Ellie Grace shared with us her third single titled “Quarter Past Three”, this Electro-Pop song is one of the most beautiful songs that we have discovered on Cheers To The Vikings. Grace’s vocal performance is unique and professional, her voice is wonderful and very powerful. The lyrics are catchy and very easy to follow. We have enjoyed the simple melodies and tones of this record, it gives you a wonderful atmosphere, and harmonies well with Ellie’s catchy vocals.
WHAT THE ARTIST SAYS ABOUT THIS SONG:
“Quarter Past Three is a lively, dancy electro-pop song that humorously addresses the thoughts and feelings going through the singer’s mind whilst she’s drunk in the back of a cab on the way home from a night out. This track is both relatable and funny, with quips such as ‘Why won’t my driver just stop talking?’. Ellie usually writes songs about her deep feelings and turbulent relationships, but this track is totally introspective and self aware. Regret, confusion and the inevitability that it’s all going to happen again sit on top of strong beats and catchy synth lines.”
ABOUT THE ARTIST:
Ellie Grace: The red-haired bold and unapologetic London based singer-songwriter, who tells raw stories through a fresh blend of indie rock, folk and electro-pop. This Aries moon-gazer has the ability to light up any room with her excitable energy and keeps eyes fixated on her every move.
Ellie has been obsessed with songwriting since the age of nine, starting off as a young poet playing the acoustic guitar. After writing hundreds of songs about her personal life, and achieving an Honours degree in Songwriting, she has developed a very honest and raw writing style that over time has also been influenced by rock, pop and folk artists, such as Alanis Morissette and Taylor Swift. Nowadays Ellie’s sound is similar to that of FLETCHER, Becky Hill and Lennon Stella.
The red-haired hopeless romantic has always had a love for words and a huge imagination. Her routes as a writer lay in folk music, after a life of observing love and life with a cynical eye. Over time she has come to realise that love stories aren’t always sweet and sad tales aren’t always poetic, and so her new music is driven by female power, a brutal honesty, and loss of any fear of judgement. Rock and electro-pop fuse together to tell a story of a London girl who will no longer be censored or silenced.