歌曲 | Interview with Tim Page 1982 |
歌手 | Glenn Gould |
专辑 | A State of Wonder: The Complete Goldberg Variations (1955 & 1981) |
下载 | Image LRC TXT |
[ti:interview in 1982] | |
[ar:Glenn Gloud] | |
[al:] | |
[00:00.00][MUSIC] | |
[00:24.26] | PAGE: Hello, I'm Tim Page |
[00:25.09] | and the music in the background is the opening segment from one of the most celebrated keyboard discs of all time. |
[00:31.32] | The theme from Bach's Goldberg Variations as recorded by Glenn Gould in 1955. |
[00:37.14] | The man responsible for that recording and for approximately 85 other recordings since is my guest on today's program. |
[00:45.07] | Glenn, thanks a lot for coming by. |
[00:46.74] | GOULD: Tim, it's my pleasure. |
[00:48.22] | P: Glenn Gould has recently rerecorded and CBS has just released a new version of the Goldberg Variations |
[00:54.39] | and I'm sure we'll get around to comparing the two discs in the course of this program. |
[00:58.36] | But first: Glenn, are you one of those artists |
[01:02.03] | who avoids listening to their own early or earlier recordings |
[01:06.74] | or are you the type who positively relishes, basking in the glow of sessions passed? |
[01:12.64] | G: No, I don't think I do much basking, Tim, |
[01:14.03] | but it doesn't really dampen my spirits at least not usually to be confronted with the sins of my youth. |
[01:19.25] | I mean I've never understood -- |
[01:21.75] | I've never even believed this sort of interview that one hears again and again on talk shows, |
[01:25.88] | you know, with actors profess never to see or to have never seen their own films -- |
[01:30.77] | you've heard that sort of thing, haven't you? |
[01:32.53] | P: Oh sure, you mean the sort of thing where the interviewer will begin with something like |
[01:36.42] | "Sir John, how do you feel now about your classic Oscar-winning performance in Bridge on the River Hudson?" |
[01:44.10] | G: "Bitch, Bitch on the River Hudson? |
[01:48.58] | Oh, oh, yes, yes, I see, I see, |
[01:50.75] | that was the film we did in America wasn't it? |
[01:52.91] | Yes. Back in the fifties I think, yes. |
[01:54.04] | Well deucedly awkward location, |
[01:56.50] | you know, thoroughly contaminated streams. |
[01:58.58] | Very, yes, marshy, is swampland indeed. |
[02:00.65] | Mosquitos even, we all had black fly, don't you know? |
[02:03.15] | No sense of landscape architecture, the Americans, badly ruined shoreline, I can tell you. |
[02:07.73] | Nothing like upper Thames, you know. |
[02:09.98] | Oh, Not at all, no." |
[02:11.34] | P: "But did you see the picture, Sir John?" |
[02:13.87] | G: "Oh, the picture. |
[02:14.71] | No. No, I never saw the picture in its entirety, of course not. |
[02:17.24] | Did drop in at the dailies once, |
[02:19.81] | I rather fancied that spot, where Sir Arthur lost a bus load or two of commuters when the center span gave way. |
[02:25.79] | Of course he was a stickler for detail, none of those bathtub mockups for him I can tell you. |
[02:30.68] | No, not at all." |
[02:31.98] | P: "Well thank you, Sir John, don't call us, we'll call you." |
[02:34.64] | G: "Ah, yes, well, please do. Of course they never do." |
[02:36.91] | P: So anyway Glenn, unlike Sir John, you do revisit the scenes of your discographic youth from time to time. |
[02:43.90] | G: Oh, sure, of course I do. Though I will admit that, |
[02:45.99] | specifically, in the case of the Goldberg Variations with a bit more reluctance than is usual for me, |
[02:50.80] | a bit more from a sense of duty than enthusiasm perhaps. |
[02:54.27] | P: This is in fact your very first recording. |
[02:54.41] | G: Yeah, indeed, so I have a lot of revisiting to do, I suppose. |
[02:59.81] | P: I'm surprised that you don't like it better because |
[03:01.72] | I find it -- as I wrote in an article not too long ago, critics always love to quote themselves -- |
[03:08.53] | that it's a performance of originality, intelligence, and fire. |
[03:13.60] | G: Well, I thank you for that comment, I was very touched by it when I read it and I don't quite share it. |
[03:19.83] | P: Well, when did you last quite listen to this record? |
[03:22.00] | G: Oh, let's see, I listened to it about 3 or 4 days before I went to New York to rerecord it and that would be in April 1981. |
[03:30.06] | I just sort of wanted to remind myself of what it was like. |
[03:32.68] | And to be honest -- and I don't mean to sound like our friend Sir John over there -- |
[03:37.05] | it had at that point been so many years since I had heard that I really was curious about what I would find. |
[03:42.94] | P: What did you find? |
[03:45.07] | G: I found that I was a rather spooky experience. |
