NEW YORK — It is not easy to be an outsider in country music, but Orville Peck has made a career out of it.
On his third album, ''Stampede,'' his nonconformist spirit has led to collaborations with everyone from Willie Nelson and Elton John to Mickey Guyton and Kylie Minogue.
When the South African musician released his debut album, ''Pony,'' in 2019, little was known about him. A country crooner with a deep baritone more in line with outlaws like Merle Haggard and Waylon Jennings than anything on contemporary radio, Peck hid his identity (Peck is a pseudonym) and his face behind a mask.
A wide strip of leather completely obscured his forehead down to the nose bridge; the rest of his visage was concealed underneath a large Stetson and a foot of cascading fringe. As his public prolife rose and he continued to release new music, Peck started slowing stripping back the mask. Now, as he prepares to release ''Stampede,'' a duets album, only the hat and eye mask remain.
''I think it's sort of in parallel with my confidence,'' he says. ''When I first started — my first album — I really needed the mask.''
It takes some self-assurance to release a duets album. Each song is a brand-new collaboration, a previously unexplored creative experiment, and a balancing act. ''Every single song is me, 50%, and then 50% the other artist,'' he says. ''It's a long tradition in country to do duets and have sort of duos. You know, I think of Johnny Cash and June Carter, Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris,'' he says, suggesting that this kind of album would arrive later in his career.
''But then when Willie asked me to do (the song) ‘Cowboys,' it was like, ‘Oh, is this maybe the right moment?' And so, then I asked Elton, and then I asked Kylie, and then, you know, so on, so forth."
A dream get that didn't work out? Dolly Parton.