GLENN HERBERT GOULD (September 25, 1932 - October 4, 1982) was a Canadian pianist who became one of the best-known and most celebrated classical pianists of the 20th century. He was particularly renowned as an interpreter of the keyboard music of Johann Sebastian Bach. His playing was distinguished by remarkable technical proficiency and capacity to articulate the polyphonic texture of Bach’s music. Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
Glenn Gould died in 1982, and hundreds of people discover him every year (of how many pianists can that be said?). He made 80 records and did radio and tv. We are blessed. Also blessed that he loved Bach.
I remember my parents hearing Gould play with the Detroit Symphony about that time and raving about him. My father was a substitute flutist with the DSO then and a friend of Tipton.
Glenn Gould was a unique talent and an indisputable genius of the piano, idiosyncrasies notwithstanding. You have to love this guy. The singing, the conducting, and all of it, that's just Glenn. Would his recordings be better without the singing? I don't know. Maybe the singing helped make his playing sing, maybe it helped him concentrate. Imagine it's you humming along to the music as you listen. I've never understood this shallow criticism of Gould. If your concentration and listening skill is up to the task of understanding the complex nature of Bach's music, certainly you would be able to filter out his occasion vocalizing, which if you do will reveal the incredible playing that is there. He is like no one else. He brings to each piece such a thorough and profound understanding on a theoretical and stylistic level that is never scholarly or pedantic sounding. Everything is clear and precise but never mechanical. We are so fortunate to have an audible record of this one of a kind artist.
About the singing: he did it his entire life as films showing him practicing at home when he was still a young man convincingly demonstrate, his mother apparently taught him to do so in his first early years. Whether it helped him to play better is anyone's guess and an irresolvable question at this point, so why worry about it? Another rather distignuished musician who sang as well during his performances was Arturo Toscanini so it can hardly be labelled a defect.
Dearest hnkahl, Your writing is very beautiful and right in every respect. This modern world in which we, or many of us, is living now in 2020 and that in Glenn's time - is / was that kind of a place which doesn't allow exceptions. It likes and is somehow based to standards; everything has to be the same like the food & quality in McDonalds. If someone puts everything for that which is his / hers passion, not profession, so that is too much for most of people. And most of people don't even recognize quality; which is good, which is bad. They just follow different kind of guides or 'advices' from so called 'specialists' who tends to have some sort of authority over different things. Like trendsetters. I could say that it is very important to be able to make a difference between theatre and something which is Original. There are many tennis-players who play theatre with their sounds, and there are many pianists who make theatre with their gestures and mimes - like french Helene Grimaud. We all have different taste but those mimes Helene makes suits better for porn-movies and has nothing to do with playing the piano or interpreting music. From Finland with Love, Pertti Rasilainen.
@@dthomases1 Daniel, actually it wasn't so. But there is connection to Glenn's mother: she asked Glenn why he doesn't sing, Glenn started - and could not stop 👍
In 1921, he escaped from Russia with, among others, his friend and colleague, cellist Gregor Piatigorsky, with whom he had played in the Bolshoi Theater. Mischakoff emigrated to the United States later that year, becoming a naturalized citizen in 1927. Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
MISCHA MISCHAKOFF (born in Proskurov, Ukraine, on April 16, 1895,[1] as Mischa Fischberg, died February 1981[1] in Petoskey, MI) was an outstanding violinist and concertmaster for 70 years, from the age of ten until the age of eighty. Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
ALBERT TIPTON (1917-1997) was an American flutist, pianist and conductor. In 1966, Time placed Albert Tipton amongst the "30 first-rate flutists" in the United States and Europe. He studied with William Kincaid at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. He served as principal flutist with the National Symphony Orchestra from 1937 to 1939 and toured with Leopold Stokowski as a soloist with the All American Youth Orchestra in 1939. Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
I love the episode at 4:44-6:03 with all its ingenious sequential repetitions building to a return of the opening theme. This is heavenly writing that makes one feel as if suspended in space and it is of course beautifully played. Mischakoff sounds a bit heavy here but I think it is the fault of the mic placement, which is too close for my taste and gives it more of a studio feel rather than the more spacious sound of a concert hall. That being said, what a great find. As a longtime fan of Gould, the DSO, Paray, and Mischakoff, I say thanks for posting this.
