The artists who are usually the easiest to record are those who report to the studio with a thought-through and fully prepared performance. All they need to do is repeat it for the microphones. This may explain why Arthur Rubinstein, who simply loved playing the piano for people, also felt at home in a recording studio. Over his long career, Rubinstein matured as an artist and altered his thinking about many of the works he played. But in the moment of making a recording, from all reports, he was content simply to lay down his current concept of a piece. That was that.
That was not Gould. As Mr. Scott explains in that 2004 interview, Gould “changed a lot as he recorded because he wanted to try different tempos, different accents, different phrasings, because that’s why he loved recording so much.” His restless, searching mind is part of what made his playing so engrossing and original.
https://mobile.nytimes.com/2018/02/02/arts/music/glenn-gould-bach-goldberg-variations.html?referer=https://www.google.com/
Lev Osherovich: Thanks so much for posting. Gould must have driven the recording studio crazy but from the snippets that I've seen, the recording engineers were remarkably cool. The precise tape splicing ( high tech of the day) looks so demanding. Hope you don't mind if I repost to my page. I wouldn't miss a moment of the 5 hours! You know that I'm a Glenn Gould addict.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure I really thought of him as human before hearing the clips in this article.
ReplyDeletePhilip Yam did you previously view him as a demigod?
ReplyDeleteLev Osherovich More like an alien who was handed the sheet music and an encyclopedia about humans.
ReplyDeletePhilip Yam agree, Canadians can seem odd.
ReplyDeleteYou're funny, Lev!
ReplyDelete