Bruce Cross
Bruce Cross
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Glenn Gould plays Beethoven: Fugue (Sonata in A-flat, Op.110)
This excerpt is from a 1963 television programme entitled 'The Anatomy of Fugue''.
Sources:
audio: Sony
score: imslp.org. public domain.
Переглядів: 1 990

Відео

Glenn Gould: Beethoven Bagatelles Op.126, No. 1,2,5
Переглядів 1,2 тис.2 роки тому
From a 1967 radio broadcast of music of Beethoven. sources: audio: Music & Arts CD-680 score: imslp.org. public domain.
Glenn Gould: Beethoven Bagatelle Op.126, No.3
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Gould's slow and intense rendition of Beethoven's Bagatelle in E-flat, Op.126, No.3. The 'Emperor' concerto conducted by Ancerl was the main item on the television programme, broadcast on December 9, 1970. sources: audio: Sony score: imslp.org. public domain
Glenn Gould plays Beethoven Bagatelles, Op 126 (1952)
Переглядів 4,2 тис.3 роки тому
Gould's 1952 radio broadcast of the Bagatelles, Op.126, stands in considerable contrast to his studio recording, made 22 years later. audio: CBC PSCD 2013 score: imslp.org. public domain.
Glenn Gould plays Beethoven: Sonata in A, Op.101
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Glenn Gould played this sonata once on a radio broadcast in 1952, and never again. Unusually for Gould, he achieves a Schnabel-level of accuracy in places from 11:14 on, but all is forgiven at 14:20 with a miraculous string of fourths in the right hand. Sources: audio: CBC PSCD 2013 score: imslp.org. public domain.
Glenn Gould plays the Berg Sonata in Stockholm, 1958
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Glenn Gould plays Alban Berg: Sonata, Op.1. The Musical Academy, Stockholm, October 6, 1958. It is not clear from the notes to BIS CD 323/234, but it sounds to me that there was no audience present for the recordings of three sonatas: Beethoven Sonata Op.110, Haydn No.49, and this item, the Berg Sonata. (In the two concertos in this set, the audience is audible.) So I surmise that Gould agreed ...
Glenn Gould: Beethoven Op.110 in Stockholm 1958
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Glenn Gould plays Beethoven: Sonata 31 in A-flat, Op.110. The Musical Academy, Stockholm, October 5, 1958. It is not clear from the notes to BIS CD 323/234, but it sounds to me that there was no audience present for the recordings of three sonatas: Berg Op.1, Haydn No.49, and this Beethoven sonata. (In the two concertos in this set, the audience is audible.) So I surmise that Gould agreed to re...
Glenn Gould: Webern Variations 1954
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Glenn Gould never recorded Webern's Variations for Piano, Op.27 for Columbia Records, but there are five recordings I know of surviving from radio, television, and concerts. This is the earliest of them, from 1954. "In Webern's music I find an approach which eliminates all but what can be felt as absolutely essential. This calls for the greatest economy of means and yet produces some of the ric...
Glenn Gould plays Beethoven's 'Pastoral' Symphony (first movement)
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Glenn Gould plays Beethoven's 'Pastoral' Symphony (first movement)
Glenn Gould plays Haydn in Stockholm
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Glenn Gould plays Haydn in Stockholm
Glenn Gould plays Beethoven: Allegretto in B-flat, WoO39
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Glenn Gould plays Beethoven: Allegretto in B-flat, WoO39
Glenn Gould Live in Stratford: Beethoven 'Ghost' Trio with Oscar Shumsky and Leonard Rose.
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Glenn Gould Live in Stratford: Beethoven 'Ghost' Trio with Oscar Shumsky and Leonard Rose.
Glenn Gould Live in Baltimore: Strauss Burleske
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Glenn Gould Live in Baltimore: Strauss Burleske
Glenn Gould Live in Stratford: Beethoven Cello Sonata #3 / Leonard Rose
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Glenn Gould Live in Stratford: Beethoven Cello Sonata #3 / Leonard Rose
Glenn Gould live in Detroit: Beethoven Concerto #2
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Glenn Gould live in Detroit: Beethoven Concerto #2
Glenn Gould Live in Vancouver: Haydn: Sonata in E-flat Hob.XVI/49
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Glenn Gould Live in Vancouver: Haydn: Sonata in E-flat Hob.XVI/49
Glenn Gould Live in Vancouver: Bach: Goldberg Variations
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Glenn Gould Live in Vancouver: Bach: Goldberg Variations
Glenn Gould live in Cleveland: Schoenberg Concerto
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Glenn Gould live in Cleveland: Schoenberg Concerto
Glenn Gould: 3 Fugues on one Subject: II
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Glenn Gould: 3 Fugues on one Subject: II
Glenn Gould: String Quartet: first recording (1956) by the Montreal String Quartet
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Glenn Gould: String Quartet: first recording (1956) by the Montreal String Quartet

