Freetown Sound
Freetown Sound is the third studio album by English singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Dev Hynes, released under his Blood Orange project.[1] Issued on 28 June 2016 by Domino Recording Company, three days ahead of its planned 1 July debut, the album comprises 17 tracks spanning approximately 58 minutes and draws on influences from new wave, R&B, and electronic music.[1][2] Hynes produced, wrote, and performed much of Freetown Sound himself in New York City, incorporating field recordings, spoken-word samples from figures such as author Ta-Nehisi Coates and rapper Vince Staples, and guest vocals from artists including Debbie Harry of Blondie, Nelly Furtado, and Empress Of.[3][4] The record delves into Hynes's personal reflections on race, queer identity, displacement, and cultural heritage, framed against the 2015-2016 backdrop of social unrest including Black Lives Matter protests.[3][5] Critics commended the album's eclectic soundscapes and introspective lyricism, with outlets highlighting its collage-like structure and emotional depth, though some noted occasional indulgence in its length and interludes.[6][3] It earned placements on year-end lists from publications like The Guardian and Pitchfork, affirming its status as a key release in alternative R&B.[7]Background
Conception and influences
The title Freetown Sound originates from Freetown, the capital city of Sierra Leone and the birthplace of Devonté Hynes' father, serving as a homage to his Sierra Leonean heritage while evoking themes of freedom, migration, and identity amid the black diaspora.[8][9] Hynes incorporated elements reflective of West African influences, including post-colonial reflections tied to Christianity's role in 1950s Sierra Leone and his father's emigration experiences.[8] Musical inspirations for the album drew heavily from 1980s R&B, dance, and pop aesthetics, with Hynes citing Prince as a pivotal figure whose unapologetic authenticity encouraged Hynes to embrace his full identity in composition and performance.[10][8] A collage-like structure, akin to J Dilla's beat tapes and the Dust Brothers' production on Beastie Boys' Paul's Boutique, shaped its patchwork of samples and ambient field recordings, such as opera singers and saxophonists captured in New York.[8][11] Missy Elliott's influence appeared through a sampled poem in the opening track "By Ourselves," highlighting empowerment and femininity in black experiences.[10] Conceived as a follow-up to Hynes' 2013 album Cupid Deluxe, which featured a more polished synth-heavy sound, Freetown Sound marked a shift toward a rawer, personal "mixtape" format emphasizing introspection over external appeal, with lyrics and arrangements sketched in notebooks during sessions in Washington Square Park starting around 2015.[8][12] This evolution prioritized a dense, headphone-oriented vibe incorporating hip-hop, house, and reclaimed 1980s-1990s elements, developed over two years with intensified refinement in the final months before its June 2016 release.[8][11]Dev Hynes' personal context
Devonté Hynes, born David Joseph Michael Hynes on 23 December 1985 in Ilford, East London, grew up in a household shaped by his Guyanese mother's and Sierra Leonean father's immigrant backgrounds, exposing him to diverse cultural influences including West African and Caribbean elements.[13][14] His early years in the multicultural suburbs of East London involved navigating feelings of difference, compounded by homophobia encountered due to his style and interests, despite not identifying strictly as gay.[15] Hynes entered the music scene as a teenager with the dance-punk band Test Icicles, formed in London around 2004, which released one album, For Screening Purposes Only, in November 2005 before dissolving in early 2006.[16] He then pursued solo work as Lightspeed Champion, releasing albums in 2008 and 2009, before adopting the Blood Orange moniker in 2011 for a pivot toward alternative R&B, debuting with Coastal Grooves that year.[17][18] By late 2006, Hynes had relocated to New York City from London, settling in areas like Queens and later Brooklyn, where he absorbed influences from the city's nightlife and vogue scenes while expanding his production collaborations.[19][15] As a queer black Briton, Hynes drew from personal encounters with prejudice and drew inspiration from figures like poet Essex Hemphill, whose work on black gay experiences resonated amid Hynes' fluid exploration of sexuality, including attempts at relationships with men that he later described as not aligning fully.