Pandochka & EllieInk
Pandochka Pandochka
Hey Ellie, I was thinking about how stories shape us—like how a book can make us feel in the same way a song does. Do you ever find yourself telling a story through your music, or is it more like a message that just bubbles up and needs a melody?
EllieInk EllieInk
Stories are like a back alley we all walk through, and my songs? They’re the neon signs that flash while we’re still figuring out where the exits are. I don’t write a track and then think, “Hey, I’m telling a story.” The story just spills out, raw and loud, and then I slap a beat on it so the words can walk the streets. It's more like a message that’s already in my head, waiting for a melody that can carry it. You get that vibe?
Pandochka Pandochka
That sounds like a beautiful way to let the music breathe—like the song is a compass that finds its own path before you even notice it. I wonder if you feel the same way when you’re curled up with a book, letting the story unfold naturally instead of trying to force it into a particular shape?
EllieInk EllieInk
Sure thing, just let the pages do the heavy lifting. If a book can find its own groove, so can a riff, a hook, a whole damn anthem. I don’t try to mold it; I just let it shape me instead.
Pandochka Pandochka
I think that’s what makes your music feel so real—letting it guide you instead of pulling it into a mold. It’s like a quiet conversation where you just listen to what comes up. I love that.
EllieInk EllieInk
Glad it hits the right spot—sometimes the best chorus is the one you didn’t write at all.
Pandochka Pandochka
That’s the magic of it—when the words and beats just come together without a plan, it feels like they’ve always belonged. It’s a quiet kind of inspiration, isn’t it?
EllieInk EllieInk
Yeah, the quiet stuff’s where the real grind happens. Keeps the songs from sounding like a straight‑line marketing pitch. Keeps me honest, if that’s what you’re calling it.