"It's about getting the actual thing to sound like what I've been seeing," she said. As she works on a piece, she strives to fill in the best hues as the musical image evolves into a concrete creation, she told the Times. "From the moment I start something, I can see the finished song, even if it's far-off and foggy," Lorde recently told The New York Times. The New Zealand native's next album, "Melodrama," is expected to be released in June, and she said each song is a creation of her imagination, synesthesia and collaborators. In Lorde's case, sound-to-color synesthesia means that she sees specific colors when certain notes are played. Between 1 percent and 4 percent of people have synesthesia, a condition in which different senses are mixed, according to a 2011 study published in the journal PLOS Biology.
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