“I didn’t think of it as an angle or something really groundbreaking at all,” the masked singer told CNN of his songwriting. “I just thought I was doing what everybody else does, which is write from your heart.”
That he’s gay is “the least interesting thing about [him],” Peck said. But to fans and artists working within a genre that has traditionally excluded marginalized performers, it’s been meaningful to see him ascend without shedding an ounce of what makes him so captivating.
Queer country artists are telling familiar stories — first love, heartbreak and learning to heal — from perspectives that were once shut out across the music industry. The sincerity and undeniable talent of country’s queer performers are changing narrow ideas of what country music can be — and who gets to perform it.
“I spent most of my career as a performer trying to be something I wasn’t,” Peck said. “I just finally realized that I could just be myself… and be what I always wanted to be, which was a country Western star.”
A (very) brief history of LGBTQ inclusion in country
Traditionally, the performers who’ve made a career off of country music have been straight, White and, particularly in the last 15 or so years, men.
It wasn’t that the country music machine intentionally kept out LGBTQ artists the way it did with Black artists — it was more of an unspoken rule that artists remain closeted if they wanted success in any genre, Hubbs said. There were virtually no out queer country artists for the first several decades of recorded music when it would have been the death knell for an artist’s career.
The music industry has bent slightly to social progress in the last decade or so, and country isn’t necessarily more discriminatory than pop or rap when it comes to LGBTQ inclusion — especially now that artists don’t need to work with a major label to deliver music to fans, and fans don’t always rely on radio to discover new artists, Hubbs said.
Country’s first gay trailblazer went decades without recognition
“I don’t know whether there was a place,” she said of her various groups, many of which feature queer women of color. “It was something that we always did.”
“When we made ‘Lavender Country,’ it was sort of an announcement that I had changed my mind, and that I was going to be a rabble-rouser … as opposed to someone who was going to be onstage doing anything,” he told CNN. “I had to choose one or the other, and there was no possible way that I could be both.”
Haggerty, with his boyish voice and knack for wordsmithery, sang every song like it would be his very last. For decades, it was.
His aspiring music career “dead as a doornail,” Haggerty devoted his life to socialist causes. It wasn’t until a producer in North Carolina discovered his record on eBay in the early 2010s that “Lavender Country” reentered Haggerty’s life, he said. At the time, he and a neighbor were playing small gigs at nursing homes in his community outside Seattle.
“I didn’t aspire to do this,” Haggerty said of recording music professionally and playing the fame game. “But I made Lavender Country as a vehicle for social change, and now I get to use Lavender Country for the exact reason that I made it in the first place — pure and unadulterated.”
The inherent queerness of country music
“Country, since its earliest days, has featured all kinds of love,” Hubbs said. “It’s not as exclusively focused as pop music is on romantic love, the ‘boy meets girl’ sort.”
Peck, previously a punk band drummer and ballet dancer, said country was the best fit for him — especially as someone who “pours their tragedies and traumas into their music.”
“The main stories in country are loneliness, heartbreak, disappointment, unrequited love — 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,” Peck said.
The stories he’s telling, Peck said, have been told and retold “since the dawn of time.” He’s just telling them from a queer perspective which, until recently, was hard to readily find in any genre.
“That’s the alchemy of music — you write these things that are personal to you, but once you release them into the world, they take on their own life depending on the listener and the listener’s experience,” Russell said.
The queer future of country
“I hope that the spirit in which I exist in country music continues to be the future of country music,” Peck said. “I get so excited when there’s somebody with a totally different perspective making country music — that thrills me so much.”
Russell said continuing to mute voices from queer country artists and performers of color will only hurt the industry in the long run.
“They’re just leaving so many people out of the narrative,” she said of the mainstream country music industry. “I think it renders their interpretation of country music less and less relevant.”
Haggerty, despite his love of being onstage, isn’t one for fame. He views Lavender Country as a “revolutionary obligation” he’s bound to, now that he’s finally got a platform and a willing audience for his songs about racism, homophobia and the faultlines in American society.
“I get to use my hambone-edness to foment social change and struggle for a better world,” he said of his unlikely career. “The very thing that sank me in the first place is the very thing that jettisoned me into this position.”