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Baby Driver is one of my favorite all-time movies. I found it to be well-written, well-acted, and well-scored. Like 2014's Guardians of the Galaxy movie, Baby Driver makes good use of its licensed music in terms of story. While I could gush on about how amazing the soundtrack is and how pretty much every scene with a needle drop has the world sync up to the song, I'd have to save that for the movie accurate version of Focus's "Hocus Pocus". Originally, "Easy" was not part of the movie's soundtrack. Director and writer Edgar Wright already had a couple songs in mind he wanted to use, such as the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion's "Bellbottoms" and "Hocus Pocus" by Focus, but "Easy" was not in that setlist. To audition for the titular Baby, actors would pick a song and lip-sync to them. Ansel Elgort, the actor who landed the role, auditioned with the Commodores's 1977 hit "Easy" written by Lionel Richie. If memory serves, Wright loved the performance so much that he incorporated the song into the story. In the actual movie, "Easy" is one of the most important songs beyond the fact that it is a song Baby's mother used to sing. It tells of how the singer is leaving the listener, being unable to continue with their current relationship with someone. Just to make it work, "[the singer] beg, stole, and [they] borrowed". They proceed to describe themselves as easy, which could be interpreted as being an agreeable, amicable person. Despite this, the singer is unhappy with themselves. Like Baby in the movie, the singer really doesn't owe anyone anything and yet still has people expecting, wanting, and demanding something from them. Both the singer and Baby want to be free from the life caused by them being easy. It's something that is seen and shown throughout the film. "Easy" is played twice in the film. The first is in a junkyard, wherein the Commodores's version plays after Baby watches a car get destroyed and the audience is treated to quick cut flashbacks to when Baby was a kid. We don't really get the meaning behind the song's use, but we see it comfort Baby after doing what should be his last job. It's only near the end when we hear "Easy" played once more, though this time performed by Sky Ferreira, who played Baby's mother in the movie. It acts as a bit of irony, since a song called "Easy" describes how not-easy Baby's journey has been. The film's score, composed by Steven Price, actually features brief snippets of an instrumental cover of "Easy". For instance, as Baby watches the car get smashed and compacted into a cube, we hear "Sunset That Ride". Listening carefully, you'd find a brief instrumental cover of "Easy" playing. A bit more can be heard in the track "Keep Driving and Never Stop", although that one has dialogue from the movie playing over the score in the other soundtrack album, Baby Driver Volume 2: The Score For A Score. We actually hear it once more in the latter half of "Run", which transitions to "Easy (Baby Driver Mix)". Having noticing the motifs in the Steven Price's score, I decided to try to mix the bits together and properly edit "Easy (Baby Driver Mix)" such that it's pure song with a definitive ending. I really hope I didn't botch this one. #Easy #SkyFerreira #StevenPrice #BabyDriver #ShatterGlass