Cheng Wei Chen Qing recited A Zi's poem "Can I?"

As a reciting enthusiast, I look for materials suitable for reciting in books and online. Reading A Zi's blog is like a gold digger discovering a gold mine. A Zi's poems are full of musicality, and her words are vocal. A peaceful and meaningful article is easier to recite, at least it won't make too many mistakes, just like walking in time. The more passionate the text, the more difficult it is to grasp, and it will sound silly to read it badly. Generally, I don't get involved easily, but I can't help but want to try A Zi's Can I, just like a racer wants to run a few laps when he sees a top car. After I recorded the recitation, it suddenly occurred to me that every article of Ah Zi was accompanied by a recitation video. I am busy reading her blog, looking for standard answers. The web page shows "video failed to pass the review or has been deleted". Fortunately, I noticed that it was recited by drunken rain, and I finally found it online. After listening, I have some opinions besides admiration. The overall mood of "Can" is "heartache", and the drunken rain enters the recitation with a calm tone. If it is a narrative and lyrical article, of course, it should be read like this, but this essay begins to be lyrical from the beginning, and a few more presses are a lyric poem, so I think it must be sensational at the beginning. The word "neng" runs through the whole text. When I first saw this essay, I first thought that these four words must have a great relationship when reading. First of all, "can" does not have much substantive meaning in the text, mainly to make the full text become the second person, paving the way for an affectionate tone. The full text is not telling a story to others, but telling it directly to your lover, so can you read it in a begging tone. Secondly, as the main line of the full text, "neng" is bound to have ups and downs. It can be said that these four words were left to the reciter by the author. The name of the accompaniment I chose was "Injury", which was written by Lin Hai, and I kept all the other readings.