My father,Leon Rudin, who was a violinist with the NY Philharmonic worked with Mishakoff for four summers, in the 1950s at Chautauqua NY. My father was assistant concertmaster of the orchestra.
nidurnevets Mr. Rudin, did your father ever play in the Philadelphia Orchestra? I have a feeling that I met him several times, through one of his cousins and a dear friend, Neil. The Philadelphia Orchestra came to Detroit frequently during those years. I remember talking with Mr. Rudin about Hindemith, whom he met several times when the composer was conducting one of his works. I don't mean to intrude, but I had to ask... sanjosemike
Sanjosemike, As far as I know, he didn't ever play with them. He was hired for the Philharmonic in 1946, and retired in 1979. He was also a pianist, who subbed for the orchestra pianist, from time to time. He did a lot of accompanying of other members of the orchestra, including Stanley Drucker. I know that he admired Hindemith's music, and once performed a very difficult violin concerto by Hindemtih, at, I believe, Town Hall, in NY back in the 1950s. It don't know the name of the work. Was there a Neil Rudin in the Philidelphia? I'm sure there are a lot of relatives I don't know of on his side of the family, and it would be so interesting if he had a cousin named Neil Rudin, who was also a violinist. Thanks for contacting me. Steve Rudin
So true and well put,...It’s in a way really simple..Gould magnificent musical and mathematic brain just couldn’t resist the overwhelming and massive impression the music filled his genius modus expressionismus . Fats Waller did the same and in that sense they are totally equal. It’s just such a wonderful and personal dedication to the love of music and mastering the instrument which creates it !
He also led the Mischakoff String Quartet in the various cities where he lived and taught at the Juilliard School in New York between 1940 and 1952. One of his notable pupils was Canadian violinist Albert Pratz. Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
He led the string sections of the St. Petersburg Conservatory Orchestra, St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Bolshoi Theater, Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, New York Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, NBC Symphony Orchestra, Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and, in retirement, the Baltimore Orchestra and Scandinavian Symphony Orchestra of Detroit - William Savola (Conductor) in Southfield, Michigan. Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing.
Il n'y a pas à dire. C'est génial. Dommage que l' interprète n'a pas pu poursuivre plus longtemps sa carrière musicale. Quelles merveilles musicales aurait-il encore pu et su produire!
In addition to orchestral playing, Albert Tipton played in and led the Tipton Chamber Orchestra and the Tipton Trio. He concertized regularly with his wife, pianist, Mary Norris. Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
PAUL PARAY Paray (born Le Tréport, 24 May 1886 - died Monte Carlo, 10 October 1979) was a French conductor, organist and composer. He is best remembered in the United States for being the resident conductor of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra for more than a decade.[1] He married Yolande Falck on 25 August 1944.
He became second flutist with the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1940 and left that position in 1946 to become the principal flutist of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra (1946-1956). He was in Detroit from 1956-1968, where he played principal flute in the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. In 1968 he accepted a position at Florida State University as Professor of Flute. He later moved to Rice University in Houston, Texas serving as Professor of Flute from 1975 to 1990. Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing,
Nice recording. Better equilibrium among the three soloists than in other versions of the BWV1050 by Gould, where the piano dominates in excess. The flavor of this recording is closer to the baroque original writing by Bach. Thanks for uploading.
At the conclusion of the Sibelius 2nd Symphony and in recognition of their professional collaboration, Mischa Mischakoff and his wife Hortense honored Conductor Savola by presenting to him a baton once used by Arturo Toscanini. The baton was last held in the hand of Toscanini. Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
I have always felt the the timbre of the harpsichord had quite a jarring effect on the listner, particularly during the louder passages where any trace of melody can be reduced to a jangeling percussive mess. This is the first time I've heard this piece played on piano and it's infinitely more welcome in my ears than any harpsichord version.
Some of us are forced to regard the minor humming as more important than the musicality of one of the world's greatest musicians -- those without musical knowledge ... or taste. You are your own worst enemy, and I cannot think of a thing to say, except HAHAHA. The next time you wander a rose garden, beware the pebbles in the path. What a maroon!
Very fine. One stylistic thing that bothers me-- there was a time when people realized that Bach's dotted rhythms didn't have to be exactly 3:1. This was taken as an injunction to overdot, which these guys all do in the last movement. But another solution is to make the 16th note more of a triplet, so it would mesh with what comes underneath. You can still emphasize each entry without making an artificial hiccup. Oh, well. That was 60 years ago, and tastes change.
