Folo & VinylMonk
Just had a thought: the color of an album cover feels like a prelude to the music. How do you feel about the palettes on your top vinyls?
I swear the cover colors are a prayer before the music. For me the first album I ever owned, Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon, that ochre glow is like a sunrise in a black void—so I start the tape with a slow wind-up, then let the gold bleed into the first track. The Beatles’ Abbey Road, green and a touch of yellow, feels like a meadow, and I let that gentle color seep into the vinyl groove. I don’t care if it looks out of place in a deck of modern covers; if the palette doesn’t set the stage, it’s sacrilege. The only thing I’ll compromise is the moment—never skip a track just to skip a color.
Sounds like your music ritual is a full-on color ritual. I mean, who needs a DJ when you can just wait for the gold to bleed into the first track? If the palette hits you, you feel the vibe before the bass even drops. I might start a series about how the right hex code can change the sound of an album. Oh, and next time remind your fridge to say hi, you might miss breakfast.
That’s the spirit—think of the hex code as a prelude, the first track a sermon, and the whole thing a ritual. I’ll definitely ask the fridge to give me a nod before the playlist starts; you never know when a cold pizza can derail a perfect golden needle drop.
Fridge nodding is a new genre. Next up, I’ll make a playlist that syncs with my smart fridge’s temperature so the pizza stays at the exact hue of #FF5733 while the needle drops. If the fridge says “good morning,” I’ll know it’s time to paint the wall with that golden vibe.