imagemap
Glenn Gould Glenn Gould (1932-1982)
Eccentric or Simply Pure Genius?

An essay
by Johann D'Souza

(Pictures from http://www.glenngould.com/)

Music teachers loathe him for his interpretation of Bach, often stating that it is far too fast, queer, extraordinary and often just so different. If his interpretation is followed, students will likely fail in their exams (that is if you can play at that breakneck speed in the first place) . If his style is emulated at a competition the person would not make it past the first round. I am inclined to believe that 98% of musicians follow the crowd and 2% ever make differences. Glenn Gould is one of that 2%.

Gould has been known as a rather "different" pianist. Recently I heard him in a recording of the 48 Preludes and Fugues which I thought to be totally bizarre. When I followed it with the score in hand, I was totally amazed not only by his technique but was totally mesmerized by his phrasing. He seemed to have seen a new dimension to this work which so many others had failed to see.

Gould's true genius surfaces when one can see his ability to see Bach from a total new angle. Angela Hewitt, Frederic Gulda, Tatiana Nikolayeva and Rosalyn Tureck, as teachers and exponents of Bach, do not show this different "sense" of "brilliance" in the manner Gould saw "The 48".

Bach left a lot of his works open to interpretation - no articulation markings, expression and phrasing markings. A pianist learning Bach has to sculpt his/her own phrasing - this is where Gould saw a new dimension many others could not.

However there are times when some of his performances did not find favour with many. I for one do not like his introductory Prelude and Fugue from Book 1, where the Prelude is taken staccato.

Andras Schiff has often commented about his own dislike for Gould’s interpretations. While others may disagree with me totally, I would like to see it as being purely a matter of different angles to the music. When Wanda Landowska said, "You play Bach your way and I’ll play Bach his way", it illustrates a very important point. But I am not very sure if Gould took to that belief.

Glenn Gould at the piano Gould’s eccentricities displayed themselves in the concert hall. He is noted for bringing his own swivelling chair which was adjusted so low that his whole frame was practically lower than the keyboard. He slouched so close to the piano that even his arm movement and dexterity could be hampered - many a great pianist would insist their students never do this.

Gould often tuned his own piano, not unlike the other great virtuoso pianist Vladimir Horowitz (you could tell the distinct sound of a Horowitz-ised piano), but in a slightly different manner. This was to give the piano that particular percussive sound that he wanted for his recordings.

Whether in "live" or studio recordings, Gould's (in)famous murmuring along with the main melody line often distracted the audience and orchestral players - and not forgetting the conductors as well. Having bought my first recording on cassette years ago, I was about to return it to the store when I read somewhere that every recording had his murmuring/humming somewhere.

In recent times, I have heard Fou Tsong and Dmitri Alexeev murmur/hum as well but all in "live" performances. Gould, with his Canadian ancestry, was often more relaxed doing his own thing and championing 20th-century works besides playing a whole repertoire from the Baroque. It is surprising that he was so at home with Bach and Haydn yet equally so with Webern, Bartók and Stockhausen.

Many critics have praised as well as condemned his interpretation of Bach works from the simple Two- and Three-Part Inventions to The Art of Fugue. The year 2000, being the 250th anniversary of Bach's passing, is bound to see a flourish of releases on the composer and of this artiste in particular, who had spent most of his life championing the composer.

Little is known of Glenn Gould as a composer but he has written a well-known quartet which was premiered by the members of the Cleveland String Quartet. Even in preparation for this work, one of the quartet players vehemently displayed his anger by asking Gould to either make up his mind if it was to be soft or loud in a certain passage. This was when he constantly carried on verbosely trying to explain phrases and articulation.

Gould love to talk when he was in the mood and could ramble on for hours on the phone. There is a story that he had rung up one of his friends (or perhaps his manager) in the late evening one day and when his friend accidentally fell asleep while listening to Gould. Six hours later, he (the friend) was surprised upon awakening that Gould was still rambling away oblivious.

His queer semantics can often be seen in his beliefs and practices - it is said that Gould hardly or close to never shook the hands of anyone for fear that he would injure them. So at parties he would often carry a glass in his right hand tightly and not release it. A sickly person by nature, he constantly suffered from back/shoulder pains which often curtailed his concert schedules. Although he was nursed by Eugene Ormandy’s orthopedic surgeon nothing actually improved it.

Gould's dressing was particularly odd in many respects, often using gloves in summer. He was always constantly aware of the cool draft in the air and always wanted to be in the confines of his home. He apparently loved women but could never get a proper relationship going for long - I suppose this stemmed from the fact that his intensity was too much for their liking, notwithstanding his eccentricities.

Glenn Gould Gould's utter genius was always coupled with the same amount of idiosyncrasy in the same breath. He would often visit people and carry with him his own soda water because he never drank any tap water. Surprisingly this was considered eccentric in those times. Now of course, this is commonplace, practiced by so many that the sales for Perrier, Evian, Aqua, etc, etc. have skyrocketed.

It is such a pity that Gould became addicted to the telephone. Many writers believe that he would have made an excellent writer just judging by his letters. In the book Glenn Gould: Selected Letters, his wit seemed to have been carefully crafted as he wrote, “Reach for your most reliable sedative” as he began his letter to the composer Otto Joachim. To his friend Diana Menuhin he wrote, “[y]our letter was terribly welcome - all twelve illegible pages of it.”