[20][21] In 2015, he publicly addressed racial profiling and police brutality in media discussions, citing personal instances of discrimination alongside broader events like the disproportionate fatal police shootings of unarmed black Americans, which data showed occurred at over twice the rate for whites.[22][23] These experiences, tied to his father's Sierra Leonean roots—where Freetown originated as a settlement for freed slaves—framed his pre-album reflections on identity, migration, and black masculinity.[24] Leading into Freetown Sound's development, Hynes shifted toward more hands-on self-production by early 2016, emphasizing independence after relying on external collaborators for prior Blood Orange releases like Cupid Deluxe (2013), allowing deeper integration of his personal narrative into the recording process.[25][26]Production
Recording sessions
Recording sessions for Freetown Sound occurred primarily in New York City, drawing on the city's ambient sounds and utilizing home studios alongside informal spaces like friends' apartments.[27][10] Specific facilities included Profit House 1 and Lounge Studios in New York.[28][29] The production spanned roughly two years, functioning as a compilation of accumulated material rather than a linear process, with elements like the instrumental for "Best to You" originating from earlier, nearly discarded sessions and vocals added later in an apartment setting.[10] Tracks such as "Love Ya" were captured in 2015, contributing to the album's extended timeline leading into 2016.[30] Sessions adopted a communal approach, with Hynes leveraging group hangouts and spontaneous contributions to foster organic energy, incorporating live elements like horns, cello, piano, and saxophones played directly to prioritize unpolished delivery over polished digital layering seen in his prior releases.[27][31] The album received a surprise digital release on June 28, 2016, via Domino Recording Company, advancing the scheduled July 1 date by three days.[32][19]Collaborators and technical process
Dev Hynes, performing as Blood Orange, handled primary vocals, instrumentation, writing, production, and engineering on Freetown Sound, with additional engineering credits to Mikaelin "Blue" Bluespruce.[2] Guest vocalists included Carly Rae Jepsen on "Hope", Nelly Furtado on "Hadron Collider", Debbie Harry on "E.V.P.", and Kelsey Lu on select tracks, contributing layered harmonies and contrasts to Hynes' lead performances.[33] [34] Spoken-word elements featured Ashlee Haze on "But You", adding narrative interludes amid the album's sonic collages.[35] The production process emphasized self-directed control by Hynes to retain an intimate, unpolished quality, drawing from splicing and compilation methods akin to improvisational jazz editing rather than linear tracking.[36] [37] Techniques involved incorporating field recordings and samples for atmospheric depth, which looped and intertwined with live synths, guitars, and percussion to evoke nostalgic textures without heavy digital gloss.[38] [39] This layering approach prioritized organic blending over studio perfection, preserving raw emotional immediacy in the final mixes.[27]Musical composition
Genres and stylistic elements
Freetown Sound blends alternative R&B with funk and 1980s R&B influences, incorporating synth-funk grooves and new romantic textures across its 17 tracks.[31][34][40] These elements evoke 1980s dance and soul aesthetics, including groovy bass lines and subtle quiet storm dynamics.[41][42] The album's sonic palette departs from minimalist contemporary R&B trends, favoring expansive arrangements with reeds, synthesizers, and chunky drums.[3] Structurally, the tracks employ non-linear forms, frequently interrupted by skits, spoken interludes, samples, and film clips, fostering a fragmented, mixtape-like progression rather than cohesive linearity.[27] With a total runtime of 58 minutes and 40 seconds, individual songs average about 3.5 minutes, enabling rapid shifts that prioritize collage over extended development.[43] This stylistic fragmentation marks an evolution from the more narrative-driven compositions of Dev Hynes' earlier Blood Orange album Cupid Deluxe, aligning instead with dense, sample-collage techniques akin to The Beastie Boys' Paul's Boutique, as Hynes himself described the record.[31][44] The result emphasizes stylistic variety and melodic density, packing diverse influences into a swift, non-repetitive flow.[45]Instrumentation and sampling
