Review: Hyetal Modern Worship

Broadcast, the debut album from Bristol's David Corney (a.k.a Hyetal), linked its producer to a specific sound, a template which has stuck with him for better or worse. It was effectively an extension of the ideas that Corney brought together on his excellent 2010 single "Phoenix," an amalgamation of bombastic '80s drums and John Carpenter synths as filtered through shoegazey song structures and a production style indebted to the purple sounds of his town's dubstep community. While this nostalgic sound palette was hardly unique, Corney managed to pull it off with a level of conviction and songwriting prowess that set him apart from the bulk of his retro-inclined peers. Broadcast did, however, seem like it was a little too attached to this core formula—sometimes sounding more like variations on a theme rather than a full-fleged LP. It's pleasing, then, that Hyetal's second album finds him pushing those ideas a bit further whilst remaining rooted to the winning aesthetic of his debut. Read more »












