Dev Hynes
Devonté Hynes (born David Joseph Michael Hynes, 23 December 1985) is an English singer, songwriter, record producer, composer, and director best known by his stage name Blood Orange. Born and raised in east London to Guyanese and Sierra Leonean immigrant parents, Hynes began his music career in the mid-2000s as a member of the nu-rave band Test Icicles before releasing two orchestral acoustic pop albums under the alias Lightspeed Champion.[1][2][3] As Blood Orange, Hynes has released six critically acclaimed albums—Coastal Grooves (2011), Cupid Deluxe (2013), Freetown Sound (2016), Negro Swan (2018), Angel's Pulse (2019), and Essex Honey (2025)—blending elements of R&B, electronic, pop, and hip-hop to explore themes of gender fluidity, vulnerability, queerness, race, and modern isolation.[4][1][5] His songwriting and production have extended to collaborations with artists including Solange (on her album A Seat at the Table), FKA twigs (on LP1), Sky Ferreira, and Carly Rae Jepsen, earning him recognition as a versatile musical polymath based in New York City.[1][6] Beyond recording, Hynes has composed scores for films such as Palo Alto (2013) and Queen & Slim (2019), the latter released as a 20-track soundtrack in 2020, and ventured into classical music with the 2020 album Fields alongside the Third Coast Percussion ensemble, which earned a Grammy nomination for Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance in 2021.[4][7] In 2024, he won a Latin Grammy Award for Best Alternative Song for co-writing "El Día Que Perdí Mi Juventud" with Nathy Peluso.[8] Hynes's work often draws from personal experiences of identity and dispossession, providing solace and energy to audiences while influencing contemporary music, film, and dance.[4][9][10]Early years
Upbringing
Devonté Hynes was born on December 23, 1985, in Houston, Texas, and raised in Ilford, East London, to immigrant parents of Guyanese and Sierra Leonean descent.[1][3] His mother worked as a health visitor nurse, providing care to elderly and underserved individuals, while his father was employed at Marks & Spencer.[11] Raised primarily in Ilford and the surrounding Essex area, a predominantly white suburb, Hynes navigated significant challenges as a mixed-race child, including frequent bullying that highlighted issues of racial and gender identity.[12][13] These early experiences fostered a sense of otherness that profoundly shaped Hynes' worldview and creative path. To cope, he developed a self-taught interest in Black history during his youth, finding solace in its narratives amid feelings of isolation.[14] Music also emerged as an outlet, influenced by the diverse sounds in his household, though formal training was limited; Hynes later recalled beginning to explore instruments like piano and cello around age seven.[14] In his late teens, Hynes channeled frustrations from his upbringing into punk influences, leading him to co-found the band Test Icicles as a raw expression of rebellion. Seeking broader artistic horizons, he relocated to New York City in 2007 at age 21, arriving without a clear plan but drawn to its vibrant creative scene, where he quickly established roots in Brooklyn.[15][13]Test Icicles
Test Icicles formed in 2004 in London when Rory Attwell and Sam Mehran recruited Dev Hynes, then 18, to join their emerging punk and noise-pop project as a third member. The teenage trio quickly gained traction through spirited live performances that showcased their chaotic energy, leading to a signing with Domino Recording Company. Hynes contributed on guitar, keyboards, and backing vocals, while the group shared lead vocal duties among its members, with Attwell and Mehran often taking the forefront.[16] Their raw, collaborative approach drew from Hynes' challenging early years, channeling personal frustrations into a high-octane punk ethos.[17] The band's sole album, For Screening Purposes Only, arrived in October 2005 via Domino, capturing their frenetic sound in tracks like the angular "Circle. Square. Triangle." and the abrasive "Hogging the Spotlight."[18] Embracing a nu-rave aesthetic amid London's early 2000s underground scene, Test Icicles blended post-punk aggression, electroclash synths, and irreverent humor, evoking a dayglo fusion of hardcore and dance elements that defied easy categorization.[19] Critics praised the record's hook-filled chaos and playful edge, with Pitchfork highlighting its "slash-and-burn post-hardcore" intensity akin to Blood Brothers-style vocals over erratic instrumentation.[20] Hynes co-wrote several songs, including "Circle. Square. Triangle.," helping shape the album's noisy, experimental bent that earned early buzz in UK music press like NME.[21] Following the album's release, Test Icicles toured the UK extensively, building a cult following with their incendiary, unpredictable shows.[22] However, underlying discord surfaced, as band members later admitted to disliking much of their output and struggling with the project's direction.[23] These internal tensions culminated in the group's abrupt dissolution in February 2006, just months after the album dropped, ending their run after one full-length and a handful of singles.[22] The split, confirmed amid swirling rumors, marked a brief but influential chapter in the nu-rave wave, with Hynes' multifaceted role amplifying the band's media spotlight in outlets like NME during their short tenure.[24]Solo projects