Dev Hynes handled much of the instrumentation on Freetown Sound, performing on guitar, keyboards, piano, bass, drums, and drum programming, which contributed to the album's intimate, layered textures. Synthesizers and bass guitars form the core rhythmic and harmonic foundation across tracks, often evoking 1980s R&B and funk grooves while maintaining a sparse arrangement that emphasizes emotional directness over density. Drum machines provide programmed beats for propulsion in several songs, such as the rubbery funk of "E.V.P.", allowing for precise control that underscores the production's handmade quality.[46][31] Live drums appear selectively for dynamic contrast, notably enhancing the piano-driven structure of "Augustine" to introduce structural complexity and a sense of immediacy amid the album's electronic elements. This approach avoids overwhelming bombast, with minimalist percussion choices—such as subdued kicks and snares—prioritizing vulnerability in the sonic palette, as heard in the optimistic yet restrained balladry of "Thank You". Bass lines, played by Hynes alongside collaborators like David Ginyard, anchor the grooves with elastic funk influences, fostering a tactile, body-conscious feel without excess.[47][46][35] Sampling integrates non-intrusively to add cultural and personal depth, drawing from news clips, spoken-word poetry, and archival audio. The album opens with a sample of a speech on Missy Elliott's influence on body image, setting a referential tone, while "With Him" incorporates clips from Marlon Riggs' documentary Tongues Untied, and "Love Ya" features Ta-Nehisi Coates. Musical interpolations include De La Soul's "Stakes Is High" in "Thank You" and biblical samples from KRS-One's "Why Is That?" in "Chance", alongside street noise and film snippets from Paris Is Burning for atmospheric collage effects. These elements, including poet Ashlee Haze's voice in "By Ourselves", are woven sparingly to evoke historical and social resonance without dominating the instrumentation.[6][31][28][44][48]Lyrical content and themes
Personal identity exploration
In Freetown Sound, Dev Hynes examines personal identity through introspective lyrics that draw on his familial background and experiences of displacement. The album's title derives from Freetown, Sierra Leone, the birthplace of Hynes' father, symbolizing a connection to paternal heritage amid post-colonial family migrations.[8] Hynes parallels his own relocation from London to New York in 2007 with his father's journey from Sierra Leone to the United Kingdom, evoking a sense of inherited uprootedness.[27] In "Augustine," he vignettes parental youth with lines such as "My father was a young man / My mother off the boat," blending autobiography with reflections on loss and unresolved longing within family lines.[49] Hynes conveys urban alienation tied to his London-to-New York transition, portraying individual isolation in city environments without broader societal indictments. Raised in Ilford amid immigrant communities, he endured severe bullying for personal expressions like wearing makeup and associating with gay friends, leading to hospitalization and near-suicide ideation.[27] This informs lyrics favoring poetic ambiguity over explicit narrative, as in "Best to You," where vulnerability surfaces in phrases like "Part of me is faking / Faking it all just for fun / Part of me is breaking," linked to personal losses such as friends' overdoses and the erosion of self amid relational demands.[10][8] On sexuality, Hynes articulates a fluid stance, rejecting rigid labels in favor of undefined authenticity modeled on figures like Prince and David Bowie.[50] He has acknowledged past experiences with men but describes them as not central to his current life, emphasizing internal freedom over external categorization.[50] This informs tracks like "With Him," which evoke embodied desire through ambient soundscapes rather than declarative statements, reflecting Hynes' resistance to judgments on his queerness—having faced accusations of being "too queer" or "not queer enough."[8] In "Hands Up," personal admonitions such as keeping one's hood down emerge from lived caution, underscoring self-preservation amid alienation without prescriptive tone.[8] Overall, these elements prioritize Hynes' subjective vignettes, maintaining ambiguity to mirror the complexity of self-exploration.[10]Social and cultural commentary
