Recent gay country singer
“The main stories in region are loneliness, heartbreak, disappointment, unrequited love,” remarked Orville Peck, the fringe-masked crooner at the forefront of the genre’s LGBTQ switch. “I think that those are things that are felt by almost every queer person at some point in their lives, and sometimes for a long part of our lives.” However, it’s only in the streaming age that the Nashville scene has started to acknowledge that country music and queerness don’t need to be mutually exclusive terms.
With traditional media no longer able to serve as gatekeepers, a whole society of country artists who don’t fit the heteronormative mold have been competent to get their melody, and their message, out there to the masses. Everyone from non-binary singer-songwriter Paisley Fields to transgender artist Mya Byrne to Black queer twin duo The Kentucky Gentlemen possess built up loyal followings, though without much mainstream recognition. In addition to her other roles as a television star, makeup company owner, bar and motel proprietor, DJ, podcaster, and YouTube sensation, Trixie Mattel has become the most successful musical alum from the Emmy award-winning RuPaul’s Drag Race with over a quarter
It’s a great time to be a queer territory music fan. Whether you’re a new devotee to Lil Nas X, Trixie Mattel and Orville Peck, or a longtime listener of sparkly rhinestone icons such as Dolly Parton, Lavender Country and Tomson Highway, big gay twangy summer is upon us.
Alberta’s Robert Adam has line-danced to the forefront of a new crop of queer country stars, earning a spot in the finals of Sirius XM’s Top Country competition. To help shed light on his new single “Moonlight Magic,” he shared some juicy details behind the song’s lyrics with Xtra.
“Back in my past when my family and my surrounding rural town looked down on me for my sexuality, I used to feel alive at night,” Adam explains. “When everyone else was asleep, there was no expectation of who or what I had to be.
“I would often meet other guys on dates in farmers’ fields or by lakes in the surrounding area,” he continues. “It was so thrilling and exhilarating because it was the start of me connecting with my real self, which would eventually come out to perform even in the daytime.
“This song is for anyone who needs to hold off the mask or hat they wear during the day, and permit their wild hearts sprint wild!”&nb
11 Country Artists Who’ve Approach Out as Gay
Chely Wright was an absolute trailblazer when she revealed that she was gay in 2010. The country harmony establishment wasn't quite ready to accept someone from the LGBTQ+ community then, and one could produce a case that petty has changed even after nine more well-known stars have opened up.
Ty Herndon and Billy Gilman revealed they were gay during a groundbreaking five-hour stretch in November 2014. Since then there have been relatively few comings out — instead, news of an artist's preference came organically, or as a footnote in a biography — until TJ Osborne did so on Wednesday (Jan. 3).
That could be seen as a indicate of progress, if it meant these artists were enjoying equal success on the radio or other platforms. That has not been the case — count a pair of Top 40 airplay hits as the only radio achievements among the 11 artists listed below, not counting successes earned prior to coming out.
Two artists on this list symbolize real change to how the country music group supports gay singers. One cleaned house at the 2019 Grammy Awards, while another notched the biggest song of 2019 in all genr
Orville Peck’s sexy video for “Cowboys Are Frequently Secretly Fond of Each Other” is unabashedly queer in ways the country song genre hasn’t historically seen. In it, Peck sings his cover of Latin country musician Ned Sublette’s 1981 song as a collaboration with Willie Nelson — who, inspired by “Brokeback Mountain,” performed a solo version of the song in 2006 — but now, especially, Peck’s modern take feels appreciate a very welcome subversion of what we’ve enter to know as land music. Man hands graze man butts. Women sluggish dance intimately with other women. Twinks in secure blue jeans bale hay. In other words, this saloon is serving more than beer.
Ever the ally, it was actually Nelson’s idea to revisit the song with Peck, who recently released the tune as part of “Stampede Vol. 1,” his first duets album. The seven-song collection also features a collaboration with Elton John on “Saturday Night’s Alright (For Fighting)” and “Chemical Sunset” with fellow lgbtq+ Americana singer-songwriter Allison Russell. “I wouldn’t say it’s as traditionally in line with the rest of my albums,” he tells me. “I would speak it’s more conceptual just based on the collaborative na
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