âThe best reason to hate Bachâs Goldberg Variations,â writes pianist Jeremy Denk, âis that everybody loves them.â As part of Denkâs iconoclastic challenge to this universal love, he cites another reason: âeveryone asks you all the time which of the two Glenn Gould recordings you prefer.â Without a doubt the most celebrated pianist of the twentieth century, and perhaps the greatest interpreter of Bachâs keyboard compositions, the eccentric genius Gould famously opened and closed his career with the Goldberg Variations, Bachâs âannoyingly unimpeachableâ (in Denkâs words) Baroque piece, written originally for the harpsichord. Gould made his first recording of the piece in 1955, and it immediately launched him to stardom, becoming âwhat may well be the best known of all piano recordings,â Colin Fleming tells us, with its âmasterful showing of command, balance, [and] vigor.â
Twenty-six years later, Gould made his second recording, in 1981, a year before his untimely death at the age of 50. Gould had already retired from public performance 18 years earlier, due in part to his stage fright, but also to a devotion to studio recording techniques that allowed him total control over his musical output. The filmed recording session of Gouldâs second Variations, above, opens with a shot not of the pianist and his instrument, but of the bank of analogue dials and switches inside the studioâs control booth. As the camera pans over and pushes in to Gould himself at the piano, we hear the familiar melody of the Goldberg aria, slowed to a snailâs pace. Gould sits in his familiar hunched-over posture, looking aged beyond his years, his body swaying over the keys in an expressive genuflection to the piece that made him more famousâand more controversialâthan perhaps any other classical musician.
The shift in Gouldâs style between the two Goldberg recordings is remarkable. Revisiting Gouldâs legacy thirty years after his death, pianist Steven Osbourne writes in The Guardian of the 1981 performance above:
The contrapuntal detail he finds in every bar is amazing; no one has equalled the way he plays the aria. But even more extraordinary is the line he creates that connects the whole piece. I’m not sure I have heard anything where every single note is placed so carefully, is so carefully thought about. For some people, it’s too controlled, but I don’t find that.
âAnd yet,â says Osbourne, âI prefer his 1955 recording of the piece. I can’t think of a single artist who made such a profound change in their approach to a piece throughout their whole career.â Certainly Gouldâs first Goldberg recordingâfueled, as the liner notes inform us, by five bottles of pills, âall different colors and prescriptionsââstands as perhaps the most idiosyncratic, and memorable, rendering of Bachâs composition. But while the first performance has âspeed and lightness going for it,â writes Erik Tarloff in Slate, the second has âan autumnal grace and the marvelous clarity Gould seems to privilege above all other qualities.â Luckily for us, Gould, who ânever recorded the same piece twice,â but for this âsignificant exception,â left us these two career bookends to debate, and enjoy, endlessly.
Related Content:
Glenn Gould Explains the Genius of Johann Sebastian Bach (1962)
Glenn Gould Offers a Strikingly Unconventional Interpretation of 1806 Beethoven Composition
The Art of Fugue: Gould Plays Bach
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
Watch Glenn Gould Perform His Last Great Studio Recording of Bach’s Goldberg Variations (1981) is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
The post Watch Glenn Gould Perform His Last Great Studio Recording of Bach’s Goldberg Variations (1981) appeared first on Open Culture.
Watch Glenn Gould Perform His Last Great Studio Recording of Bachâs Goldberg Variations (1981)
No comments:
Post a Comment