The lyrics of Freetown Sound reference 2010s racial justice movements, including Black Lives Matter, through the track "Hands Up," whose title directly alludes to the "hands up, don't shoot" chant stemming from the 2014 police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.[51] The song's verses examine personal evasion and relational pretense amid such societal tensions, portraying racial peril as intertwined with individual accountability rather than isolated grievance.[52] Samples from Black Lives Matter protests further embed these events, emphasizing active resistance over passive victimhood.[53] Spoken interludes challenge normalized victimhood tropes by foregrounding agency in black experiences. In "By Ourselves," a sample from poet Ashlee Haze depicts a 26-year-old black woman's self-assertion against adversity, framing survival as tactical empowerment rather than defeatist dependence.[54] This contrasts media-driven narratives of perpetual oppression, highlighting textual evidence of resilience and self-navigation in the face of systemic pressures.[55] References to Christianity and migration underscore black diasporic struggles without deterministic overemphasis on external forces. The interlude "Juicy 1-4" invokes "Our Lady Africa" in a prayer-like plea—"You promised us a home / But not for while we're young"—merging Catholic imagery with the unfulfilled promises of relocation, as experienced by Hynes' Nigerian immigrant family.[56] Such elements balance cultural displacement with spiritual universality, critiquing assimilation demands on queer black identities (e.g., being "not black enough, too black, too queer") while attributing tensions to human frailties over monolithic systemic causation.[35][3] Lyrics occasionally probe performative allyship and identity agendas, as in broader explorations of racial and homophobic politics that pressure conformity, yet prioritize personal introspection—evident in lines questioning self-facing amid "loudmouth" pretense—over collective determinism.[35] This approach tempers grievance with agency, drawing from Hynes' observations of media portrayals that amplify division at the expense of shared human struggles.[41]Release and promotion
Singles and marketing strategies
The primary promotional single from Freetown Sound was "Augustine", accompanied by a music video released on June 27, 2016, featuring guest appearances by musicians including Julian Casablancas and Aaron Maine.[57][58] The video prioritized artistic visuals, such as fragmented narratives and cultural references, over straightforward commercial promotion, aligning with Devonté Hynes' emphasis on thematic depth rather than pop accessibility.[58] The album's rollout began with its title announcement on April 18, 2016, via Domino Recording Company, which highlighted Hynes' connection to Freetown, Sierra Leone—his father's birthplace—as a conceptual anchor for the project's exploration of identity and soundscapes.[12] Further details, including tracklist and artwork, were revealed on June 8, 2016, building anticipation through social media snippets and interviews that teased personal and sonic influences without full-track previews beyond "Augustine".[37] Domino employed a digital-first strategy, executing a surprise full-album drop on June 28, 2016—three days ahead of the scheduled July 1 release—to capitalize on streaming platforms and immediate accessibility, while delaying physical formats like vinyl and CD until August 19, 2016.[59][60] This approach, informed by Hynes' independent production ethos, aimed to foster organic buzz via online shares and playlist integrations, though initial physical scarcity limited traditional retail tie-ins.[43] The tactic's effectiveness is evidenced by rapid digital uptake and coverage in outlets like Pitchfork and Wired, which noted the surprise element amplifying pre-release discourse.[61][59]Live performances and tour
Blood Orange supported Freetown Sound with live performances beginning shortly after its June 28, 2016 release, including festival appearances that highlighted tracks from the album alongside earlier material. On July 6, 2016, Devonté Hynes performed at KOKO in London, where spoken-word samples from the album's opening track echoed through the venue during the set. [62] At Pitchfork Music Festival on July 16, 2016, in Chicago's Union Park, the setlist incorporated Freetown Sound songs such as "By Ourselves," "Augustine," "Love Ya," and "But You," mixed with selections like "Chamakay" and "It Is What It Is" from prior releases, demonstrating the album's integration into Hynes's live