Photographed by David Mollé

While his fashion is certainly standout, it is not just for show. There are layers of meaning to Peck’s persona, which taps into gay culture and cowboy masculinity. “I draw a lot of inspiration from old rodeo performers and was always enamored with cowboys as a kid, the old Nudie Suits and bedazzled rhinestone and fringe,” says Peck. “You’d have all of these tough cowboy performers singing about all of this stuff and they’d be wearing rhinestoned pink suits and stuff. I found the contrast of that kind of cool. I found it kind of innately edgy.” In his newest video, “Hope to Die,” the opening shot references the famous cowboys from Vivienne Westwood’s ’70s Seditionaries T-shirt of two cowboys naked from the waist down. “There are a few hidden things in there for people,” says Peck of the fashion in the video. “There is a lot of reference to classic cowboy motifs, and in this video we reference Spaghetti Western and classic images of the cowboy and the sunset, but we add my own twist and the Orville take.”

Photographed by David Mollé

Peck comes at a time when country music is having a renaissance, pushing outside the sphere of straight, white Garth Brooks–style men on guitar. There is the rise of Lil Nas X and “Old Town Road”; Yola, a black British musician who sings country; and even the likes of Diplo and Post Malone, who have been wearing Western-style clothing. “It seems that there is a resurgence of cowboy culture; I think that is helping country open us [up, by] showing its true diversity. Maybe it has always been there, but maybe it doesn’t have the chance to be shown,” says Peck. “Different perspectives and diversity and different sounds within that genre are coming to the foreground and being embraced, and that is exciting.”

So will Peck ever reveal his face? He has no plans to—and might not ever need to. His music and style already speak for themselves.