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* ProudBeauty: From "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" contains this quip: "I've got a face of gold/ I've got a heart of coal/ But baby, that's my cross to bear."
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* ProudBeauty: From "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" contains this quip: "I've got a face of gold/ I've got a heart of coal/ But baby, that's my cross to bear.""
* WhipOfDominance: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip, and given it is a BreakUpSong about never getting back together with the narrator's ex mixed with Orville's usual themes of GayCowboy and BDSM, it's likely it's just as much an affirmation that they reject their ex forcefully as much as it is a cowboy cliche.
* WhipOfDominance: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip, and given it is a BreakUpSong about never getting back together with the narrator's ex mixed with Orville's usual themes of GayCowboy and BDSM, it's likely it's just as much an affirmation that they reject their ex forcefully as much as it is a cowboy cliche.
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By TRS decision Whip It Good is now a disambiguation page. Moving entries to appropriate tropes when possible.
Changed line(s) 27,28 (click to see context) from:
* ProudBeauty: From "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" contains this quip: "I've got a face of gold/ I've got a heart of coal/ But baby, that's my cross to bear."
* WhipItGood: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip.
* WhipItGood: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip.
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* ProudBeauty: From "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" contains this quip: "I've got a face of gold/ I've got a heart of coal/ But baby, that's my cross to bear."
* WhipItGood: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip."
* WhipItGood: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip.
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* DragQueen: The music video for "Queen of the Rodeo" features drag performers Thanks Jem and Louisianna Purchase.
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* DragQueen: The music video for "Queen of the Rodeo" features drag performers Thanks Jem and [[Series/{{Dragula}} Louisianna Purchase.Purchase]].
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* DragQueen: The music video for "Queen of the Rodeo" features drag performers Thanks Jem and Louisiana Purchase.
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* DragQueen: The music video for "Queen of the Rodeo" features drag performers Thanks Jem and Louisiana Louisianna Purchase.
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Orville Peck is a country musician based in Canada, although as a pseudonymous performer his birthplace isn't publicly known. He is one of very few famous examples of a gay male country singer. His vocal style has been compared to Music/ElvisPresley, Chris Isaak, and Music/RoyOrbison.
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Orville Peck is a South African country musician based in Canada, although as a pseudonymous performer his birthplace isn't publicly known. Canada.
He is one of very few famous examples of a gay male country singer. His vocal style has been compared to Music/ElvisPresley, Chris Isaak, and Music/RoyOrbison.
He is one of very few famous examples of a gay male country singer. His vocal style has been compared to Music/ElvisPresley, Chris Isaak, and Music/RoyOrbison.
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** "Starin' back from the lookin' glass/ there stood a woman where a half-grown boy[[note]]"Kid" in the original[[/note]] had stood."
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Misuse. The lyrics never qualify the states/countries, only stating the cities.
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* LondonEnglandSyndrome: The opening lyrics of "No Glory in the West" deliberately play off of American Western towns that are named after more famous places (Paris, London, and Memphis, to be exact)
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* ''Bronco'' (2022)
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I just realised the "cross to bear/bare" is likely a pun, but oh, well!
* LondonEnglandSyndrome: The opening lyrics of "No Glory in the West" deliberately play off of American Western towns that are named after more famous places (Paris, London, and Memphis, to be exact)
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* ProudBeauty: From "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" contains this quip: "I've got a face of gold/ I've got a heart of coal/ But baby, that's my cross to bare."
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* ProudBeauty: From "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" contains this quip: "I've got a face of gold/ I've got a heart of coal/ But baby, that's my cross to bare.bear."
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* TheCoverChangesTheGender: His cover of Bobbie Gentry's "Fancy" makes an interesting use of this trope, implying that Fancy is a trans woman.
** "Starin' back from the lookin' glass/ there stood a woman where a half-grown boy[[note]]"Kid" in the original[[/note]] had stood."
** "Starin' back from the lookin' glass/ there stood a woman where a half-grown boy[[note]]"Kid" in the original[[/note]] had stood."
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* ProudBeauty: From "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" contains this quip: "I've got a face of gold/ I've got a heart of coal/ But baby, that's my cross to bare."
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* MindScrew: Many of his music videos are influenced by Creator/DavidLynch, and it shows - with almost-there narratives that are full of symbolism, but no real explanation.
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* BreakUpSong: "Turn To Hate" and "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" from ''Pony''.
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* BreakUpSong: BreakUpSong:
** "Turn To Hate" and "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)"from ''Pony''.are fairly traditional ones.
** "Dead of Night" is, according to Peck, about an unsustainable romance where neither of the partners can give the other what they want, but it makes the inevitable no less sadder.
** "Drive Me, Crazy" strongly implies the narrator's partner leaves them behind in the end.
** "Turn To Hate" and "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)"
** "Dead of Night" is, according to Peck, about an unsustainable romance where neither of the partners can give the other what they want, but it makes the inevitable no less sadder.
** "Drive Me, Crazy" strongly implies the narrator's partner leaves them behind in the end.
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* GayCowboy: His music, iconography, and public persona feature queered versions of cowboy and western aesthetics.
* KayfabeMusic: "Orville Peck" is a pseudonym, and he's never seen in public without a Lone Rider mask.
* KayfabeMusic: "Orville Peck" is a pseudonym, and he's never seen in public without a Lone Rider mask.
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* GayCowboy: His music, iconography, and public persona feature queered versions of cowboy and western aesthetics.
aesthetics, with a lot of references to Creator/TomOfFinland.
* KayfabeMusic: "Orville Peck" is a pseudonym, and he's never seen in public without a Lone Rider mask. He's also claimed his music is autobiographical, but how much of it is true is up for debate.
* KayfabeMusic: "Orville Peck" is a pseudonym, and he's never seen in public without a Lone Rider mask. He's also claimed his music is autobiographical, but how much of it is true is up for debate.
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!!Discography
* ''Pony'' (2019)
* ''Show Pony'' (2020)
* ''Pony'' (2019)
* ''Show Pony'' (2020)
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!!Tropes:
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* GayCowboy: The crux of Orville Peck. His music, iconography, and public persona feature queered versions of cowboy and western aesthetics.
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* GayCowboy: The crux of Orville Peck. His music, iconography, and public persona feature queered versions of cowboy and western aesthetics.
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* DragQueen: The music video for "Queen of the Rodeo" features drag performers Thanks Jem and Louisiana Purchase.
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* MinisculeRocking: "Old River" clocks in at just a minute and two seconds.
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[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/orville_peck.png]]
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Orville Peck is a country musician.
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Orville Peck is a country musician.
musician based in Canada, although as a pseudonymous performer his birthplace isn't publicly known. He is one of very few famous examples of a gay male country singer. His vocal style has been compared to Music/ElvisPresley, Chris Isaak, and Music/RoyOrbison.
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* WhipIt: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip.
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* WhipIt: WhipItGood: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip.
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Orville Peck is a country musician.
----
* BreakUpSong: "Turn To Hate" and "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" from ''Pony''.
* GayCowboy: The crux of Orville Peck. His music, iconography, and public persona feature queered versions of cowboy and western aesthetics.
* KayfabeMusic: "Orville Peck" is a pseudonym, and he's never seen in public without a Lone Rider mask.
* WhipIt: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip.
----
* BreakUpSong: "Turn To Hate" and "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" from ''Pony''.
* GayCowboy: The crux of Orville Peck. His music, iconography, and public persona feature queered versions of cowboy and western aesthetics.
* KayfabeMusic: "Orville Peck" is a pseudonym, and he's never seen in public without a Lone Rider mask.
* WhipIt: "Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)" makes prominent use of a whip.