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @markanthonychao2912
    @markanthonychao2912 3 дні тому

    Quite a masterpiece… Genuinely both profoundly insightful and of high intellect Gould criticizing Bach's Ricercare à 3 from Musical Offering: 『…it's still rather disjointed and episodic… still lacking a firm sense of direction… still rather impovisatory in design…』

  • @MM-sd1vr
    @MM-sd1vr 3 дні тому

    Best Partita No.6! Thank you so much for sharing this

  • @aurelienplays88
    @aurelienplays88 6 днів тому

    oops what is that B# doing there at 05:07 !? Crazy our dear perfectionist Glenn didn't catch that. Makes for a nice E augmented chord though !!

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 7 днів тому

    grazie di nuovo

  • @lawrencetaylor4101
    @lawrencetaylor4101 8 днів тому

    Beethoven, Liszt, Gould. We hit the Jackpot. Merci.

  • @hank1519
    @hank1519 12 днів тому

    Such a high level discourse!

  • @bobjones-bt9bh
    @bobjones-bt9bh 14 днів тому

    he burst onto the scene, already a legend

  • @corvanha1
    @corvanha1 18 днів тому

    Oh was he that famous hummer?

  • @maruryo1098
    @maruryo1098 23 дні тому

  • @adamcolbertmusic
    @adamcolbertmusic Місяць тому

    14:05 and meanwhile here we are on the cusp of the year 2025

  • @bobtaylor170
    @bobtaylor170 Місяць тому

    I can't listen. Was this edited to jam his sentences together? I've heard other talks of Gould's, and he was never like this!

  • @Twentythousandlps
    @Twentythousandlps Місяць тому

    There is a splendid broadcast of this by GG, from his January 1957 appearances with Bernstein and the NY Phil, which I hope makes it to youtube.

  • @Twentythousandlps
    @Twentythousandlps Місяць тому

    Amazing fact - all three of the children of Gertrude and Arnold have lived to celebrate their father's 150th anniversary!

  • @mrtchaikovsky
    @mrtchaikovsky Місяць тому

    3:03 nachschlagen (Gould's German is a bit rough here, I assume he meant to say "Nachschläge", plural of "Nachschlag", a type of ornament.) 15:16 rêverie, a French term for daydream, musing, flight of fancy.

  • @mrtchaikovsky
    @mrtchaikovsky Місяць тому

    40:06 Now for instance Lasker in Berlin, this chess man, etc. (Emanuel Lasker, the famous chess champion)

  • @mrtchaikovsky
    @mrtchaikovsky Місяць тому

    45:30 [From Schönberg's lecture "My evolution"] New characters had emerged, new moods and more rapid changes of expression had been created, and new types of beginning, continuing, contrasting, repeating, and ending had come into usage. Forty years have since proved that the psychological basis of all these changes was correct. Music without a constant reference to a tonic was comprehensible, could produce characters and moods, could provoke emotions and was not bare of being gay or humorous. 54:48 [From Schönberg's lecture "Who am I?"] [Besides,] this reminds me of an event which occurred about 50 years ago, in Vienna. Our emperor, Francis Joseph the First, usually honored openings of important industrial or artistic expositions by his presence. On such occasions the chairman of the committees were allowed to present prominent industrialists and artists to the emperor. In this special case, the chairman did it as it was customary with ordinary citizens: "Your Majesty, may I present Mr. so-and-so, a great industrialist." Thereafter, turning to the gentleman, he added: "His Majesty, the emperor." After he had done that several times, the emperor said softly: "By now, I hope, the gentlemen will know who I am!" [audience laughter] May I hope, in another 50 years they will also know who I am.

  • @mrtchaikovsky
    @mrtchaikovsky Місяць тому

    It's odd how Getrude refers to her own husband as "Schönberg".

