Colors is the fourth studio album by American progressive metal band Between the Buried and Me, released on September 18, 2007 through Victory Records. Although separated in 8 tracks, Colors gives the impression of one continuous song, with transitions between each part. The album was remixed and remastered in 2020. In August 2021, the band released a sequel to Colors, titled Colors II.[1]

Two weeks before the release of Colors, the band released a series of videos for the songs. The videos consisted of clips from classic films, and each video was shown for one day before being removed. The videos were designated different colors to coincide with the album's theme, although having no known relation to the lyrics:


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Kerrang named the album in their list "The 21 Best U.S. Metalcore Albums Of All Time."[6] Loudwire named it at fifth in their list "Top 25 Progressive Metal Albums of All Time."[21] ThoughtCo also named Colors in their list "Essential Progressive Metal Albums."[22]

I've used a lot of music apps but the ones I stuck around with, had an option to pick background color, button colors from the album artwork and it always looked very interesting. If the app doesn't have this feature, tell me and I'll post it in requests

This is literally the only thing at the moment that I think Poweramp really is missing. It doesn't even have to be as extravagant as this. A simple change of the button colours and wave seek or progress bar is all that's needed. It already does a good job at giving an accurate background based on the album art. As @Pila19 showed, Retro Player (and Blackplayer I might add) have very good UI colour adaptation based on album art. They usually find the least bright colour to make the background and a bright our otherwise outstanding colour for both the text and, player controls buttons and progress bar. The first two images are examples of the Retro Player UI now playing screen and the third as an example of Black Player's album screen. All have found amicable way to use the album art colours to enhance the look and feel of the UI

I've made a very crude mockup of how it might look. Obviously there would be more variation in the colours for different elements, but I did this in like 30 seconds with the paint bucket tool, and admittedly this album art doesn't have the greatest colour choice. However, the concept is there. I think the background in the light theme would need to be made significantly less saturated than you can get away with in the dark theme.

That would be super cool, I think I remember the legacy Poweramp had an option to set the player screen background to a solid color based on the album art, and you could change the brightness. I use the Luminous Dark skin and I sometimes just go through different songs with different album art pictures and manually change the skin accent color to match that, lol

I do prefer to change the accent color while keeping the background black/dark, but changing both would be very nice. For the background, on the player screen only would be enough, while the accent color could be global. Something like the colored notifications we have since Android 8 I guess? Which sets the notification background and the other elements to solid colors matching the album art.

Through countless growing pains, Between the Buried and Me carved themselves a portrait into the hall of prog gods with Colors, an album metalheads continue to hold up as one of the most important heavy works of the century.

Additionally Jimmy Turrell and Steve Stacey created a customizable album cover for the double red vinyl deluxe edition. It consists of multiple die cut transparencies that fans can combine in layered designs of their own choosing.

Cassettes from Beck.com have been delayed and are expected to be delivered mid-November (but fans that ordered the tape through the site will still receive their complimentary download of the album on October 13th).

The bulk of the algorithm deals with finding the dominant color of an image. A prerequisite to finding dominant colors, however, is calculating a quantifiable difference between two colors. One way to calculate the difference between two colors is to calculate their Euclidean distance in the RGB color space. However, human color perception doesn't match up very well with distance in the RGB color space.

Note that .1 is the tolerance for how different colors must be to be considered separate. Also note that although the input is an array of pixels in raw triplet form ({{1,1,1},{0,0,0}}), I return a Mathematica RGBColor element to better approximate the built-in DominantColors function.

The tolerance values above are as follows: .1 is the minimum difference between "separate" colors; .2 is the minimum difference between numerous dominant colors (A lower value might return black and dark gray, while a higher value ensures more diversity in the dominant colors); .5 is the minimum difference between dominant colors and the background (A higher value will yield higher-contrast color combinations)

The algorithm can be applied very generally. I tweaked the above settings and tolerance values to the point where they work to produce generally correct colors for ~80% of the album covers I tested. A few edge cases occur when DominantColorsNew doesn't find two colors to return for the highlights (i.e. when the album cover is monochrome). My algorithm doesn't address these cases, but it would be trivial to duplicate iTunes' functionality: when the album yields less than two highlights, the title becomes white or black depending on the best contrast with the background. Then the songs become the one highlight color if there is one, or the title color faded into the background a bit.

I asked the same question in a different context and was pointed over to -python-and-k-means-to-find-the-dominant-colors-in-images/ for a learning algorithm (k Means) that rougly does the same thing using random starting points in the image. That way, the algorithm finds dominant colors by itself.

In October 1971, Dolly Parton released her eighth solo album, "Coat of Many Colors." The song, "My Blue Tears," was released as the album's first single in the summer of 1971 and was followed by the release of the album and title track in fall of the same year.

Like their previous albums Good Boy and Human Nature, Anjimile continues to sound like a cross between Woo and Wye Oak, but this time deals much more directly with up-close-and-personal life themes and events.

The diversity and inventiveness from song to song has created a beautiful amalgam that has, through its differences, made a concept album more concise and moving than many other artists attempting to do the same explicitly.

Be consistent with your visual identity. The White Stripes are known for their use of three shades: black, white, and red. Their entire discography carries with it a cohesion that makes their albums easily recognized and reinforces their brand.

Experiment with the ways typeface selection and alignment contribute to your message. Here the album title is elevated to the top and aligned in the center, with a simple and modern sans serif type in all caps. Bold, minimalist, and iconic.

A Blue album is solely a critic must-hear album (15+ critic reviews AND 80+ average critic score) A Purple album is both a critic and user must-hear album (15+ critic reviews AND 80+ average critic score AND 500+ user ratings AND 80+ average user score) A Orange album is solely a user must-hear album (500+ user ratings AND 80+ average user score)

At TheChristianBeat.org, our mission is to point you to music that connects the human heart with Jesus in all seasons of life. We are committed to connecting you with your favorite Christian and Gospel artists like never before with unparalleled coverage of new music, an expansive video gallery, and exclusive interviews, album reviews and special event coverage.

Our standard handling time for shipping albums is typically between 1 to 3 business days. Pre-orders may require additional time to prepare and ship, depending on order volume. Orders that contain pre-ordered items will be shipped as a whole once the latest released items become available.

Music has always been such an important part of my life and because I am an artist, I appreciate the album art that goes hand in hand with the music industry. You can get a lot of inspiration from the colors and design elements of the artwork as well as the format. So here I share album art through color palettes that can inspire tons of ideas for your home and event. Enjoy!

The Dark Side of the Moon album cover is a reference to a scientific discovery that has influenced visual artists for centuries. In the 1660s, English mathematician, astronomer and scientist Sir Isaac Newton began experimenting with light by holding a prism against a window. Through these experiments, he demonstrated that light is responsible for creating color. His further investigations led to the creation of the principles of color theory, which today remains an essential tool for artists and designers alike.

In this lesson, students learn about the color theory, and use the color wheel to analyze musician fashion and album covers. They then draw upon the color wheel as a tool to design their own album covers. 2351a5e196

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