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David Archuleta hits gay puberty in his new music

From closeted teen heartthrob to the WorldPride stage, the musician distills his journey to becoming a man in new EP.

David Archuleta
Nick Spanos

David Archuleta’s latest era? Love.

It’s fitting, considering the singer-songwriter’s beginnings. His career began in 2008, when he was just 17, with a run on American Idol, where he placed second. As a teen heartthrob, he released his debut single, “Crush,” which still echoes in his life today — and it’s not just the onstage reverb.


The song that pined “I know this crush ain’t going away” reached number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 that year. Yearning. Budding first love. Fear of acting on his true feelings. Those youthful themes of “Crush” have come full circle for Archuleta. “Why do I keep running from the truth?” he croons on the track. “All I ever think about is you.”

The song “always felt like it was gonna be very special,” Archuleta says. “I didn’t think of how it would be such a moment for the rest of my career up to this point.”

As a young man, Archuleta never allowed himself to feel crushes. “Even for girls, like even if I had feelings for them, I felt like if I let my feelings come out, my gay feelings would come, my same-sex feelings would come,” he says.

In 2021, the singer came out as queer, and he left the Mormon Church in 2022. In the years since, he’s dated men, gone to raves, and even pierced his ears — something he was always afraid to do. Given that Archuleta is no longer hiding, the song that launched his career hits differently.

Nick Spanos

Coming out has “been an awakening,” he says. “It’s been a sexual awakening. It almost feels like I’m going through puberty now rather than as a teenager.” By suppressing everything, he felt “detached from feelings of sexuality.” Because of that fear, “I never allowed myself to fully experience it,” he says. “I was so afraid [that] if I let too much of [my] sexual feelings come out, then I would turn gay, or I would unleash the monster in me, or I would lose self-control.”

His latest EP, Earthly Delights, “is just how I feel,” he says. “It’s a grounding of David.” At 34, he’s settling into his life nicely, but he’s still reflecting: “What does it mean to be queer as David? It still comes with playing, exploring, experimenting. As an artist, you always experiment and explore. That’s the beauty of being an artist is always creating a story and creating a world for the audience and the listener to step into.”

“Look at Lady Gaga, Harry Styles, Bruno Mars. They have these eras of who they are,” Archuleta says. “I’m in a grounded era where I want it to feel a little more chill but still sexy. And I don’t know what will come after that. I’m excited to share this side of me.”

Archuleta performed at WorldPride in Washington, D.C., in June, and the love and support of the global LGBTQ+ community means the world to him. “We all have a shared experience,” he says. His friends, especially his transgender friends like RuPaul’s Drag Race star and American Idol alum Adore Delano, with whom he recently reconnected, have taught him “how to really live boldly and courageously.”

This is what Pride is all about, says Archuleta. “Being proud of how far you’ve come, whether it’s individually or just in the LGBTQ+ community as a whole” is powerful, he says. “There was a time when it was illegal, and you could be punished for simply being queer and allowing yourself to be in a relationship with someone. The progress we’ve made — you can marry the person you love, start a family, and start a life together, and create goals and dreams together.”

David Archuleta’s EP Earthly Delights is out August 15, and his tour kicks off this fall.

This article is part of Out's July/Aug 2025 issue, which hits newsstands July 1. Support queer media and subscribe — or download the issue now through Apple News, Zinio, Nook, or PressReader.

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