Lightspeed Champion
Following the disbandment of the punk band Test Icicles in late 2006, Dev Hynes adopted the Lightspeed Champion moniker to pivot toward acoustic folk-pop, drawing on influences like Elliott Smith and Conor Oberst for a more introspective sound.[25][26] Hynes' debut album as Lightspeed Champion, Falling Off the Lavender Bridge, was released in January 2008 on Domino Recording Company.[27] Recorded in Omaha, Nebraska, with producer Mike Mogis of Bright Eyes, the album featured lush string arrangements and a blend of country-rock and indie folk elements, exemplified by tracks like the melancholic "Galaxy of the Lost," which showcased Hynes' vulnerable songwriting.[28][26] Critics praised its emotional depth and ornate production, with Pitchfork noting Hynes' transformation into a "florid troubadour" emoting over manicured acoustics and strings.[26] The follow-up, Life Is Sweet! Nice to Meet You, arrived in February 2010, also via Domino, expanding on the orchestral pop of the debut with classical influences and themes of lost love and restlessness.[29] Recorded with contributions from session musicians including members of the Britten Sinfonia for its sweeping arrangements, the album included tracks like "Marlene" and "All Things Pass Away," blending whimsy with orchestral swells.[30] Reception was mixed but generally positive, with The Guardian highlighting its likability and potential to position Hynes as a UK counterpart to Conor Oberst, though some reviewers critiqued its uneven pacing.[31] To support the albums, Lightspeed Champion toured extensively from 2008 to 2010, including headline shows across the UK and US, festival appearances at events like T in the Park and SXSW, and support slots for artists such as Adam Green.[32][33] Live performances emphasized the project's acoustic intimacy and Hynes' raw vulnerability, earning acclaim for bridging his punk roots with folk tenderness.[34] By 2010, Hynes grew disillusioned with the persona's ornate style and began transitioning away from Lightspeed Champion, releasing limited material like a series of "bootleg" mixtapes before fully retiring the alias to pursue new directions.[35][36] This marked the end of a phase defined by youthful romance and orchestral experimentation, with no major releases under the name since.[37]Blood Orange
Blood Orange is the ongoing solo project of Dev Hynes, initiated in 2011 with the release of the mixtape Blood Orange Home Recordings and the debut studio album Coastal Grooves on Domino Recording Company.[38][9] The album blends R&B, funk, and electronic influences, marking a shift from Hynes' earlier folk-oriented work as Lightspeed Champion toward a more introspective and genre-fluid sound.[39] Subsequent releases expanded this foundation, with Cupid Deluxe (2013) incorporating lush synth-pop arrangements and orchestral elements that echoed Hynes' prior style.[40] Freetown Sound (2016) delved into themes of race, queerness, displacement, and heartbreak, sampling news clips and personal narratives to address Black and queer experiences in contemporary America.[41][42] Negro Swan (2018) further explored mental health, Black identity, religion, and queerness through collaborative sound collages featuring artists like Puff Daddy and A$AP Rocky.[43][44] The surprise mixtape Angel's Pulse (2019) adopted a looser, pre-production aesthetic with guest contributions from Tinashe and Toro y Moi, emphasizing emotional rawness over polished structure.[45] In 2025, Hynes returned with Essex Honey, his first full-length Blood Orange album in six years, which confronts grief, homecoming, and subdued introspection amid reflections on an English childhood marked by joy, pain, and musical discovery; the record draws from personal truths through abstract tracks rather than explicit storytelling, following a period of near-retirement from the alias.[46][47][5] Hynes has supported these releases with dynamic live performances, including NPR's Tiny Desk Concert in 2019, and numerous self-directed music videos that amplify the project's thematic focus on Black and queer life in modern America, such as the 35mm-shot "Hope" (2019) featuring cameos from Tyler, the Creator and Empress Of, or the serene "Dark & Handsome" (2019) with Toro y Moi.[48][49][50] Over time, Blood Orange evolved from synth-driven pop to a more experimental and collaborative approach, incorporating diverse guests and sonic textures while earning critical acclaim, including Grammy nominations for related classical compositions like Fields (2021).[51][52]Writing and production
For other artists
