© Kolour Sundays |
Coran Maloney likes his photographs laden with lens flare, grainy, desaturated, with a smattering of faux lens scratches and suffused with a pale golden glow. In an advertising agency, an art director might call the style ‘high key’. The uninitiated will notice this look, nod appreciatively at its understated Instagram coolness, and then, as the cogs turn a few more times, think: ‘Hang on, where are the colours?’
Kolour
Sundays, you see, is the name chosen for the infrequent,
effervescent, stone cool and scorchingly hot daytime raves for
grown-ups created by Maloney and his partner-in-crime Vina Charay, a
fellow taste-maker who was previously Bangkok's high
priestess of house parties and is the Thailand face of international
invitation-only hipster conclave French Tuesdays.
An
art director would call this epiphany a ‘smile in the mind’,
that elusive little ‘aha’ moment where something quirkily clever
hits the little sweet spot in your brain, sending neurotransmitters
dancing across synapses, creating a new and permanent pathway in your
brain.
It's
branding manna from heaven, the stuff of the coveted ‘stickiness’
ad men whisper about in reverent tones. As a former marketing student
who worked as brand manager for a multinational forestry company,
Maloney knows this.
“We
even have our own filter,” he says proudly, sprawled on a sofa in
his spacious apartment a stone's throw from Bangkok's posh SwissĂ´tel
Nai Lert Park.
He
sports shorts and a tattered gym shirt, stretched over a tanned,
towering gym rat’s frame. Hanging from the wall is a Kolour Sunday
logo, a simple wordmark in the style beloved of the luxury brands,
surrounded by a kind of postmark and the group’s slogan, credo and
philosophy of life: “This is us … doing what we love.”
© Jason Gagliardi |
“It
was a big weekend,” smiles Maloney. Big weekends are prized
currency in the kingdom – and growing cult – of Kolour Sundays,
and a hot topic of conversation amongst the Kolour Krew, a loose knit
collective of 12 DJs who take turns headlining the parties.
There
are no international superstar DJs at Kolour events, along with no
red carpets, velvet ropes or fawned-over celebrities. “I'm going to
ban photographers from our parties in the future,” he says. “We
had nine or 10 with big paparazzi cameras at the last party and it
looked terrible. It takes people out of the moment and they start
posing and it’s just not what we’re about. I come from a
background of going to parties where you don’t go to be seen, you
go to enjoy the music and to dance. We don't want our party to become
a hangout for high-society snobs.”
© Jason Gagliardi |
None
of this is by accident. Maloney is simply on the money, being
himself, doing what he loves. He tossed in the branding job and his
suit and tie corporate existence a little over a year ago to devote
himself full time to living Kolour.
It
was a ballsy, sink-or-swim decision that has paid off in spades. The
money and accolades are rolling in, he is beating off DJs, promoters
and reporters with a stick, and for the moment at least, he seems to
have captured lighting – or at least magic hour – in a bottle.
© Jason Gagliardi |
The
DJ drops a well-judged tune and the energy amps up considerably.
Slabs of synth surf sunbeams as smiles spread, legs start pumping and
bodies sway. There is an undeniable and infectious feel-good vibe
spreading across the crowd, enveloping all in its warm summery
embrace. A breeze ruffles the ribbons of purple, blue and maroon
festooned across the lower level. Birds, butterflies and bizarre
smiling insects undulate on high wires, turning things trippy. The
smartphones come out and the selfies are snapped, sending the social
media hamster wheel spinning, transmuting woofers into tweeters.
© Jason Gagliardi |
KOLOUR
SUNDAYS was born over two years ago, when Maloney and Charay returned
from holidays to Ibiza and Paris respectively to a crushing
depressions and creeping disenchantment with Bangkok's rudderless and
moribund club scene. The heyday of Sukhumvit Soi 11, when BED
Supperclub and Q Bar were the hot tickets and pushing musical
boundaries had passed, but nothing had really filled the vacuum.
“I
was fed up with the music on offer, it was cheesy commercial stuff,”
Maloney says. “No one was making the most of the four to five
months of beautiful weather Bangkok has. No one wanted to be in the
sun. So we defined what we wanted to create one afternoon, found the
perfect venue in Viva Aviv The River at River City and Kolour Sundays
was born.
© Jason Gagliardi |
One
local writer, Yvonne Liang, describes the first Kolour Sunday thus:
“Imagine drinking and dancing on a boardwalk in broad daylight and
then watching the sun dip into the horizon while a DJ spins the
sickest of beats. One of the most unforgettable moments was being
amongst hundreds of like-minded individuals who were screaming and
cheering in an almost animalistic way as the sun descended. That long
afternoon on the Chao Phraya was unforgettable, and an atmosphere
closer to St Tropez than Bangkok.”
Bangkok
clubbing's elder statesman Sanya Souvanna Phouma, the former creative
director of Bed Supperclub who now runs hotspot Maggie Choo’s,
says: “Right from the beginning there was something in their
marketing that was right. The personalised invites, the
daytime/sunset concept, it was solid. They nailed it. The gap was
there, they spotted it, and people were ready to embrace it. And the
fact that it's not a regular gig makes it more ‘not to be missed’.
Coran managed to brand himself as well as the event and created a
connection with his guests on a very personal level. It’s already a
mature brand that everyone associates with great times.”
© Jason Gagliardi |
Maloney
is not prone to idle boasting or big-uppery, but he is quietly and
determinedly ambitious and very serious about the brand he has built.
At the end of the first year and having finally turned a profit, he
invested the money into getting one of Asia's hottest branding
agencies in to tweak the brand into the fine-tuned and very slick
product it is today.
In the meantime, he has launched a new Wednesday night event called Family at Glow nightclub in Sukhumvit Soi 23 which is packing them in, and he also plans to begin a Kolour Nights series.
“Family has begun with a bang, over 100 people in a small dark club on a Wednesday night is no mean feat. It's a great way to bring a credible musical offering to the mid-week scene which Bangkok was lacking. This was also really just me creating the event I wanted to go to myself, and it's a great way to keep the Kolours Krew honed and keen while the bigger parties go into hibernation.”
Ever
the social media maven, he is even getting buzz for his spoof Family
posters, photoshopped faces of DJs and key scene members plonked into
antique photographs of sailors, aviators and lederhausen-clad
adventurers. It's weirdly clever, and it works.
© Jason Gagliardi |
Maloney
looks worried for a moment, like he has just transgressed, crossed
the line into money-hungry territory. He relaxes back into his genial
giant persona.
“One of my greatest joys is bringing people together. Through Kolour Sundays I've been able to do this on a scale I never thought possible. We are just getting started and I promise you one thing, I am never going to stop clubbing.”
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