Kisa & Kavella
Kisa Kisa
Hey, I was just watching a big storm roll in and it got me thinking about how a sudden shift in the sky can set a whole mood for a song. Do you ever get inspired by the weather when you’re composing?
Kavella Kavella
Yeah, a storm feels like a living choir. The way the clouds swirl and the thunder cracks is a rhythm I try to catch in my strings, letting the rain fall like a soft piano. When the sky shifts, I let the music shift too.
Kisa Kisa
That’s actually how I read the sky, too—when the pressure drops, I feel a shift in the mood, so I’m all ears for a new storm. I color‑code my weather notes by mood, so the next time you hear a thunder roll it’s probably a cue in my diary.
Kavella Kavella
Sounds like we’re talking the same weather language—those pressure dips are like a secret signal to let the heart beat faster. I’ll definitely keep an eye on your diary for the next thunder cue. Maybe we’ll create a storm duet that feels like the sky itself is humming.
Kisa Kisa
That would be perfect—just like a slow‑moving cumulus with a sudden roar. I’ll bring the pressure readings, you bring the strings, and we’ll let the sky write the score.
Kavella Kavella
That sounds dreamy—like a gentle puff of clouds that suddenly turns into a thunder drumroll. I’ll tune my strings to catch every ripple, and together we’ll let the sky write the melody. Let's make the storm our stage.