Following the end of his Lightspeed Champion era around 2010, Dev Hynes transitioned into a prominent role as a songwriter and producer for other artists, beginning with contributions to projects like Florence and the Machine's debut album Lungs in 2009, including co-writing the track "Swimming."[36] This marked an early shift toward crafting material that amplified emerging voices in indie and alternative scenes, building on his experience with lush, introspective songcraft. Hynes' signature production style features intricate, lush arrangements layered with falsetto elements and seamless genre-blending across R&B, indie pop, and electronic influences, creating emotionally immersive soundscapes that enhance the artist's core identity.[17] His approach prioritizes emotional depth through subtle builds and vulnerable textures, while fostering close collaboration that elevates the performer's vision without overshadowing it—often involving co-writing sessions where he adapts to their narrative and vocal range.[53] Among his broader contributions, Hynes co-produced and co-wrote key tracks on Sky Ferreira's debut album Night Time, My Time (2013), including the breakout single "Everything Is Embarrassing," which fused dreamy synths with raw introspection to help define Ferreira's alt-pop sound.[54] He also provided production on FKA twigs' debut album LP1 (2014), contributing to its ethereal, experimental R&B framework with atmospheric beats and harmonic subtlety on tracks like "Two Weeks" that underscored twigs' innovative vocal delivery.[55] Further expanding his impact, Hynes co-wrote and co-produced several songs on Solange's critically acclaimed A Seat at the Table (2016), such as "Junie" and "Borderline (An Ode to Self Care)," infusing neo-soul grooves with introspective lyricism that aligned with the album's themes of Black identity and resilience.[56] In 2025, Hynes contributed additional production and co-writing to Daniel Caesar's album Son of Spergy (released October 24, 2025), including credits on tracks like "Root of All Evil," emphasizing soulful melodies and intimate arrangements to complement Caesar's confessional style. [57] Elements of his Blood Orange solo sound, with its blend of falsetto-driven vulnerability and genre fluidity, subtly inform these productions, allowing Hynes to weave personal emotional threads into diverse artistic contexts.[58]Key collaborations
Dev Hynes has forged several pivotal collaborations that highlight his versatility as a songwriter, producer, and creative partner, often blending R&B, electronic, and indie elements to elevate his collaborators' work. One of his most notable partnerships is with Solange Knowles, whom he co-wrote and co-produced multiple tracks for her critically acclaimed 2016 album A Seat at the Table, including the lead single "Cranes in the Sky," which earned a Grammy nomination for Record of the Year in 2018. Their synergy is evident in Hynes' contributions to the album's introspective soul sound, drawing from personal and cultural themes, as detailed in interviews where Solange credited Hynes for helping shape the project's emotional depth. Hynes' full production role on Sky Ferreira's 2013 debut album Night Time, My Time marked a transformative collaboration, where he crafted a raw, synth-driven indie-pop aesthetic that contrasted Ferreira's earlier pop image and helped establish her as a cult figure in alternative music. The album's production emphasized atmospheric textures and emotional vulnerability, with Hynes handling instrumentation and arrangements that Ferreira described as integral to capturing her artistic evolution. In electronic and experimental realms, Hynes contributed songwriting and production to FKA twigs' 2014 album LP1, co-creating tracks like "Two Weeks" that fused glitchy electronics with soulful vocals, earning widespread praise for their innovative intimacy. Similarly, his work on Kelela's 2017 album Take Me Apart involved co-writing and producing several songs, blending futuristic R&B with house influences to underscore Kelela's vocal prowess and the album's exploration of relational dynamics. Hynes has also featured in co-writes and guest appearances with artists such as Tinashe on her 2014 track "Bet" from Aquarius, where he provided vocals and co-writing. As of November 2025, Hynes's collaborative approach often extends beyond music, as seen in directing videos for partners like Solange and featuring on tracks to mutually inspire growth, fostering a network of artists who value his boundary-pushing ethos. In 2024, he co-wrote "El Día Que Perdí Mi Juventud" with Nathy Peluso, earning a Latin Grammy for Best Alternative Song.[8]Compositions and scores
Classical music