His renunciation of concert hall performances led him to be a radio producer, but he never travelled anywhere if it involved travelling by plane. I supposed the loss of musicians the likes of Gienette Neveu and Benny Goodman to air crashes scared the living daylights out of him.

I only wished he had written down more of his thoughts on Bach and other composers so that we could have greater insight into his musical mind.

Bibliography

  1. Bach: The Well Tempered Clavier Book 1. Sony Glenn Gould Edition SMK2K52600
  2. Bach: The Well Tempered Clavier Book 2. Sony Glenn Gould Edition SM2K 52603
  3. Bach: The English Suites BWV 806-811. Sony Glenn Gould Edition SM2K52606.
  4. Perspective - Glenn Gould’s Solitude Trilogy. Three sound documentaries - The idea of the North. The Latecomers. The Quiet in the Land. CBC Records 2003, 1994.
  5. Roberts, John P.L. and Ghyslaine Guertin, ed. and comp. Glenn Gould: Selected Letters. Oxford UP, 1995.
  6. Ostwald, Peter F., Glenn Gould: The Ecstasy and Tragedy of Genius. W.W.Norton & Co, 1997. ISBN 0393040771
  7. Payzant, Geoffery. Glenn Gould - Music and Mind. Key Porter Books, 1997. ISBN 1550138588.

Johann D'Souza has stashed his cash under his pillow until the 14th of February 2001 - it should be safe then.

Click to Return to the Classical Index!...
or Visit the Inkvault archives!

623: 9.10.1999. cor.10.1.2000 ©Johann D'Souza

Readers' Comments


From: Kian Hing (tuxcard@hotmail.com / Monday, January 3, 2000 at 22:35:32)

I myself have had the experience of failing a Bach prelude and fugue in the ABRSM pianoforte examination... by playing it Glenn Gould-style. However,I wouldn't have traded in my GG recordings for anything else.

From: Kit Wei Zheng (art70269@leonis.nus.edu.sg / Monday, January 10, 2000 at 00:54:11)

Dinu Lipatti died of an abscess on his lung, not in an air crash, as you have implied in your essay. I believe you had intended to refer to William Kapell, who died in 1953 in an air crash. Secondly, Horowitz never tuned his piano but rather travelled with it on tour. The characteristic sound of Horowitz's Steinway may be attributed more to the application of lacquer on the hammers than on the tuning itself. [Thank you, Wei Zheng - the article has been corrected! - Ed.]

From: David Schreiber (deschreiber@yahoo.com / Sunday, January 30, 2000 at 09:42:26)

As a Canadian who used to live in Singapore, now surfing through various Singaporean classical music Web site, it was very interesting to read John's article on Glenn Gould. I think he's got it pretty much right. Of COURSE Gould is no model for young piano players who only want to pass music tests (shudder). He was, really, a genius, a true one-of-a-kind, not weird just to be weird, but weird because he was on his own path and had no interest in the paths other people were taking. But most important of all, his eccentricity was coupled with enormous talent and profound, profound musical insight. - I'm getting long-winded (Gould is one of my favourite topics). - I have no liking for the music of Arnold Schoenberg. But when Gould plays the Shoenberg piano pieces, I am COMPELLED to listen. He makes me see what he sees in the music. What a wonderful gift! One last point - I seem to be the only person who marvels at Gould's playing of the Brahms Intermezzi - his earlier album. No one plays them like that. No one should try to copy him. But, my god, what depths he plumbs!!

From: Granville Edwin D'Souza (granny@pacific.net.sg / Friday, February 25, 2000 at 16:15:31)

I have always found Glenn Gould to be rather queer but you cannot escape the fact that he is a genius - try listening to his Goldberg Variations and you will not find a comparison that comes close to it.

From: Rodrigo Pincheira (rodrigopincheira@hotmail.com / Thursday, August 3, 2000 at 00:36:21)

Thank you for your wonderful article. I have been a fan of Glenn Gould since the age of 13 when I received his intriguing biography as a present for my birthday. Since then I have read every book available on Mr. Gould. As far as I know, Gould never tuned his own piano, but did tour with it (towards the end of his life he ended up playing on a Yamaha because the movers dropped his beloved Steinway!) He did have constant clashes with the Steinway technicians because he wanted them to do things to his piano that were quite unorthodox, in order to help achieve that famous "Gould" sound on the piano. This was all done in order to simulate the sound of his Chickering piano at his lake cottage. I was also intrigued by your reference to his being comfortable with Stockhausen...I did not know that he ever played Stockhausen. Do you have a recording of this? Lastly, there is a wonderful book compiled and edited by Tim Page called the Glenn Gould Reader, filled with most of Gould's writings on everything from his thoughts on Bach, Beethoven and Mozart, in depth musical anaylses of Shoenberg, Beethoven and Webern, to his thoughts on performance, radio, and recording. Highly recommended.

From: yyd ( / Sunday, August 27, 2000 at 16:09:14)

good

 

Explore the Flying Inkpot

They're Alive!
Concert Reviews

Bit deadish:

Other Resources at The Flying Inkpot
Home
Further Movements
The Official Glenn Gould Website