  • @mrtchaikovsky
    @mrtchaikovsky Місяць тому

    3:51 [From Schönberg's lecture "Who am I?"] I wonder sometimes who I am. When the Committee on Lectures and Drama announced my lecture in the newspapers, someone was afraid the readers might not know who I am. So they informed them as follows: "famous theoretician and controversial musical figure, known for the influence he has brought to bear on modern music." Up to now, I thought I compose for different reasons. 18:15 [From Schönberg's lecture "My evolution"] [This is why] in my Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night) the thematic construction is based on Wagnerian "model and sequence" above a roving harmony on the one hand, and on Brahms' technique of, as I call it, of "developing variation," on the other hand. [...] [True,] at this time I had already become an admirer of Richard Strauss, but not yet of Gustav Mahler, whom I started to understand only much later, at a time when his symphonic style could no more exert its influence on me. But it is still possible that his strongly tonal structure and his more sustained harmony influenced me considerably. There were not many unusual melodic progressions requesting clarification through the harmony. 25:29 [Ibd.] The climax of my first period is definitely reached in the Kammersymphonie, opus 9. [...] I was at this time able to write a theme which I thought not to be related to the main theme, but nevertheless it seemed so logical to me that I didn't cross it out. And, as I said, years later I found the solution in that I saw the relation. [...] And I say, if there is a composer capable of inventing themes on the basis of such a remote relationship, I am not one of them. 36:13 [Ibd.] This first step occurred in the Songs, opus 14, and thereafter in the Fifteen Songs of the Hanging Gardens [op. 15], and in the Three Piano Pieces, opus 11. Most critics of this new style failed to investigate up to which degree the ancient "eternal" laws of musical aesthetic were observed, spurned, or merely adjusted to changed circumstances. Such superficiality brought about these accusations of anarchy and revolution, while it was distinctly evolution, no more exorbitant than that which always has occurred in the history of music. 46:38 [Ibd.] In 1915 I had sketched a symphony, the Scherzo of which accidentally consisted of twelve tones. Only two years later, a further step in this direction occurred. I had planned to build all the main themes of my unfinished oratorio Die Jakobsleiter out of the six tones [of this row]. [...] I called this "working with tones," not yet "twelve-tones." [...] I had at this time not yet discovered all the technical tools which furnish such abundance of variety as is necessary for expansive forms.

  • @arsenesindayigaya
    @arsenesindayigaya Місяць тому

    I can hear his voice 😮😊

  • @digitalfootprint741
    @digitalfootprint741 Місяць тому

    Why did the producer of this documentary not elaborate upon the negative effects the unnecessay psychiatric medication had on life? This can not be ruled out as a negative influence artistically and in terns of health as well.

  • @digitalfootprint741
    @digitalfootprint741 Місяць тому

    There is no mention of how the unnecessary psychiatric medications negatively affected his life.

  • @fmoll2509
    @fmoll2509 Місяць тому

  • @francescomini2410
    @francescomini2410 Місяць тому

    Gould Is the only piano interpreter that gives sense to the music he is playing. Some other do, but for limited well known repertoires. Gould for all, from Gibbons to Webern.

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 Місяць тому

    grazie

  • @mrtchaikovsky
    @mrtchaikovsky Місяць тому

    I suppose he's trying to say "modern" at 5:21. At 11:17 he says "Wandervogel" instead of "wonderful". 25:57 Thereafter I think everywhere it lacks etc. 30:46 the regime, which I'm sure he hated. 39:43 First World War 41:05 ihm nach [lit. "after him" in the sense of following him into death] 46:12 He says "anxiety", but pronounces it incorrectly.

    • @brucecross1164
      @brucecross1164 Місяць тому

      Thank you. This is very helpful and I am incorporating your information into the captions.

    • @mrtchaikovsky
      @mrtchaikovsky Місяць тому

      @@brucecross1164 My thanks goes to you for providing us with the wonderful videos on your channel.

  • @sharky_spike
    @sharky_spike Місяць тому

    WOW...the weber concert stucke in F at 31:00...thats amazing

  • @sharky_spike
    @sharky_spike Місяць тому

    what is the piece in Db hes playing at 6:00??

    • @brucecross1164
      @brucecross1164 Місяць тому

      from 5:22 on, the middle of Haydn Sonata 59 in Eb Hob.XVI/49 II Adagio e cantabile

  • @mrtchaikovsky
    @mrtchaikovsky Місяць тому

    10:04 I can only answer you with the words of his wife, his wife Pauline. I must say it in German, auf Bairisch [in Bavarian dialect], ich kann nicht so gut Bairisch [I don't speak the bavarian dialect very well]. She said: "I woass ja dass mei Richardl a Depp is, aber in da Musi do tobt er si halt aus." [I know that my Richy is a dork/bozo/blockhead/dolt, but in music he lets of steam/runs riot.]