A reply 5 years later.... He did play it for a TV program on something called a Harpsi-piano. ("A neurotic piano that thinks it's a harpsicord") If you are still interested, let me know and I can find it and post a link here.
Even the great Glenn hits one of the only (THE only?) wrong notes of his life in public at 9:40, and he is so pissed at himself that he speeds up to a bat out of hell speed after 10:00. haha
yes! i was shocked at the one note "clinker" there too! lol... i had to "rewind" a few times to check... but it's live music, and he just continued on playing brilliantly without dropping a beat... gould is my hero!
Yes, this is pretty well known as one of the only mistakes he made in public. You can tell he's pissed at himself--he speeds way up right after that mis-hit.
It's true that with the piano we can listen more easy the music writed for cymbal.But J.S.Bach not belived on the piano. I prefer to listen to play the cymbal because more near to the time of J.S.Bach and how listen the music those people.
They had exactly one chance to let this sound like music and they missed it completely. It was never a good idea to try to stand your ground when accompanying Gould 😂.
I guess if one's auditory faculties are impaired, the caterwauling is not egregious. --------------------------------------------------- Ich denke, wenn man die auditiven Fähigkeiten beeinträchtigt sind, die Katzenmusik nicht ungeheuerlich.
Gould ruined most of his recordings with his abominable habit of humming (out of tune) while he played. Bach does not need Mr. Gould's "embellishments". I have Gould CDs gathering dust because I can't stand to listen to Gould's maniacal humming.
For some of us familiar with the music, his humming adds a dimension of human presence to accompany his phenomenal musical gifts; so, so much more welcome than the goofs and losers in an audience who save a month's worth of hacking and coughing just for an evening at the symphony. Musical genius such as Gould only happens seldom in a century, if more than once.
GLENN HERBERT GOULD (September 25, 1932 - October 4, 1982) was a Canadian pianist who became one of the best-known and most celebrated classical pianists of the 20th century. He was particularly renowned as an interpreter of the keyboard music of Johann Sebastian Bach. His playing was distinguished by remarkable technical proficiency and capacity to articulate the polyphonic texture of Bach’s music.
Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
🎼🎹🎶🎵👏👏👏🌹
Glenn Gould died in 1982, and hundreds of people discover him every year (of how many pianists can that be said?). He made 80 records and did radio and tv. We are blessed. Also blessed that he loved Bach.
How wonderful to hear my teacher, Mischakoff performing with Glen Gould. Thanks for putting this radio program up on UA-cam.
wow!!!!! How wonderful for you!!!
I remember my parents hearing Gould play with the Detroit Symphony about that time and raving about him. My father was a substitute flutist with the DSO then and a friend of Tipton.
WOW
A super recording - so clear and with such expression - a joy to listen to over and again
Glenn Gould was a unique talent and an indisputable genius of the piano, idiosyncrasies notwithstanding. You have to love this guy. The singing, the conducting, and all of it, that's just Glenn. Would his recordings be better without the singing? I don't know. Maybe the singing helped make his playing sing, maybe it helped him concentrate. Imagine it's you humming along to the music as you listen. I've never understood this shallow criticism of Gould. If your concentration and listening skill is up to the task of understanding the complex nature of Bach's music, certainly you would be able to filter out his occasion vocalizing, which if you do will reveal the incredible playing that is there. He is like no one else. He brings to each piece such a thorough and profound understanding on a theoretical and stylistic level that is never scholarly or pedantic sounding. Everything is clear and precise but never mechanical. We are so fortunate to have an audible record of this one of a kind artist.
About the singing: he did it his entire life as films showing him practicing at home when he was still a young man convincingly demonstrate, his mother apparently taught him to do so in his first early years. Whether it helped him to play better is anyone's guess and an irresolvable question at this point, so why worry about it? Another rather distignuished musician who sang as well during his performances was Arturo Toscanini so it can hardly be labelled a defect.
One of best comments about Gould ever and I've read a lot. Well put
Full of life, electric life, wonderful life, always.
Dearest hnkahl, Your writing is very beautiful and right in every respect. This modern world in which we, or many of us, is living now in 2020 and that in Glenn's time - is / was that kind of a place which doesn't allow exceptions. It likes and is somehow based to standards; everything has to be the same like the food & quality in McDonalds. If someone puts everything for that which is his / hers passion, not profession, so that is too much for most of people. And most of people don't even recognize quality; which is good, which is bad. They just follow different kind of guides or 'advices' from so called 'specialists' who tends to have some sort of authority over different things. Like trendsetters.
