Berkeley residents may be able to pick up hi-fi vinyl, and high-potency OG Kush in one stop this year.

The legendary Berkeley record store Amoeba Records is close to securing a new lease on life, as sales of physically recorded music continue to decline.

Amoeba is one of three finalists for the city’s fifth medical marijuana dispensary license. Thursday evening, the Berkeley Medical Cannabis Commission selected Amoeba to forward to the Berkeley City Council for final selection.

As sales of physical records continue to slide, vending marijuana would underwrite the cultural institution and city landmark, its owners say. Amoeba would add a dispensary to its current jazz room, and promises massive marijuana synergies at the music mecca.

“We need supplemental income,” Amoeba co-founder David Prinz told the East Bay Express. “That’s the real truth. This helps keep us open and enables us to do some amazing shit.”

Amoeba will find out if they won the permit by the end of March.

“I f*cking love it,” said Bay Area music industry expert Brian Zisk. “Music and weed go together like — music and weed.”

“People are already getting stoned and ending up at Amoeba,” Zisk said. “They’re going to spend four times as much.”

Sales of legal cannabis totaled over $5.45 billion in 2015 in the U.S. Some Bay Area dispensaries report gross revenues in the range of $20 million per year.