Dev Hynes developed an early interest in classical music during his childhood in Ilford, England, where he demonstrated a particular appreciation for composers like Johann Sebastian Bach, though he later explored broader genres.[59] This foundation influenced his transition toward formal classical composition in the late 2010s, marking a departure from the pop structures of his earlier work as Blood Orange and Lightspeed Champion.[60] Hynes' debut in classical composition came with the 2019 album Fields, a collaboration with the Grammy-winning Third Coast Percussion ensemble, featuring world-premiere recordings of three original works: Fields, Perfectly Voiceless, and Attachment.[61] The album blends minimalist influences reminiscent of Philip Glass with emotive, repetitive string-like textures adapted for percussion, exploring themes of introspection and emotional resonance without vocal elements.[61] Fields received a Grammy nomination for Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance in 2021, highlighting Hynes' ability to fuse contemporary classical techniques with personal narrative.[60] Subsequent commissions expanded Hynes' orchestral portfolio, including works for major ensembles. In 2022, the Los Angeles Philharmonic performed selections from his catalog at The Ford, showcasing pieces that integrate classical and R&B sensibilities.[62] The London Symphony Orchestra premiered new compositions in 2023 at the Barbican Centre, including Naked Blue and Untitled III, which delve into 21st-century complexities like identity and vulnerability through discordant yet gravitational orchestration.[63] That same year, Hynes was commissioned by the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra for Naked Blue, a symphony premiered in collaboration with filmmakers Mati Diop and Manon Lutanie as part of the Sun Dogs program.[64] Hynes' classical output continued to evolve through dedicated releases and live integrations. Morning Piece (2023), composed for two pianos and premiered with pianist Adam Tendler, was submitted for Grammy consideration in Best Classical Instrumental Solo for 2026.[65] Hynes' pieces such as The Long Ride II for two pianos appear on Adam Tendler's 2024 album Inheritances and were performed by major orchestras such as the Sydney Symphony Orchestra during Vivid LIVE in May 2024.[66][67] These works and performances, up to 2025, demonstrate Hynes' range as a polymath composer, prioritizing abstract, concert-hall explorations of human experience.[68]Film, TV, and theater
Dev Hynes has composed original scores for several films, blending electronic, classical, and ambient elements to enhance narrative tension and emotional depth. His debut feature film score was for Gia Coppola's Palo Alto (2014), where he crafted a subtle, introspective soundtrack featuring piano and strings that underscored the film's exploration of adolescent angst in suburban California.[69][70] In 2016, Hynes scored Nerve, a thriller directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman, using pulsating synths and rhythmic percussion to mirror the high-stakes digital game at the story's core.[71] Hynes' work expanded into more prominent projects with the score for Melina Matsoukas' Queen & Slim (2019), a 20-track album of ambient and orchestral pieces that evoke the road trip's urgency and intimacy through layered strings and minimalistic motifs.[72][73] He continued this trajectory with scores for Passing (2021), Rebecca Hall's adaptation of Nella Larsen's novel, where his compositions incorporated jazz-inflected piano to highlight themes of racial identity and deception. For Gia Coppola's Mainstream (2021), Hynes delivered a soundtrack blending indie electronic sounds with acoustic elements to satirize social media fame. In 2023, he scored Paul Schrader's Master Gardener, employing sparse, brooding instrumentation to amplify the film's psychological thriller elements.[74] On television, Hynes composed the score for Luca Guadagnino's HBO miniseries We Are Who We Are (2020), featuring 12 piano-driven tracks with airy synths that immerse viewers in the protagonists' coming-of-age experiences in an Italian military base.[75][76] His contributions extended to the HBO series In Treatment (2021), where he provided a minimalist score emphasizing emotional introspection through subtle piano and ambient textures.[77] In theater, Hynes made his Broadway debut composing original music for Max Wolf Friedlich's play Job (2024), which ran at the Hayes Theater from July to October; his score integrated atmospheric sounds to heighten the production's thriller elements around technology and isolation.[78][79] Beyond scoring, Hynes has directed music videos and short films that extend his multimedia approach, often blurring lines between music and visual storytelling. He co-directed the 2017 short film With Him, incorporating tracks from his album Freetown Sound to explore themes of love and loss in a narrative format.[80] In 2015, Hynes directed God Bless The Child, a dance-infused short that showcases his choreographic vision alongside original music.[81] More recently, he self-directed the video for "The Field" from his 2025 album Essex Honey, depicting a DIY festival scene to complement the song's themes of escapism.[82] These works demonstrate Hynes' evolution toward immersive, narrative-driven soundscapes in visual media.Discography
As Lightspeed Champion
