"Pop-punk directness meets diary-level detail. A husky voice that doesn’t stay in one lane."
Many first met Choi Eunseo on JTBC’s Girls on Fire. Husky voice, even tone. A look that said she would not stay on a fixed path. She wanted a bigger space. Nights on a quiet campus tuned her ear first. Rain on slick hallways. Reverb slipping through a practice room door left ajar. A shallow shadow under a streetlight. Those fragments filled her notebooks and phone. “Ghost in the Flames” set her direction. Guitars hit rough, tempos run fast. She chooses honesty over drama. Her songs stand where pop-punk drive meets diary detail. Think skatepark spring, tight forward drums, and choruses built to sing. Scenes start close to daily life. A missed late bus, the edge of the heart cold as dawn air. She stands as the subject, not the victim. She keeps the color of the 2000s without getting stuck in retro. She updates that grain with today’s speed and clarity. Now she opens a new chapter with “If I Could Drink Enough.” The first pop-punk full-length is already growing inside the demos.