Interestingly, posters promoting Musgraves’ album have been pasted on to the construction hoarding around a condo project near a parking lot by my apartment in Toronto. With questions like “Horny? Or “Dry Spell?” A phone number -430 789 9797- is included. Maybe I should have called it before posting it here!

  3. Oh,wow! That Kane Brown song is a banger. I love it!

    As far as the Musgraves song, I haven’t really liked her last couple of albums, mainly because the production on them bored me, but I’m loving “Dry Spell.” It’s giving me hope for the upcoming album. Also, “Lonely with a capital ‘H'” made me laugh out loud!

  4. Brown definitely delivered on his promise to release more hook-forward material with this one. One of his catchiest singles yet, and his performance is pure charisma.

    Whether or not it was intentional– and she’s enough of a genre nerd that I believe it probably is– Musgraves’ phrasing on that first, “I’ve been loooooonely,” reminds me so much of Connie Smith’s “Ain’t Had No Lovin’,” which I’d consider an s-tier hard up country single. I don’t know that this is my favorite Musgraves single, but it’s a welcome return to form after two underwhelming album cycles and subpar collabs.

  5. …i might have paid for to be the fly on the wall, when it was discussed how to get across “dry spell” best. judging from the result, it wasn’t the finest hour of those involved. ms. musgraves should just have had a cup of folgers with hannah dasher getting some serious inputs, how such topics are dealt with properly – or michelle billingsley, perhaps.

    …give kane brown’s “woman” to anne wilson to sing and things could go from smoothie to juicy flat-out.

  6. Just to further date myself, I was just listening to the Crook & Chase countdown on the radio on KX 96 in Toronto, and I heard Kane Brown’s “Woman” was the most added song at radio this week.

  7. Love these reviews. Kacey is growing on me more and more. Loved the music on first listen but the lyrics, though funny, are a bit hard to believe and gimmicky. No one that attractive is ever in a year long dry spell unless it’s completely chosen, so they’d never need to write a song about how frustrating it is. I know I’m taking it too seriously but that’s why it irked me a bit at first. She has so many songs with lyrics you know she REALLY feels or has felt.

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