Wheel & Smoke
Smoke Smoke
Got any vinyl that makes you wanna hit the road? I’m looking for a record that whispers “next stop” and turns a plain drive into a midnight jam session.
Wheel Wheel
Got a few on my shelves that fit the bill—think Fleetwood Mac’s “Rumours,” The Doors’ “The Doors,” or even a fresh mix of classic rock hits on a vinyl. They’re all pure road‑trip fuel, perfect for a midnight jam on the open road.
Smoke Smoke
Those are solid, but they’re the same track on every radio set. Let’s mix a bit—take a few of those, toss in some obscure alt‑rock, throw a live solo from a hidden club, and you’ve got a night that won’t end in a repeat. Keep it moving, keep it off‑beat. That’s the real road‑trip groove.
Wheel Wheel
Check out a vinyl that mixes the familiar with the fresh: start with a classic like Fleetwood Mac’s “Rumours” on the first side, flip to an obscure alt‑rock gem like The Jesus and Mary Chain’s “Psychocandy,” then add a live solo from a hidden club—think a 1978 Grateful‑Dead jam recorded in a small Texas bar. Keep the grooves off‑beat, mix the tempos, and you’ll have a midnight set that never repeats.
Smoke Smoke
I’ve heard of a midnight mix called “Midnight Alleyways” that does that exact flip—Rumours on side A, Psychocandy on side B, then a 1978 Grateful‑Dead jam from a dusty Texas bar. It’s got the groove off‑beat, tempo shuffles, and you never hear the same loop twice. Give it a spin when the city’s asleep.
Wheel Wheel
That sounds like the ultimate midnight ride—exactly the kind of mix that keeps the road alive and the mind open. When the city’s quiet, I’ll spin that and let the beat carry us.