Lightspeed Champion's debut studio album, Falling Off the Lavender Bridge, was released in 2008 by Domino Recording Company and features 12 tracks blending folk-pop and indie elements.[27] The album peaked at number 45 on the UK Albums Chart.[83] Key tracks include "Galaxy of the Lost," a country-rock influenced song, and "Let Me Know," which exemplifies the project's shift toward acoustic introspection following Hynes's time in the more energetic Test Icicles.[84] The second and final studio album under the Lightspeed Champion moniker, Life is Sweet! Nice to Meet You, arrived in 2010, also via Domino, comprising 13 tracks with a broader orchestral scope incorporating chamber pop and experimental flourishes.[29] Notable inclusions are "All Things Pass into the Night," a poignant closer, and "Mueller," highlighting the album's narrative depth. In addition to the albums, Lightspeed Champion issued several singles in 2008, such as "Let Me Know" and "Mueller," though neither achieved significant chart placement.[85] Limited-edition releases included the Galaxy Sessions EP in 2008, a four-track live recording capturing early performances.[86] No further material has been released under this name since 2010.[87]As Blood Orange
Under the Blood Orange moniker, Dev Hynes has released a series of critically acclaimed albums and mixtapes blending alternative R&B, synth-pop, and electronic elements, often exploring themes of identity, race, sexuality, and personal loss.[39] His work as Blood Orange, beginning in 2011, marks a shift from his earlier indie folk style, emphasizing lush production, guest collaborations, and introspective lyrics. Hynes' debut mixtape, Blood Orange Home Recordings Mixtape, was released on May 23, 2011, as a compilation of home demos mixed by DJ Exotica Sage, featuring tracks like "Get Fresh" and "Sex Cray" that showcase early electronic and synth influences.[38] This self-released project, available via Bandcamp and SoundCloud, served as an introduction to the Blood Orange sound, blending new wave and darkwave aesthetics.[88] The debut studio album, Coastal Grooves, followed on August 30, 2011, through Domino Recording Company, comprising 10 tracks including the single "Sutphin Boulevard," which highlights Hynes' falsetto and nostalgic grooves.[89] Recorded primarily in New York, the album draws from '80s R&B and post-punk, earning praise for its intimate, bedroom-pop vibe. cupid deluxe, released on November 18, 2013, also via Domino, expanded the sonic palette with orchestral elements and features from artists like Cocteau Twins' Elizabeth Fraser on "By Myself."[90] The 10-track album delves into themes of unrequited love and vulnerability, receiving widespread acclaim for its sophisticated arrangements and emotional depth. Hynes' third album, Freetown Sound, arrived unexpectedly on June 28, 2016, through Domino, featuring 17 tracks interspersed with spoken-word samples addressing black identity and migration. Singles like "Augustine" underscore its political edge, and the record peaked at number 16 on Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[91] Critics lauded its thematic depth and collage-like structure, with Pitchfork awarding it a 9.1/10 for blending personal narrative with social commentary.[92] Negro Swan, the fourth studio album, was released on August 24, 2018, via Domino, incorporating collaborations with Puff Daddy, Tei Shi, and Nelly Furtado across 13 tracks.[93] The single "Charcoal Baby," released July 26, 2018, exemplifies its exploration of queer black experience and mental health, peaking at number 64 on the UK Albums Chart.[94] It garnered strong reviews for its lush, melancholic production and vulnerability. Angel's Pulse, issued as a surprise mixtape on July 12, 2019, through Domino, includes 14 tracks with guests like Toro y Moi and Kelsey Lu, blending neo-soul and hypnagogic pop.[95] Though initially digital-only, a vinyl edition followed in October 2019, praised for its breezy yet poignant intimacy as a companion to Negro Swan. Hynes' fifth album, Essex Honey, was released on August 29, 2025, via RCA Records under license from Domino, featuring 14 tracks that navigate grief, childhood memories, and Essex roots through eclectic styles like indie pop and funk.[96] The lead single "The Field," released June 26, 2025, sets a tone of reflective mourning, with the album peaking at number 69 on the UK Albums Chart.[97] Reviews highlight its elegant emotional core and cameos from Lorde and Caroline Polachek.[46]| Release | Type | Date | Label | Key Tracks/Singles |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood Orange Home Recordings Mixtape | Mixtape | May 23, 2011 | Self-released | "Get Fresh," "Sex Cray" |
| Coastal Grooves | Studio Album | August 30, 2011 | Domino | "Sutphin Boulevard," "Champagne Coast" |
| cupid deluxe | Studio Album | November 18, 2013 | Domino | "You're Not Good Enough," "It Is What It Is" |
| Freetown Sound | Studio Album | June 28, 2016 | Domino | "Augustine," "Best to You" (feat. Empress Of) |
| Negro Swan | Studio Album | August 24, 2018 | Domino | "Charcoal Baby," "Jewelry" (feat. XO) |
| Angel's Pulse | Mixtape | July 12, 2019 | Domino | "Dark & Handsome" (feat. Toro y Moi), "I Wanna C U" |
| Essex Honey | Studio Album | August 29, 2025 | RCA/Domino | "The Field," "Somewhere in Between" |