"Born to be the Blues": Let's listen to the blues trumpet that can break the gut

Hans 2022-08-19 11:25:05

Ethan Hawke is no stranger. I have watched everything from the "Love Is..." series to "Boyhood", but I have never liked him very much. His appearance is not the type I like, and his tone is like a mist, which makes people feel uncomfortable.
A book that changed my mind about this Hollywood star. This book is Playing Life by Seymour Bernstein and Andrew Harvey. An interview about classical music, which had nothing to do with Ethan Hawke originally, however, this interview was derived from a documentary "Introduction to Seymour" directed by Ethan Hawke.
Only after reading "Introduction to Seymour" can we have a further understanding of "Playing Life"; only after reading "Introduction to Seymour" can we understand the origin of an old man Mi Shou's praise for Hollywood stars.
Speaking of the director, Ethan Hawke also left the country in "Introduction to Seymour". Of course, he knows how destructive it is to him if he shows his cowardice in a movie. But Ethan Hawke actually told the world to the camera: I don't understand classical music. That honesty and sincerity is more moving than Ethan Hawke pretending to be someone else.
I know a thing or two about the blues and about Chat Baker, that's all, so, before I planned to watch the movie "Born to Be the Blues", I didn't know it was a movie about Chat Baker, so I didn't know about Chart Baker. Te Baker is played by Ethan Hawke. He was lying on the ground in an Italian prison, hallucinating the poisonous spider crawling out of the golden trumpet. I didn't see it was Ethan Hawke; Seeing that it was Ethan Hawke, until he started talking a lot to his lover--looks can hide, voice really can't be deceived, I was a little concerned, except for the trumpet, Chat Baker later sang, Ethan How do you sing San Hawke's voice, which is a little too far from being in place? However, he conquered the audience with his excellent acting, let's not care about the rest.
The movie "Born To Be Blues" did not focus on how a poor boy from rural Oklahoma became a famous blues trumpeter. He became famous and became a family through his own efforts. In one scene, after falling in love with Jane, because of the loss of the opportunity to perform, Chat Baker had to borrow Jane's broken car to return to his hometown. I have probably always opposed my son becoming a blues musician, but this time he has the means to ridicule and ridicule his son, but Chat Baker's counterattack made me almost imagine what he looked like when he was proud of himself. In addition, the film shows how the trough of Chat Baker is trying to get back to the state. Where is the trough? Chat Baker with a set of dentures plays the trumpet in a bar, and Ethan Hawke hints by pressing his cheeks how big a hindrance dentures are to a trumpet player. Rao is like this, the boss didn't plan to give Chat Baker and Jane the next chance, "You guys go home and practice again." "He's Chat Baker." I heard that Jane introduced Chat Baker, old man. Pa and all the other horses in the bar were horrified—you can see how high Chat Baker's peak was when he didn't lose his teeth. Only in this way, watching Chat Baker looking for a former partner and trying to get a performance opportunity, Ethan Hawke asked Chat Baker to interpret this stage of Chat Baker with a prayer, sincerity, and a low-key mood. , is the real Chart Baker trying to make a comeback like this? Anyway, it's heartbreaking to see Chart Baker, who was performed by Ethan Hawke on the basis of Chart Baker's soul. It makes people feel that Chart Baker will be a good match for Jane who pulled him out of the quagmire. However, when Charter Baker returned to Bird Island, New York, the stage that brought him glory, Jane handed over the necklace that Charter Baker couldn't afford an engagement ring and strung with her most precious trumpet mouthpiece. I really don't know what to say about all the efforts that Chat Baker made to get back on stage. But it makes me feel emotional, because Ethan Hawke played Chat Baker to the core!
Now that he knows that drugs destroy himself, why does Chat Baker repeat the same mistakes? A poor boy without a leading edge can jump to the top of the blues trumpet player, how can you explain it other than talent? The problem is, God is always giving you a spoonful of honey and a drop of poison, and that's fate. Listen to Chat Baker's gut-busting blues trumpet.

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