  • @Crystal-ho7so
    @Crystal-ho7so 2 місяці тому

    L❤VE Glenn G😍💓🥰💕🤗💖

  • @jaspernatchez
    @jaspernatchez 2 місяці тому

    Around 8:49 the left hand short note is supposed to be a 32nd. But Glenn thinks "Allegretto vivace" is the same as "Vivace", so he doesn't have time to play it correctly and it decays into a 16th. You'd think he'd catch on and realize his tempo is too fast, but of course, as usual, he's oblivious.

  • @JacquesGlaserI
    @JacquesGlaserI 2 місяці тому

    Я услышал Гленна Гульда впервые 45 лет назад и до сих пор не могу остановиться

  • @Fritz_Maisenbacher
    @Fritz_Maisenbacher 2 місяці тому

    I don't share his musical options, but this is so wonderful living .... !

  • @randall-n5u
    @randall-n5u 3 місяці тому

    this is wonderful

  • @milkenjoyer14
    @milkenjoyer14 3 місяці тому

    24:04 "We should have rehearsed this before". A prophetic statement!

  • @charleswinokoor6023
    @charleswinokoor6023 3 місяці тому

    You don’t have to be a pianist to appreciate Gould both as a musician and lecturer. He was stimulating on both counts. And I notice that no one else has commented that Gould greatly admired Schoenberg for his compositional skill notwithstanding the fact that the piano was not featured.

  • @charleswinokoor6023
    @charleswinokoor6023 3 місяці тому

    You don’t have to be a pianist to appreciate Gould both as a musician and lecturer. He was stimulating on both counts. And I notice that no one else has commented that Gould greatly admired Schoenberg for his compositional skill notwithstanding the fact that the piano was not featured.

  • @sofiakhalkhodjaeva6521
    @sofiakhalkhodjaeva6521 3 місяці тому

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 3 місяці тому

    Canada is proud to have Gould as a wonderful musician

  • @PortisFarzenberg
    @PortisFarzenberg 3 місяці тому

    Hi Bruce, not sure if you still look at these comments or whatever but love this archive so so much, so grateful to you. Would you know anything about Gould's private home tapes and recordings? Or where they are? Anything? lol Anyways lots of love, thanks so much. Also - are the dubbed in better versions of the music selections the same recordings as Gould's original selections, just better quality sound? Very interested to know what recordings he enjoyed listening to.

    • @brucecross1164
      @brucecross1164 3 місяці тому

      I'm so glad you are enjoying the channel. I didn't change anything - just put in better sounding sources. I know he admired Fleisher, but I don't know if the others were chosen because they were favoured by him, or whether it was convenient to find them in the CBC library. Gould's possessions went to the National Library of Canada where they remain today.

  • @squishyrrr
    @squishyrrr 3 місяці тому

    bruce your channel is such a gem i hope it exists forever on youtube kind greetings and love from vienna

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 3 місяці тому

    Very very interesting. Thanks

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 3 місяці тому

    Truly a great video. Thank you

  • @robinthomsoncomposer
    @robinthomsoncomposer 3 місяці тому

    Amazing control of voices like there is a piano duo and sometimes trio playing

  • @Sitahsongue
    @Sitahsongue 3 місяці тому

    O, but what Fun he was having…

  • @foolim1
    @foolim1 4 місяці тому

    This helps me sleep better

  • @omegads3862
    @omegads3862 4 місяці тому

    He plays everything like Bach.

  • @carolineseguin-ro5vt
    @carolineseguin-ro5vt 4 місяці тому

    I love GG. But. He is butchering Mozart here. Why do that?

    • @brucecross1164
      @brucecross1164 4 місяці тому

      15:46 is as close as we get to an explanation from Gould.

    • @carolineseguin-ro5vt
      @carolineseguin-ro5vt 4 місяці тому

      @@brucecross1164 Yes, I know he doesn't like Mozart. But then why play him? He is not proving anything since he is playing Mozart so badly. They only thing is he proving is that he doesn't understand Mozart? Just really weird coming from such an amazing Bach pianist!

  • @vandeponseele1
    @vandeponseele1 4 місяці тому

    🙏🙏🙏

  • @hugoclarke3284
    @hugoclarke3284 4 місяці тому

    When they opened this up with an advert, for some reason I still got mad at UA-cam

  • @marcraider
    @marcraider 4 місяці тому

    A lovely tribute to Beethoven fifth symphony