

Little Wide Open
For Kevin Morby, the ālittle wide openā is the big sky, the small lives, itās his origins in the Midwest, and every duty and modesty and familiarity and isolation: the land, the people, and the parts of that inside him. āThereās something unintentionally musical about the Midwest; cicadas chirping in the trees, a train passing, a tornado siren going off,ā explains Morby. āIf you listen, there are these almost ominous sounds taking place beneath the wide-open skyāits ugliness and its beauty and how the two are often working together simultaneously. And while the Midwest isnāt technically the badlands, itās my badlands.ā
Little Wide Open is the title of Kevin Morbyās eighth studio album, produced by Aaron Dessner. In the summer of 2024, Dessner had asked Morby to support The National at their London show in Crystal Palace Park. Shortly after, Dessnerāwho was on a hot streak, having produced albums for Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran, and Gracie Abramsāreached out to Morby to say heād love to produce his next album. They began recording at Aaronās Long Pond Studio in Stuyvesant, NY, early in 2025 and finished in September of that year.
The album, which features a host of contributors such as Dessnerāwho plays multiple instruments across itāAmelia Meath, Andrew Barr, Justin Vernon, Katie Gavin, Lucinda Williams, Meg Duffy, and more, has been described by Morby as the third in a trilogy of releases, following 2020ās Sundowner and 2022ās This Is a Photograph, which catalogued his time in the Midwest after moving back to Kansas City. This time out, Dessnerās production elevates Morbyās recordings while never losing focus of the songs themselves. Thereās a newfound confidence and clarity in both Morbyās writing and Dessnerās production that recalls Tom Pettyās 1994 classic Wildflowers.
Now primarily living in LA, the atmosphere that runs through Little Wide Open has changed somewhat from its predecessors. As Rachel Kushner writes of Morby in the albumās accompanying essay: āItās about time, about feeling like he has shifted from nostalgia and the losing game, losing but beautiful, of holding onto the past. He has accepted that time is ceaselessly flowing, and you canāt stop it. Instead, he feels like heās riding it. Heās riding passenger with time.ā
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For Kevin Morby, the ālittle wide openā is the big sky, the small lives, itās his origins in the Midwest, and every duty and modesty and familiarity and isolation: the land, the people, and the parts of that inside him. āThereās something unintentionally musical about the Midwest; cicadas chirping in the trees, a train passing, a tornado siren going off,ā explains Morby. āIf you listen, there are these almost ominous sounds taking place beneath the wide-open skyāits ugliness and its beauty and how the two are often working together simultaneously. And while the Midwest isnāt technically the badlands, itās my badlands.ā
Little Wide Open is the title of Kevin Morbyās eighth studio album, produced by Aaron Dessner. In the summer of 2024, Dessner had asked Morby to support The National at their London show in Crystal Palace Park. Shortly after, Dessnerāwho was on a hot streak, having produced albums for Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran, and Gracie Abramsāreached out to Morby to say heād love to produce his next album. They began recording at Aaronās Long Pond Studio in Stuyvesant, NY, early in 2025 and finished in September of that year.
The album, which features a host of contributors such as Dessnerāwho plays multiple instruments across itāAmelia Meath, Andrew Barr, Justin Vernon, Katie Gavin, Lucinda Williams, Meg Duffy, and more, has been described by Morby as the third in a trilogy of releases, following 2020ās Sundowner and 2022ās This Is a Photograph, which catalogued his time in the Midwest after moving back to Kansas City. This time out, Dessnerās production elevates Morbyās recordings while never losing focus of the songs themselves. Thereās a newfound confidence and clarity in both Morbyās writing and Dessnerās production that recalls Tom Pettyās 1994 classic Wildflowers.
Now primarily living in LA, the atmosphere that runs through Little Wide Open has changed somewhat from its predecessors. As Rachel Kushner writes of Morby in the albumās accompanying essay: āItās about time, about feeling like he has shifted from nostalgia and the losing game, losing but beautiful, of holding onto the past. He has accepted that time is ceaselessly flowing, and you canāt stop it. Instead, he feels like heās riding it. Heās riding passenger with time.ā

