repertoire. [63] [63] The band announced a North American tour on August 9, 2016, commencing August 24 in Los Angeles, where Hynes debuted a full performance of Freetown Sound—the first such rendition—which was live-streamed via TIDAL to emphasize the album's cohesive structure in a concert setting. [64] [65] Additional dates extended into late 2016, including the Panorama festival in New York on July 23, featuring "Love Ya" and "But You," and the Day for Night festival in Houston on December 17. [66] Performances reached international venues, such as Clockenflap in Hong Kong on November 26 and Neon Lights on November 27. [67] [67] Touring continued into 2017, with shows sustaining promotion of Freetown Sound through setlists prioritizing its tracks, such as "Best to You," amid a band configuration that preserved the album's layered R&B and electronic elements without confirmed guest appearances replicating studio collaborators. [68] These engagements, spanning U.S. cities, European spots like London, and select Asian festivals, tested the album's themes in communal environments, with attendance reflecting steady interest in Hynes's evolving stage presentation. [64] [69]Critical reception
Initial reviews and analysis
Upon its release on June 28, 2016, Freetown Sound received widespread critical acclaim, earning a Metacritic score of 82 out of 100 based on 30 reviews, reflecting strong consensus on its ambitious scope and cultural resonance while noting occasional structural diffuseness.[70] Critics frequently highlighted the album's mature engagement with themes of black diaspora and identity, drawing from Dev Hynes's personal experiences across England and America, amid a backdrop of contemporaneous racial tensions such as the Freddie Gray and Tamir Rice cases.[31] Pitchfork awarded it 8.8 out of 10, designating it "Best New Music" and praising its expansive tapestry of funk, '80s R&B, and nostalgic soul grooves that form a "searing and soothing personal document," comparable to Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly in evoking multifaceted black experiences through collaborations like those with Nelly Furtado and Debbie Harry.[31] In contrast, The Guardian observed passion and illuminating production in tracks like "But You" and "Hands Up," appreciating Hynes's talent for weaving recurring motifs and guest vocals into a collage of sounds, yet critiqued its "pell-mell" chaos and unfinished quality, with some songs feeling like demos marred by an undernourished vocal delivery and self-indulgent sprawl.[6] Divergences centered on cohesion: while many lauded the album's quick-moving density and idea-rich layering as a strength in exploring systemic oppression and cultural hybridity, others pointed to fragmentation as a flaw, with interludes and abrupt shifts occasionally undermining tighter songcraft despite melodic potency.[70] This balance underscored a prevailing view of Freetown Sound as a bold, if uneven, evolution in Hynes's oeuvre, prioritizing raw emotional and sociopolitical candor over streamlined pop accessibility.[31][6]Achievements and criticisms
Freetown Sound garnered praise for its innovative fusion of personal introspection with 1980s R&B and dance elements, forming a multifaceted exploration of black masculinity, migration, and queerness that resonated amid contemporary social tensions.[41] Reviewers highlighted the album's expansive yet cohesive production, which incorporated nostalgic soul grooves, guest vocals from artists like Nelly Furtado and Debbie Harry, and spoken-word samples from figures such as Ta-Nehisi Coates to foster a sense of communal urgency and intimacy.[31] This approach was seen as a bold, genre-blurring endeavor akin to sampling-heavy classics, effectively weaving Dev Hynes' narrative of racial and sexual identity into a soothing yet searing document.[44] Criticisms centered on the album's 17-track length and heavy use of interludes and skits, which some argued created bloat and disrupted momentum, rendering portions feeling overstuffed and half-formed.[44] In particular, the integration of identity-themed samples was faulted for tenuous linkages—such as juxtaposing police brutality with personal relationships—resulting in scattershot focus and diluted impact, with Hynes' vocals often overshadowed by guests and lacking raw conviction.[71] Production choices, including sparse melodies and garish synth elements, were also critiqued for insufficient punch, contributing to an indulgent slog despite nuanced thematic intentions.[71] While the lush layering and guest contributions underscored empirical production strengths, detractors suggested tighter curation could mitigate dilution, prioritizing universality over fragmented signaling to amplify the album's resonant core.[44][71]Commercial performance
