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Hal Hartley [1] (born November 3, 1959) is an American film director, screenwriter, producer and composer who became a key figure in the American independent film movement of the 1980s and '90s. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] His films include The Unbelievable Truth (1989), Trust (1990), Simple Men (1992), Amateur (1994) and Henry Fool (1997), [ 4 ] which are ...
[3] [4] A music video was directed by Hal Hartley. The second and final single released from the album was "I Didn't Know I Was Looking for Love", which peaked at number 72 on the UK chart. [5] The song was later covered by Karen Ramirez, re-titled "Looking for Love", and spent 11 weeks on the UK chart, peaking at number 8. [6]
In 1998, while shooting a film as an actress for Hal Hartley in New York, she felt inspired by the city and wrote several songs. Some of them ended up on the record. [9] In 1999, she chose to live there for nine months. [10] However, she insisted in interviews it was not "my New York album".
The Unbelievable Truth is a 1989 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Hal Hartley [2] and starring Adrienne Shelly and Robert Burke.It tells the story of Audry, who dumps her high-school boyfriend and becomes a successful fashion model, but all along is in love with a mysterious man called Josh, released after conviction for manslaughter.
The marketing campaign for Too Legit To Quit was the largest in the history of Capitol Records at the time, including a $1 million of prerelease TV ad campaign, the music video for "2 Legit 2 Quit", that remains one of the most expensive ever made with cameos by James Brown and several sports figures, including the Oakland A's' Jose Canseco and the Detroit Pistons' Isaiah Thomas.
Chuck Hammer; Jan Hammer (born 1948) Oscar Hammerstein II (1885–1960) Hamsalekha (born 1951) Herbie Hancock (born 1940) Frederic Hand (born 1947) KentarÅ Haneda (1949–2007) James Hannigan (born 1971) Ilmari Hannikainen (1892–1955) Glen Hansard (born 1970) Raymond Hanson (1913–1976) Petr Hapka (1944–2014) Edward W. Hardy (born 1992 ...
Huntley continues to impress and now he's gunning for a win on The Voice finale!. The rocking vocalist is the only male performer remaining in the competition and his first performance on Monday's ...
Bob Mummert – drums, percussion, tire iron ("Hammer and Nails") John Propst – piano; Pete Wasner – piano, Hammond B-3 organ; Additional musicians. Glen Duncan – fiddle on "Louisiana Blue" and "Closing Time", viola on "Easier Said than Done" Albert Lee – lead guitar on "Don't Say Goodbye" and "Louisiana Blue"