I could say that it is very important to be able to make a difference between theatre and something which is Original. There are many tennis-players who play theatre with their sounds, and there are many pianists who make theatre with their gestures and mimes - like french Helene Grimaud. We all have different taste but those mimes Helene makes suits better for porn-movies and has nothing to do with playing the piano or interpreting music.
From Finland with Love, Pertti Rasilainen.
@@dthomases1
Daniel, actually it wasn't so. But there is connection to Glenn's mother: she asked Glenn why he doesn't sing, Glenn started - and could not stop 👍
ne plus ultra. Grazie infinite di nuovo.
In 1921, he escaped from Russia with, among others, his friend and colleague, cellist Gregor Piatigorsky, with whom he had played in the Bolshoi Theater. Mischakoff emigrated to the United States later that year, becoming a naturalized citizen in 1927.
Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
MISCHA MISCHAKOFF (born in Proskurov, Ukraine, on April 16, 1895,[1] as Mischa Fischberg, died February 1981[1] in Petoskey, MI) was an outstanding violinist and concertmaster for 70 years, from the age of ten until the age of eighty.
Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
An historical document!! thanks for posting!!!
ALBERT TIPTON (1917-1997) was an American flutist, pianist and conductor. In 1966, Time placed Albert Tipton amongst the "30 first-rate flutists" in the United States and Europe. He studied with William Kincaid at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. He served as principal flutist with the National Symphony Orchestra from 1937 to 1939 and toured with Leopold Stokowski as a soloist with the All American Youth Orchestra in 1939.
Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
Amazing! Thank you for sharing! I love Bach, as well as such beautiful performances as that you have given us...
cannot stop listening to this.
I love the episode at 4:44-6:03 with all its ingenious sequential repetitions building to a return of the opening theme. This is heavenly writing that makes one feel as if suspended in space and it is of course beautifully played. Mischakoff sounds a bit heavy here but I think it is the fault of the mic placement, which is too close for my taste and gives it more of a studio feel rather than the more spacious sound of a concert hall. That being said, what a great find. As a longtime fan of Gould, the DSO, Paray, and Mischakoff, I say thanks for posting this.
Favorite part...
really unbelievable,incredible,to cry of joy...
I am addicted to this performance.
Gould playing with the Detroit Symphony (1960) -it's a pleasure to hear my mentor Mischa Mishakoff in this
My father,Leon Rudin, who was a violinist with the NY Philharmonic worked with Mishakoff for four summers, in the 1950s at Chautauqua NY. My father was assistant concertmaster of the orchestra.
nidurnevets Mr. Rudin, did your father ever play in the Philadelphia Orchestra? I have a feeling that I met him several times, through one of his cousins and a dear friend, Neil. The Philadelphia Orchestra came to Detroit frequently during those years. I remember talking with Mr. Rudin about Hindemith, whom he met several times when the composer was conducting one of his works. I don't mean to intrude, but I had to ask...
sanjosemike
Sanjosemike, As far as I know, he didn't ever play with them. He was hired for the Philharmonic in 1946, and retired in 1979. He was also a pianist, who subbed for the orchestra pianist, from time to time. He did a lot of accompanying of other members of the orchestra, including Stanley Drucker. I know that he admired Hindemith's music, and once performed a very difficult violin concerto by Hindemtih, at, I believe, Town Hall, in NY back in the 1950s. It don't know the name of the work. Was there a Neil Rudin in the Philidelphia? I'm sure there are a lot of relatives I don't know of on his side of the family, and it would be so interesting if he had a cousin named Neil Rudin, who was also a violinist. Thanks for contacting me. Steve Rudin
Grandioso. E anche una tale registrazione rara.
Grazie mille, "Gutmensch".
grazie di nuovo. formidabile
So true and well put,...It’s in a way really simple..Gould magnificent musical and mathematic brain just couldn’t resist the overwhelming and massive impression the music filled his genius modus expressionismus .
Fats Waller did the same and in that sense they are totally equal.
It’s just such a wonderful and personal dedication to the love of music and mastering the instrument which creates it !
Thank you for posting an historical performance !
Absolutely gorgeous - on every level (amazingly good sound quality). Thanks for posting!
He also led the Mischakoff String Quartet in the various cities where he lived and taught at the Juilliard School in New York between 1940 and 1952. One of his notable pupils was Canadian violinist Albert Pratz.
Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
He's the only one I've heard that makes the keyboard solo sound good on piano.
Glenn Gould is as old as my father. If he is still alive he will be 84 years old.
He led the string sections of the St. Petersburg Conservatory Orchestra, St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Bolshoi Theater, Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, New York Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, NBC Symphony Orchestra, Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and, in retirement, the Baltimore Orchestra and Scandinavian Symphony Orchestra of Detroit - William Savola (Conductor) in Southfield, Michigan.
Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing.
Grazie ancora
Спасибо огромное и низкий поклон из России! Гленн Гульд всегда в моем сердце!
Позвольте присоединиться к вам. Проживаю в Республике Казахстан 🇰🇿
Il n'y a pas à dire. C'est génial. Dommage que l' interprète n'a pas pu poursuivre plus longtemps sa carrière musicale. Quelles merveilles musicales aurait-il encore pu et su produire!
Grazie di nuovo
Thank you so much for sharing this!
grazie infinite
In addition to orchestral playing, Albert Tipton played in and led the Tipton Chamber Orchestra and the Tipton Trio. He concertized regularly with his wife, pianist, Mary Norris.
Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
grazie di nuovo
perfection!!!!!! thank you for posting
GRAZIE!!!!!!!!!
Grazie di cuore
ill be performing this at the end of may :)
I SLAYED yay
Thank you verty much. I didn't even know this recording existed. I admire Paul Paray very much as well.
grazie
Bellissima interpretazione.
Timeless performance.
grazie ancora
prego
Gould humming during the cadenza 🥰🥰🥰😭😭😭
PAUL PARAY Paray (born Le Tréport, 24 May 1886 - died Monte Carlo, 10 October 1979) was a French conductor, organist and composer. He is best remembered in the United States for being the resident conductor of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra for more than a decade.[1] He married Yolande Falck on 25 August 1944.
8:23 start "grande cadenza"❤️
Thank you!
meraviglioso!
He became second flutist with the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1940 and left that position in 1946 to become the principal flutist of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra (1946-1956). He was in Detroit from 1956-1968, where he played principal flute in the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. In 1968 he accepted a position at Florida State University as Professor of Flute. He later moved to Rice University in Houston, Texas serving as Professor of Flute from 1975 to 1990.
Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing,
Réponse à Pierre Clouthier
When the wise man points to the moon, the fool looks at the finger.
Great expression, Jacques! Is it a common French adage?
13:52 Phrase is so beautiful I could cry.
Nice recording. Better equilibrium among the three soloists than in other versions of the BWV1050 by Gould, where the piano dominates in excess. The flavor of this recording is closer to the baroque original writing by Bach. Thanks for uploading.
At the conclusion of the Sibelius 2nd Symphony and in recognition of their professional collaboration, Mischa Mischakoff and his wife Hortense honored Conductor Savola by presenting to him a baton once used by Arturo Toscanini. The baton was last held in the hand of Toscanini.
Molto Bello!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
@solonka123
the conductor in the photo is Paray.
BEST SOLO OF THE WHOLE UNIVERSE!
you are correct!!!!!
check out Dinu Lipatti's candenza in Mozart's concerto 21... if you like this sort of thing ;)
Indeed. Solo is amazing
Trank you for Sharing
I have always felt the the timbre of the harpsichord had quite a jarring effect on the listner, particularly during the louder passages where any trace of melody can be reduced to a jangeling percussive mess. This is the first time I've heard this piece played on piano and it's infinitely more welcome in my ears than any harpsichord version.
なんて素晴らしい演奏なんだ!
1st 1:37 2nd 11:40 3rd 17:29
Some of us are forced to regard the minor humming as more important than the musicality of one of the world's greatest musicians -- those without musical knowledge ... or taste.
You are your own worst enemy, and I cannot think of a thing to say, except HAHAHA.
The next time you wander a rose garden, beware the pebbles in the path.
What a maroon!
Oh if only there was video.
Did you catch the CBC footage of 60's chamber version of the piece? It was from the Glenn Gould On Bach program.
Спасибо большое! С любовью из России! 💖
The introduction begins at 00:00.
A rare Gould error caught on tape at 9:40! The D# and E dissonance.
Very fine. One stylistic thing that bothers me-- there was a time when people realized that Bach's dotted rhythms didn't have to be exactly 3:1. This was taken as an injunction to overdot, which these guys all do in the last movement. But another solution is to make the 16th note more of a triplet, so it would mesh with what comes underneath. You can still emphasize each entry without making an artificial hiccup. Oh, well. That was 60 years ago, and tastes change.
I can't believe Gould never played this concerto on the harpsichord! What I would give to hear it...
A reply 5 years later.... He did play it for a TV program on something called a Harpsi-piano. ("A neurotic piano that thinks it's a harpsicord") If you are still interested, let me know and I can find it and post a link here.
ua-cam.com/video/gvs4v_aswfk/v-deo.html
“Is it a harpsichord or a piano performance?”
“Yes”
Where did you get this recording from? Thanks for the upload!
@goodmanmusica thank you so much for posting this. i listen to it every week. do you happen to know which radio station this was a recording for? cbc?
I do not know
Give it to someone who doesn't go so nutso about this minor issue.
no! Harpsichord is another world. But orchestra very beautiful, delicate
💓💓💓
10:59 is where the alpha melody starts
The pianist is Gould.
The chair is low.
The music stands cost $45 each.
Can you say when? I didn't notice any humming but then I don't know what to listen for.
Spoke too soon! I believe we can hear Gould's trademark caterwauling.
Even the great Glenn hits one of the only (THE only?) wrong notes of his life in public at 9:40, and he is so pissed at himself that he speeds up to a bat out of hell speed after 10:00. haha
Unexpected notes at 10:04?
♥️2138♥️GG
Is this a cadenza by Bach? By Gould? By.......who?
jazztemple2 Bach
Bach, yes, but Gould put his own music in it. All cadenze are an opportunity for the soloist to improvise.
ahhhhhhhhhhh
This young pianist :)) now, Gould is dead
I believe they're all dead now.
@@lindawinkelman587 And yet they still all live, including the composer.
9:40 did he make a mistake ?
yes! i was shocked at the one note "clinker" there too! lol... i had to "rewind" a few times to check... but it's live music, and he just continued on playing brilliantly without dropping a beat... gould is my hero!
Yes, this is pretty well known as one of the only mistakes he made in public. You can tell he's pissed at himself--he speeds way up right after that mis-hit.
It's true that with the piano we can listen more easy the music writed for cymbal.But J.S.Bach not belived on the piano. I prefer to listen to play the cymbal because more near to the time of J.S.Bach and how listen the
music those people.
No. It's a glitch in the recording.
And if it had been, so what?
it's not a glitch... he hit a wrong note... a shock to all gould lovers in the world!! haha... a reminder that our hero is quite human!! :)
9:40 :O
errore
Normal
He's Human too!!!
yes, you have such a good ear, thanks for letting us know.
yes, I heard it. That's precisely why Gould stopped performing at the age of 32; the smallest human error is held against him.
They had exactly one chance to let this sound like music and they missed it completely. It was never a good idea to try to stand your ground when accompanying Gould 😂.
seriously ..? your teacher ??'
so he have made a mistake.
Isn't the intro Alex Trebek?
I guess if one's auditory faculties are impaired, the caterwauling is not egregious.
---------------------------------------------------
Ich denke, wenn man die auditiven Fähigkeiten beeinträchtigt sind, die Katzenmusik nicht ungeheuerlich.
Plenty of other good pianists out there for you to listen to.
At least the orchestra drowns out his execrable humming.
Message received.
suena como una interpretación romántica de la música barroca. No, gracias.
Wurde zensiert! Völlig unverständlich mAn.
Este Concierto no se toca con Piano y la interpretación me parece deplorable
Gould ruined most of his recordings with his abominable habit of humming (out of tune) while he played. Bach does not need Mr. Gould's "embellishments". I have Gould CDs gathering dust because I can't stand to listen to Gould's maniacal humming.
Sell 'em. Won't be hard.
I’d like to purchase them! Please.
GG was aware of that but they couldn’t solve the problem… nevertheless it’s hard to say that his recordings have been “ruined” 😉
For some of us familiar with the music, his humming adds a dimension of human presence to accompany his phenomenal musical gifts; so, so much more welcome than the goofs and losers in an audience who save a month's worth of hacking and coughing just for an evening at the symphony. Musical genius such as Gould only happens seldom in a century, if more than once.
Possibly his worst performance
grazie