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Watch Sabrina Carpenter and Kacey Musgraves Unite for a Nancy Sinatra Classic Performance

San Franciscoโ€™s Outside Lands Festival attendees were in for a treat this past weekend as Sabrina Carpenter and Kacey Musgraves joined forces for a surprise performance of a 1966 Nancy Sinatra classic. Carpenter invited Musgraves onstage as she closed out the night on the Lands End stage the night of August 10.

Carpenter and Musgravesโ€™ iconic collaboration on Sinatraโ€™s โ€œThese Boots Are Made For Walkinโ€™โ€ seems to push Carpenter further into the realm of half-Western, half-country pop that she entered into with the release of her 2024 track โ€œPlease Please Please.โ€

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Sabrina Carpenter and Kacey Musgraves Join Forces

Tambourine in hand, clad in a sparkly black dress and knee-high platform boots, Sabrina Carpenter addressed the crowd: โ€œI think you know this one Outside Lands, yeah?โ€ As Carpenter rattled her tambourine and the band started the songโ€™s distinct introduction, Kacey Musgraves walked out onstage to a roaring crowd.

Standing side by side on opposite platforms, Musgraves kicks off the songโ€™s first verse as Carpenter dances nearby. The two women come together in unison for the songโ€™s chorus. These boots are made for walking, and thatโ€™s just what theyโ€™ll do. Their effortless harmonies at the end of their phrases add another layer to the performance, showcasing both womenโ€™s musicianship and vocal agility.

The pop stars closed out the song downstage, dancing, bantering, and harmonizing with one another. Their version of the Nancy Sinatra classic was a perfect tribute to the pop star that came decades before them, and the San Francisco crowd unsurprisingly loved it.

This Isnโ€™t The Pop Starโ€™s First Country-Tinged Rodeo

Nancy Sinatraโ€™s half-folk rock, half-country classic is the perfect song for an artist like Kacey Musgraves, who broke out as an alternative country artist in the early aughts. But one couldnโ€™t necessarily fault a listener for thinking Sabrina Carpenterโ€™s connection to the country-tinged track was less obviousโ€”particularly before she released โ€œPlease Please Please.โ€

While Carpenterโ€™s pseudo-disco, cheeky hit โ€œEspressoโ€ took the cultural zeitgeist by storm in the summer of 2024, โ€œPlease Please Pleaseโ€ was the singerโ€™s actual first No. 1 single. The chart-topping single has a far more country flavor than her past singles, featuring acoustic guitar, soaring vocals, and Carpenterโ€™s love of tongue-in-cheek lyrics. (Case in point: her pleading chorus ending with a gravelly, I beg you donโ€™t embarrass me, motherf*****.)

Carpenterโ€™s inclusion of a country-adjacent track like Nancy Sinatraโ€™s in her Outside Lands set seems to suggest the singer isnโ€™t afraid of leaning into her Americana roots, and based on her performance this past weekend, we think itโ€™s safe to say she can master any genre she likes. Plus, we certainly wouldnโ€™t be mad about getting more Carpenter-Musgraves collaborations in the future.

Photo by Daniel DeSlover/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock