Showing posts with label out musicians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label out musicians. Show all posts

Sunday, August 18, 2019

Podcast: Chatting With Journalist, Recording Artist & Red Carpet Ninja Corey Andrew


Join me as I chat with my Instinct Magazine colleague, Corey Andrew.

In addition to the terrific writing Corey contributes to Instinct, he also has an international music career as an accomplished singer/songwriter and producer with songs that have been streamed over a million times.

Working together, Corey and I realized we have many interests and friends in common having both arrived in New York City at around the same time in the late 1980s. So, our perspective on many topics jives with each other.

Corey Andrew

When I asked Corey to join me for a chat for the podcast, I said I’m going to hit record and we’ll go from there.

Along the way, we touch on how Corey approaches writing, bringing style to his red carpet interviews, his adventures covering World Pride this year in New York City, how music took his talents around the world, plus we chat on our connections to a certain famous Australian, and an Emmy nominated actor from the cast of POSE.

You can find Corey's music on Spotify here.

And make sure you check out his articles for Instinct Magazine here.



Thursday, August 15, 2019

Out Rapper Lil Nas X Covers TIME Magazine

TIME Magazine covers the rise of Lil Nas X (screen capture)
These are heady, well-earned times for rapper Lil Nas X.

Less than a year ago, the college drop-out was living on his sister’s floor.

Fast-forward to the release of his mega-hit single, “Old Town Road,” now the longest-running number-one song sitting atop the Billboard Hot 100 for 19 weeks now.

Along that journey, Lil Nas decided during Pride Month to come out as gay as his single continued its meteoric trajectory.

And now, the chart-busting country/hip-hop artist is covering TIME Magazine.



When @lilnasx's debut single “Old Town Road” exploded online early this year and began climbing the charts, industry prognosticators anticipated a quick rise and fall. It’s now the longest-running No. 1 song in history, having occupied the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100 for 19 weeks. It’s been streamed more than a billion times on @spotify alone. All of this has made “Old Town Road” the defining sound of the year, a slurry, genre-busting interpolation of two quintessential American musical genres: #country and hip-hop. Yet even from his perch, writes Andrew R. Chow, Lil Nas is still an outlier. There aren’t many black stars in country #music; there aren’t many queer stars in #hiphop. There aren’t many queer black stars in American culture, point-blank. The fact that Lil Nas has risen so far and so fast testifies not only to his skill, but also to the erosion of the systems that for generations kept #artists like him on the sidelines. At a time when debates about categorization and identity are ubiquitous, Lil Nas X represents a more unified vision of the future, one in which a young #queer black man can dominate popular #culture by being unapologetically himself. “Everything lined up for this moment to take me to this place,” he says now. “Not to sound self-centered, but it feels like I’m chosen, in a way, to do this stuff.” Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @kelianne for TIME; animation by @brobeldesign; “Old Town Road” (p) 2019 Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment
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In an interview for the venerable publication, Lil Nas explains what having THE number one song represents to him.

“To me, ‘Old Town Road’ being the longest-running number-one song of all time means that…everybody has great taste in music,” says the 20-year-old with a sly smile before adding, “I’m joking.”

“My reaction, just like, me…I was in a complete state of shock,” he adds in a candid moment. “I cried a little bit.”

For someone who grew up poor, being shuttled from one divorced parent to another, it can only be mind-boggling that, in addition to the chart action, “Old Town Road” has been streamed - on Spotify alone - over a billion times.

TIME notes how disparate the stars that have aligned are that brought this to be.

“There aren’t many black stars in country music; there aren’t many queer stars in hip-hop,” writes Andrew Chow for TIME. “There aren’t many queer black stars in American culture, point-blank.”

“The fact that Lil Nas has risen so far and so fast testifies not only to his skill but also to the erosion of the systems that for generations kept artists like him on the sidelines,” adds Chow.

Chow points to social media and streaming platforms for ‘democratizing’ the path to possible success in the music industry today.



When @lilnasx recorded “Old Town Road” last fall, he was hoping it could be his way out of an unhappy life. Born Montero Lamar Hill outside #Atlanta in 1999, Lil Nas grew up poor, living with one parent or another—his mother and father split when he was 6. As he spent most of his teenage years alone, he began to live on the Internet and particularly Twitter, creating #memes that showed his disarming wit and pop-culture savvy. “It was like, I’m able to go viral, but I’m not promoting anything that’s gonna help me,” he says. “Until music came along.” A gifted vocalist since he was a child—his father is a gospel singer—Lil Nas began writing and recording songs in his closet. When, around last Halloween, he stumbled across a banjo-driven beat by the teenage Dutch producer @youngkio, he saw an opportunity to combine trap—a Southern-born #hiphop subgenre propelled by vicious bass and crawling tempos—with #country, which was experiencing a surge of popularity on the Internet. “Because it’s two polar opposites coming together, it’s funny no matter what it is,” he says. For the history of #music, artists like Lil Nas were the exception, writes Andrew R. Chow. Now, by definition, Lil Nas is the rule. Read more at the link in bio. Video by @khomariflashfilms and @alexandra_robson for TIME
A post shared by TIME (@time) on


That said, Lil Nas isn’t doing the cocky walk any time soon.

He tells TIME, “Everything lined up for this moment to take me to this place,” adding that he feels “chosen” to be in this place at this time.

The country-trap artist didn’t expect “this time” to include coming out, but, here we are.

“I know the people who listen to this the most, and they’re not accepting of homosexuality,” admits Nas. “I never would have done that if I wasn’t in a way pushed by the universe.”

As “Old Town Road” continued its reign at number one, the U.S. entered Pride Month, and the artist says he saw “Pride flags everywhere” and “couples holding hands.”

And so, he tweeted one of the most casual ‘coming out’ moments in music history.






What’s next for the young musician?

“I definitely feel the need to use my platform to spread positivity and do good things for the world,” he says thoughtfully. “I don’t want to be, in the last minute like, ‘Dang, I should have said something about this, you know?”

“From here, I just want to keep making whatever my ears catch hold to and happen to love.”

Read the full profile over at TIME.com.

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

News Round-Up: August 13, 2019

Max Souza (via Instagram)

Some news items you might have missed:

InstaHunks: Max Souza looking ridiculously perfect in Brazil. #woof

Norwich Evening News: A bus driver in the UK has been suspended pending an investigation after refusing to drive a bus he said “promotes homosexuality” because the ID number of the vehicle was written in a rainbow typeface.

kenneth-in-the-212: Kenneth knows 'Morning Wood' when he sees it...

Washington Blade: Cleveland Browns receiver Odell Beckham Jr. defended his sexuality after posting a photo of himself posing in Calvin Klein underwear.

NY Times: Former Gov. John Hickenlooper of Colorado is considering ending his presidential bid and entering the race for his state’s Republican-held Senate seat, potentially giving Democrats a strong candidate in a race they must win to have hopes of retaking the chamber in 2021. Folks in Texas have urged former Rep. Beto O'Rourke to challenge GOP Sen. John Cornyn in his reelection bid.

The Advocate: As the first gay Black man to play the coveted role of 'Freddy Eynsford-Hill' (singing the Lerner/Loewe classic, "On The Street Where You Live") in My Fair Lady on Broadway, Christian Dante White is blazing a new trail.

New Music: Brazilian singer, songwriter and the first drag queen to be nominated to a Latin Grammy and the MTV EMAs, Pabllo Vittar, releases her new single and music video for “Flash Pose” featuring Charli XCX.

Vittar is currently the most followed drag queen on social media in the world, and also #1 on VEVO and Spotify globally.

Vittar spent her 2019 summer touring Pride events across the US and Canada including Los Angeles, Miami, New York, and San Francisco.







Monday, August 5, 2019

News Round-Up: August 5, 2019

Terron Beckham (via Instagram)

Some news items you might have missed:

InstaHunks: Terron Beckham (above), the ridiculously jacked cousin of the Cleveland Browns' Odell Beckham Jr., shows off some gym humor along with his 'big-is-best' everything else. #thosecalves

OUT: A new study shows some men may be reticent to recycle because it might be perceived as 'feminine.'

Variety: At her Madison Square Gardens concert over the weekend, Barbra Streisand offered up a tweaked version of "Send in the Clowns" that trolled the current clown in the Oval Office.

Twitter: A police officer busts some moves to Steps’ 2017 hit “Scared Of The Dark” while attending Brighton Pride in the UK. The clip went viral after his police department shared the clip on social media.



Red Flag Bill: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) is collaborating on a “red flag” bill with Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) that would start a federal grant program to help encourage states to create “‘red flag’ protection order” laws, which are meant to make it easier for law enforcement to identify mentally ill people who should be banned from purchasing guns.

NY Magazine: A new profile on Ivanka Trump quotes a friend who says the Trumpette, "Has no idea she’s privileged. She genuinely thinks she’s earned everything she has. She goes on and on all the time about how hard she works.”

Out Music: Make-up artist Deney Adam (whose work has been seen in Vogue, NY Times, Interview) puts down his brushes to drop his wild and wooly new track and music video, "Heartdrop."

The visual, directed by the fab Mike Ruiz, is a fast and furious, animalistic affair featuring a nearly naked Deney locked inside a glass case.

“I wanted to convey that feeling of being trapped in a situation; when just at the moment that you think you are finally free from it, you find yourself right back where you started,” says Deney.

Musically, the track continually switches gears resulting in a visceral, heart-pounding (or should that be 'heart-dropping?') ride. Hit play below.



Out Music: Kyle Motsinger "Love On Each Other"

Out singer/songwriter Kyle Motsinger just released his latest single, "Love On Each Other," in advance of his upcoming album to be released this winter.

Out singer/songwriter Kyle Motsinger just released his latest single, a groovy, bouncy bop titled "Love On Each Other," in advance of his upcoming album to be released this winter.

Working with producer and collaborator Corey Tut, the track features big disco beats and slinky 70s strings making for an upbeat affair - which was Motsinger's goal.

The artist says current headlines of "crowds chanting against immigrants" and "transgender people being murdered in the streets" inspired him to counter that with some positivity.

"It’s a sneak peek of the more upbeat sound I’m cultivating for my Sophomore album that will be released this winter," says Motsinger. "I hope everyone takes away from the song that we have the power to change the world if we open our hearts and ‘Love on Each Other!’"

You can currently find the track on Amazon and Spotify.

Check it out below.



Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Out Music: Kat Cunning "King Of Shadow"

Out actor/singer Kat Cunning recently released her new single, "King of Shadow," which has been featured on the hit Netflix series Trinkets where she plays rocker chick, "Sabine."
Kat Cunning (image via Instagram)

Out actor/singer Kat Cunning recently released her new single, "King of Shadow," which has been featured on the hit Netflix series Trinkets where she plays rocker chick, "Sabine."

Since her performance of "King of Shadow" on the show in mid-June, Kat's streaming platforms have seen 7.8 million streams with "King of Shadow" garnering over 3 million streams.

As a musician, the beguiling artist crafts alternative pop songs, drawing from her study of dance as well as her time on stage which includes appearances on Broadway in Dangerous Liaisons and Cirque Du Soleil's Paramour.

“A lot of my music is pretty queer because I’m telling my stories and I’m queer, and I really believe in representation for anybody who’s marginalized," she told PEOPLE in 2018. "Being a queer person, I can’t really help but write true stories about love with female pronouns."

“The themes my music ends up being about are sexuality, religion — as one of those metaphors for sexuality and love — and also heartbreak and love," she added.

In "King of Shadow," Cunning exudes seductive romantic confidence that combines with rich pop production resulting in a richly-layered musical tapestry.

I like.

The multi-hyphenate artist is currently working on her debut EP. Hit play below.



Wednesday, July 24, 2019

News Round-Up: July 24, 2019

(via Instagram)

Some news items you might have missed:

InstaHunks: Woofy Diego Lozano (above) reminds me how many InstaHunks I follow in Spain. Which I guess explains why I'm headed back there in August ;)

The Economist: In a new poll conducted by YouGov, former Vice President Joe Biden has a 7 point lead over Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) 25/18 respectively. In third place, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) garnered 13 percent support.

GQ: Asked about "gay rumors," NFL star Odell Beckham Jr. says he "wasn't offended," adding, "I have no problem with anyone's sexual orientation. Love is Love."

Twitter: Not to be weird or anything, but is that the 'white power' hand signal Trump is making?



Billboard: Out rapper Lil Nas X has tied the record (16 weeks) for the most weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. The other record holders are Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men’s “One Sweet Day,” and Luis Fonsi, Daddy Yankee and Justin Bieber’s “Despacito.” He also scored 8 MTV Music Video Award nominations today including 'Video of the Year.'

USA Today: A New Jersey school board member, Daniel Leonard, may face an ethics inquiry over social media posts that include violent comments regarding Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Michigan). One post read, "My life would be complete if she/they die," across a photo of Tlaib. Leonard was, unsurprisingly, charged in a road rage incident last week where he crashed into a tree while chasing another motorist.

Out Music: Openly pansexual artist Madison Malone releases this sweet mid-tempo groove, "Quiet Down." The music video features a wide, diverse universe of folks sharing their thoughts on what "love is."

The Wisconsin native has performed at some of the world's largest music festivals including SXSW and SUMMERFEST, where she was voted ‘Favorite Emerging Artist.' Find out more at her official website here.



Sunday, July 21, 2019

Out Music: Charli XCX's Latest Music Video "Gone" Is A Wet & Wild Affair

I really don't know what's going on in the new music video, "Gone," from out singer/songwriter Charli XCX and Christine and the Queens, but it's a wet and wild affair to be sure.
Charli XCX & Christine in "Gone"

I really don't know what's going on in the new music video, "Gone," from out singer/songwriter Charli XCX and Christine and the Queens, but it's a wet and wild affair to be sure.

Towleroad called the video "an automotive bondage fantasy empowerment anthem," which pretty much sums it all up.

That said, I do like the track. Mixing 90s synths with some fat 80s beats with the ladies' on-point pop vocals results in a bouncy bop I'll be including on my pool-time playlist.

Check it out below.



Saturday, July 20, 2019

Woofy Raph Solo Drops New Album 'LIFE'

Raph Solo

Hunky out singer/songwriter Raph Solo shares the first single from his fifth studio album, LIFE.

The single, titled “Jasmine Petals,” looks to nature for inspiration in how we look back at lost loves and knowing when to let go.

“Trees release their buds after the loveliness decays and that’s when real growth to the tree occurs,” says Solo. “Such should be the case with people and love.”

“We live and love and it’s ok to lose sometimes,” he adds. “What doesn’t kill us makes us stronger.”

The contemporary euro-pop track begins with a haunting, melancholy introduction before a heavy bass beat kicks in along with piano and violin.



Shot in a cemetery and in a French period mansion in North London, the music video is full of symbolism.

In one scene, Raph is seen playing a violin, blindfolded. The artist says the visual is his way of questioning whether we really see what is happening in our lives, or if we simply go through life blinded.

In several scenes, Solo brandishes a gun. In that guns can end life, Solo includes the weapon as a metaphor for choosing or ending life. Choose to put the gun down and you choose life. Regardless of circumstance, Solo says the decision between life and death is ultimately our own.

"Jasmine Petals" and LIFE are currently available on Spotify, iTunes, Amazon and other digital music sites.

You can check out my previous coverage of Solo's music on The Randy Report here.

Check out the video below, and you can find more info on Solo at his official website here.



Friday, July 19, 2019

Out Music: Sam Smith Busts A Move With "How Do You Sleep?"


Well, look at Sam Smith get down with his bad self.

After a tremendously successful year that saw Dancing With a Stranger garner an amazing one billion streams, hitting #1 in both the US and UK, and going platinum in 15 countries, it seems Mr. Smith is in the mood to dance about.

Smith begins his new single, "How Do You Sleep," singing ‘I’m done hating myself for feeling / I'm done crying myself awake,' to an ambient, light-as-air accompaniment before the track kicks into a mid-tempo dance groove complete with hooky chorus.


And that's when Smith surprises by busting a move (a lot of them!) with a company of half-naked male dancers choreographed by Parris Goebel.

It's a nice change of pace for the 4-time Grammy Award winner.



The singer tweeted to his fans, "My heart is beating so fast. I'm so proud of this one. Thank you to all the beautiful humans who've helped me really come out my shell over the past year. I hope you all enjoy this & please learn the moves so we can dance together soon."




Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Tune Tuesdays: Katey Brooks "All Of Me"

Katey Brooks (photo: John Morgan)

With a career spanning four continents, out musician Katey Brooks continues her journey from intimate living rooms to dive bars to opulent concert halls to your digital catalogue with her single, "All of Me."

Considering her back-catalogue incorporates soul, folk, blues and country, Brooks is difficult to categorize in terms of genre. Words like "organic" and "honest"come to mind as her music details her romantic turbulence and the struggle to come to terms with her sexuality.

Growing up in a cult, Brooks found refuge in music.

"It was a very chaotic upbringing, full of some pretty colourful and sometimes unsavoury, characters," she shares. "But when I sang, I felt free and connected. For as long as I can remember, it’s been my way of getting what I need to say out."

"All of Me" narrates calling someone out on their ambivalence.

"It was inspired by a personal situation with someone I was prepared to give my world to," reveals the artist. "They proclaimed deep love, but then proceeded to behave in ways that were completely incongruent with that proclamation."

Brooks has garnered acclaim from the likes of Billboard, Pride, The Advocate, Gay Times, After Ellen and Earmilk to name a few.

Listen below, and follow her on Spotify here.



Saturday, July 13, 2019

Out Music: Justin Utley "Survivors"

Two-time OUTMusic Award winner Justin Utley releases his new single, "Survivors," a clarion call to stand up against conversion therapy.
Justin Utley

I interviewed out singer/songwriter Justin Utley some years ago when I was co-hosting the online radio show, The Candi & Randy Show.

Candi and I both just fell in love with Justin's talent and his deep passion for speaking out against so-called 'conversion therapy,' having been subjected it its dangers for two years as a young Mormon in Utah.

Happy to say the two-time OUTMusic Award winner has a new single out, "Survivors," from his upcoming album, Scars.

Justin recently told my Instinct Magazine colleague Michael Cook, “'Survivors' is about facing and overcoming insurmountable odds and learning to thrive in the face of adversity."

“It’s about survivors of abuse in all forms and how it takes a great deal of effort to move forward in life while carrying the heavy burden of trauma," added the hunky singer.

During the month of July 2019, all proceeds from “Survivors” will be donated to the Born Perfect Campaign, a survivor-led movement working to end conversion therapy. The song is available on most digital download sites like iTunes.



Oh, and as you can see, Justin is waaaay easy on the eyes, too ;)



A post shared by Justin Utley (@justinutley) on




Justin is performing at Bristol Pride today and in London on July 18. More concert dates below.



Friday, July 12, 2019

Interview: Singer/Songwriter Tom Goss On Open Hearts & Open Relationships

Acclaimed singer/songwriter Tom Goss (photo: LafamosPR)

Out singer/songwriter Tom Goss drops this chill summer single, “Quayside,” from his upcoming album, Territories. The song shares the delicate story of entering into a polyamorous relationship.

In a departure for the ‘guitar-toting troubadour,’ Goss explores new musical territory in “Quayside” (pronounced ‘key-side’). The track, featuring acclaimed songwriter Gregory Douglass and produced by Ian Carmichael, finds Goss shifting into a contemporary synth-pop vibe.

I recently chatted at length with Goss about the new track and how his own perceptions of love and relationships shaped the narrative of the upcoming album.

“‘Quayside’ explores an entirely new set of boundaries that I encountered when visiting my lover at his home on a quayside in London for the first time,” explains Goss. “I was concerned about being respectful to him, and his public (or daily life with his husband) while still being respectful to my own husband, and the love we've fostered for so many years.”



“It’s been a tumultuous three years or so for me, in that my husband and I opened our relationship, which is very difficult for me,” shared Goss in our candid interview. “I spent a lot of time struggling with that, and a lot of time just being really introspective.”

“This has all been an evolution trying to understand my role in helping my husband find the thing he was searching for and support him in the changing man that he was becoming,” explained the singer.

“And I was a little lost in knowing where I fit in along those lines," added Goss. "So, I think that that definitely made me very introspective and I think changed the ways in which I tell stories because it was painful for me.”

“There’s a whole world out there that’s very frightening because you we live in a society that tells us what sex is, and what relationship is, and what monogamy is and what this is,” said Goss. “And when you come out as gay, a whole bunch of that falls to the ground and you have to learn how to live with that.”

“And when you open your relationship, it does the same exact thing”, he added. “A whole bunch of those internal constructs that you believe are innate to you, you start questioning. Are these innate to me or are these something that’s learned? Is this a learned behavior?”

“And this is a learned thought,” says Goss with a sense of resolution.

(photo: LafamosPR)

To make sure everyone is on the same page here, the discussion is not about cheating on one’s spouse or partner.

Polyamory is described as the practice of intimate relationships with more than one partner, with the consent of all partners involved. It has been called ‘consensual, ethical, and responsible non-monogamy.’