Chart achievements
Freetown Sound debuted at number 67 on the US Billboard 200 chart for the week ending July 16, 2016.[72] It simultaneously entered the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart at number 16. The album spent one week on the Billboard 200.[72] In the United Kingdom, Freetown Sound did not enter the main UK Albums Chart top 75 but peaked at number 4 on the Official Independent Album Breakers Chart in early July 2016, with subsequent re-entries holding a peak of number 3 by late August.[73][74] The album saw limited charting elsewhere, with no reported entries on major Australian ARIA Albums Chart or prominent European national album charts, consistent with its independent release and niche alternative R&B appeal.[75]Sales data and metrics
Freetown Sound achieved modest traditional sales without reaching certification thresholds from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[76] Detailed unit sales data from initial release periods remain limited in public industry reports, reflecting the album's niche positioning within independent R&B and alternative genres rather than broad commercial dominance. Physical formats, including vinyl and CD, contributed minimally, with digital downloads comprising the primary non-streaming revenue stream.[77] Consumption metrics shifted heavily toward streaming post-release, aligning with 2016 industry trends favoring equivalents over pure sales. As of October 2025, the album has amassed over 147 million plays on Spotify alone, translating to roughly 98,000 album-equivalent units under RIAA guidelines (where 1,500 on-demand audio/video streams equal one unit). This streaming volume underscores sustained listener engagement beyond initial sales, though total equivalents across platforms likely remain below major label benchmarks for cult releases. No evidence of significant international sales spikes or reissue boosts has been documented in verifiable trade sources.Legacy
Cultural and musical influence
Freetown Sound's musical influence manifests primarily within alternative R&B and indie scenes, where its eclectic sampling—drawing from 1980s funk, hip-hop spoken-word interludes, and nostalgic synths—encouraged introspective, collage-style production in queer-leaning artists exploring personal and political fragmentation. The album's structure, featuring abrupt shifts between danceable grooves and raw identity interrogations, paralleled and anticipated the fragmented aesthetics in post-2016 indie R&B outputs, though explicit citations from contemporaries like Yves Tumor remain unverified beyond shared thematic overlaps in vulnerability and sonic experimentation.[5][78] Culturally, the record advanced conversations on black diaspora hybridity, particularly for British artists of Caribbean and African descent grappling with exile, Christianity, and masculinity, as Hynes channels his Guyanese heritage through Freetown's symbolic nod to Sierra Leone's founding as a freed-slave settlement. Post-release analyses positioned it as a "clapback" against rigid identity gatekeeping, influencing niche discourse on "not black enough" or "too queer" experiences amid 2016's Black Lives Matter and Orlando shooting contexts, without achieving broader mainstream permeation beyond curated playlists and festival rotations.[7][78][5] Its reach stayed confined to specialized audiences, evidenced by sustained plays on platforms like Spotify's alternative R&B curations and appearances in queer music retrospectives, rather than spawning widespread emulations or chart-dominating successors. This niche endurance underscores a subtle causal ripple in fostering authentic, non-commercial expressions of intersectional marginality, distinct from Hynes' prior works yet foundational to his evolving oeuvre.[34]Retrospective evaluations
In the 2020s, formal retrospective analyses of Freetown Sound have been limited, with the album primarily referenced within broader career overviews of Dev Hynes rather than dedicated reevaluations. A 2018 New York Times profile situates the record as a response to contemporaneous social tensions, including social media-driven identity conflicts, positioning it as an extension of Hynes' interpersonal themes into societal fragmentation.[79] This framing underscores the album's engagement with fractured personal and collective identities, themes that resonate amid ongoing 2020s discourse on digital echo chambers and cultural polarization, though without new empirical data prompting widespread critical revisits. Some independent reflections highlight the album's prescience in anticipating persistent debates over race, queerness, and belonging in hyper-connected environments, as echoed in Hynes' own descriptions of its societal focus.[80] However, niche critiques, including fan discussions, contend that its immersion in mid-2010s identity politics—amid movements like Black Lives Matter—can render portions era-bound, occasionally prioritizing thematic messaging over the record's eclectic sonic palette of R&B, funk, and samples.[81] As of October 2025, no deluxe reissues, expanded editions, or official anniversary campaigns have materialized for Freetown Sound, nine years post-release, reflecting its archival niche within indie and alternative R&B without sustained commercial or revivalist momentum.[2] This stasis contrasts with Hynes' subsequent works, suggesting the album's legacy endures through selective acclaim for its bold conceptual risks rather than broad reevaluation.Credits
Personnel listings
Devonté Hynes served as the primary writer, producer, lead vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist on Freetown Sound, handling instruments including piano, percussion, and Roland synthesizers across the album.[35][82] Additional vocalists- Ashlee Haze (featured vocals on "By Ourselves")[35][82]
- Ava Raiin (background vocals on tracks including "By Ourselves" and "Augustine")[83][82]
- Carly Rae Jepsen (additional vocals on "Better Than Me")[82]
- Nelly Furtado (spoken word snippets)[34][82]
- Percussion: Patrick Wimberly[35]
- Primary engineer: Devonté Hynes (on tracks 1–8 and 10–17)[82]
- Additional vocals engineering: Joey LaHaye[82]
- Additional engineering: Tom Elmhirst[82]
- Mixing: Devonté Hynes, Joey LaHaye, Mikaelin "Blue" Bluespruce[35][82]
- Guy Davie (at Electric Lady Studios)[82]
- Design: Matthew Cooper, Paul J. Street[82]
Production acknowledgments
Recording for Freetown Sound took place across numerous locations, predominantly in New York City, including Devonté Hynes' apartment, Red Bull Studios, CRC Studios in Brooklyn, Profit House, Aaron Maine's apartment, Washington Square Park, St. Mark's Place, the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) upstairs dance studio, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), and Lounge Studios; additional sessions occurred at Orange Lounge in Toronto, Canada.[82] Instrumentation and production equipment encompassed keyboards, synthesizers (including the Roland Juno series), guitar, bass, drums, drum machines, piano, cello, saxophone, electronic wind instrument (EWI), and turntable scratches.[82] Mastering was handled at Elysian Mastering in Los Angeles, California.[82] Publishing rights for the tracks were administered primarily by Domino Publishing Co. Ltd. (PRS), with sample clearances involving Sony/ATV Music Publishing, BMG Rights Management, Universal Music Ltd., and others for elements such as the interpolation in "Thank You" from De La Soul's "Stakes Is High."[82][28] Acknowledgments in the liner notes credit Domino Recording Company for overall production facilitation and distribution, alongside courtesies extended to featured artists like Carly Rae Jepsen via Interscope Records/Universal Music Group.[82][84]Track listing
Standard edition tracks
The standard edition of Freetown Sound, released by Domino Recording Company on June 28, 2016, contains 17 tracks written by Dev Hynes, with a total runtime of 58 minutes and 39 seconds.[43][85] The track listing is consistent across CD, digital download, and vinyl formats, incorporating spoken-word interludes such as "E.V.P.", "Two Week Vacancy", and "Happiness".[84]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "By Ourselves" | 2:12 |
| 2 | "Augustine" | 3:51 |
| 3 | "Chance" | 2:48 |
| 4 | "Best to You" (featuring Empress Of) | 3:45 |
| 5 | "With Him" | 1:25 |
| 6 | "E.V.P." | 1:12 |
| 7 | "Love Ya" | 3:49 |
| 8 | "But You" | 3:00 |
| 9 | "Hands Up" | 2:42 |
| 10 | "Two Week Vacancy" | 1:02 |
| 11 | "Desert Sand" | 1:30 |
| 12 | "No One New" | 2:18 |
| 13 | "Better Than Me" | 2:36 |
| 14 | "Dark & Handsome" (featuring Nelly Furtado, Debbie Harry, and Helado Negro) | 4:02 |
| 15 | "Tangie" | 3:39 |
| 16 | "Happiness" | 1:09 |
| 17 | "No One Else All Year" | 2:51 |