That said, Goss is clear that seeking purely physical connections are not in his wheelhouse.

“I want to have really impactful emotional experiences,” shares the singer. “I think, for me, the, the idea of physicality and openheartedness is very important, and I want my intimate experiences with my husband, or with another person, to be really open and connective.”


Shifting the conversation to the music, Goss is upbeat, saying, “The whole record is really me trying to understand how I engage with the world at large in a positive, honest way.”

“And it really puts a spotlight on the openness of the opening of the relationship, and the falling in love with another person, and the wanting to be respectful of that person, and wanting to be respectful of my husband, and wanting to be respectful of me, and wanting to be respectful of my lover,” he says. “It has been all of these things and it just becomes a mind f*ck very quickly.”

“I’m so proud of this record – I’ve never heard anything like it. And, I’ve never shied away from saying something ‘different’ in my career,” says the man who put the bear community front and center in his music video celebrating the furry form.

(photo: Daren Cornell)

A veteran musician of seven albums, Goss has played over a thousand shows in over a hundred cities around the globe, and his music has been featured on ABC, HBO and Univision.

A college wrestler turned Catholic seminarian turned polyamorous gay songwriter, Goss is well-known in the LGBT world for his music videos for “Bears,” “Round in All The Right Places,” and his cover of the Dusty Springfield classic “Son of a Preacher Man,” which reimagines the video as a poignant ballad about two gay teens.

Racking up more than 12 million views of his music videos, Goss has been praised by press outlets such as The Washington Post, The Advocate, The Daily Beast, Huff Post, Billboard and more.

“Quayside” is now available now on all digital download sites.

For more info about Tom and his future tour dates, click over to TomGossMusic.com.

You can listen to our full chat below.

Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Parker Matthews Is More Than "Good Enough"

Parker Matthews "Good Enough"

Out singer/songwriter Parker Matthews drops his latest music video, "Good Enough."

Trust and believe - it's more than 'good enough.'

The visually elegant video finds our hero prepping for a performance, but troubled.

After the sexy sass of previous tracks like "Hit and Run" and "Feelin' Right," Matthews is in a pensive mood.

Who hasn't worried/wondered if they are 'good enough?' For others, for ourselves?

Through repetition (plus a touch of humanity), the title phrase sometimes feels like Parker is convincing his listener, sometimes himself.

It's like I'm not good enough, good enough
Why'm I not good enough, good enough
Baby, I'm good enough, good enough
I know that I'm good enough, good enough
I can't take it
My heart, you break it
I'm good enough, good enough
I know that I'm good enough, good enough

(screen capture)

The handsome Mr. Matthews offers some of his most expressive and muscular vocals to date.

And, like all his releases, the production is top-shelf and sophisticated.

Make sure you hang around for the ending.

"Good Enough" is available now on iTunes, Amazon and all other digital download sites.



Check out my previous coverage of Mr. Matthews on The Randy Report here.

Out Music: Brian Justin Crum "I & U"

America's Got Talent finalist Brian Justin Crum recently released the music video for his latest single, "I & U."
Brian Justin Crum (photo credit: Mark Mendoza)

America's Got Talent finalist Brian Justin Crum recently released the music video for his latest single, "I & U."

Penned by #1 Billboard writers Melanie Fontana, Lindgren and Ferras, and produced by Lindgren, "I & U" is the follow-up single to "Circles," released in February.

The singer recently told Huffpost the video for “I & U” is meant as an homage to his 'spirit animal,' George Michael.

“The video for 'I & U' is the most free Iʼve ever felt in my Queer expression," says Crum. "I spent so many years trying to 'butch it up' so that people around would feel more comfortable and so that I could fit into anyones little box they wanted to put me in."



Crum adds that he also wanted the music video to "feature a diverse cast of women who are strong in their own expression as well."

"Growing up queer I was surrounded by woman who supported me," says the 31-year-old singer. "My friends at school were all girls and it was their mothers (and my own) that loved me for who I was."

"I think itʼs very important that we, as gay men, rally behind women and fight with them as they have always fought with us,” he adds.

During his time on Season 11 of America's Got Talent, Crum garnered millions of views from his performances of songs by Michael Jackson, Radiohead, Tears For Fears and Phil Collins.

Check out the new track now available on all digital download sites.