[03:46.97] | I listened to it with great pleasure in many respects. |
[03:50.06] | I found for example that it had a real sense of humor, I think, |
[03:53.77] | all sorts of crooky, spiky accents and so on, |
[03:56.80] | that gave it a certain buoyancy. |
[03:58.87] | And I found that I recognized at all points, really, |
[04:02.22] | the fingerprints of the party responsible. |
[04:04.72] | I mean, from a tactile standpoint, from purely mechanical standpoint, |
[04:08.48] | my approach to playing the piano really hasn't changed all that much over the years. |
[04:12.23] | It's remained quite stable, I think, static, some people might prefer to say. |
[04:16.97] | So I recognized the fingerprints, |
[04:18.79] | but -- and it is a very big but -- |
[04:21.39] | but I could not recognize or identify with the spirit of the person who made that recording. |
[04:26.99] | It really seemed like some other spirit had been involved and, |
[04:30.47] | as a consequence, I was just very glad to be doing it again. |
[04:33.15] | P: Uh-huh. Now, that's unusual for you because you actually seldom record anything twice. |
[04:38.47] | G: Yeah, that's quite true. |
[04:39.72] | I've only rerecorded two or three things over the years. |
[04:42.56] | I guess the most obvious recent example is the Haydn E-flat Major Sonata No. 59 |
[04:47.21] | which I, oh, originally did back in the mono-only days of the '50s, |
[04:51.87] | but which was digitally updated just last year. |
[04:55.30] | P: Well Glenn, when you look back at a record like that -- |
[04:58.19] | like the early version of that Haydn sonata -- |
[05:00.65] | do you have the same sense of discomfort, the same qualms, |
[05:05.06] | as in the case of the early Goldbergs? |
[05:07.10] | G: No, no, not at all. |
[05:08.21] | I prefer the later version of the Haydn, |
[05:10.58] | not just sonically, but interpretively, |
[05:12.01] | but I understand the early version, you know. |
[05:14.21] | I understand why I did what I did, |
[05:16.23] | even if I wouldn't do it in quite the same way today. |
[05:18.55] | But I'll give you a better example, Tim, |
[05:20.21] | the Mozart Sonata in C Major, K... 330. |
[05:24.73] | P: Which was originally paired with that Haydn sonata back in the '50s. |
[05:26.58] | G: Yeah. That's right, and as you know I rerecorded the Mozart |
[05:29.97] | in 1970, I think it was. |
[05:31.97] | P: As part of your survey of the complete Mozart sonatas. |
[05:34.04] | G: Mm-hm. And in that instance -- in the case of Mozart -- |
[05:36.66] | I really do prefer the early version. |
[05:38.29] | P: That's interesting. |
[05:39.13] | I like them both in their way; |
[05:40.64] | I guess it depends on my mood. |
[05:42.38] | G: Well, of course, as you know, |
[05:43.29] | I harbor -- shall we say -- rather ambivalent feelings for Wolfgang Amadeus and his works. |
[05:48.38] | We better not get into that here because we will never get back to Bach if we do, |
[05:51.71] | but by 1970 -- when the later version was made -- I had already confessed my true feelings about Mozart, of course. |
[05:57.86] | P: Well, you'd called him a lousy composer. |
[06:00.00] | G: I think I used maybe more slightly gentile language, sir, |
[06:02.45] | but words to that affect nonetheless. |
[06:04.34] | Whereas maybe back in 1958 -- |
[06:06.87] | even though my doubts about Mozart were certainly present -- |
[06:09.27] | I nevertheless covered them up somehow. |
[06:12.07] | I managed a leap of faith as the theologians like to say, which I guess I just couldn't manage twelve years later. |
[06:18.28] | P: Well, the most obvious discrepancy between those performances is one of tempi. |
[06:23.80] | And you've pointed this out in various articles actually -- |
[06:27.24] | P: -- the early version of Mozart is very, very slow. |
[06:29.90] | G: Indeed. |
[06:30.40] | P: And the later one -- if I may say so -- goes like the preverbal bat out of hell. |
[06:35.80] | G: Yeah, that's absolutely true. |
[06:36.91] | Well, I have a theory -- vis-à-vis my own work anyway. |
[06:41.26] | Well, something less grand of a theory, really; |
[06:43.64] | it's more like a speculative premise. |
[06:45.21] | But anyway, it goes something like this: |
[06:46.45] | I think that the great majority of the music that moves me very deeply, is music that I want to hear played -- or want to play myself, as the case may be -- |
[06:54.65] | in a very ruminative, very deliberate tempo. |
[06:58.12] | P: That's fascinating. |
[06:59.15] | In other words, you want to savor it, you want to -- |
[07:02.19] | G: I, no, I don't think so, not quite savor, no. |
[07:04.38] | Because -- at least to me -- savor somehow suggests dawdling or lingering over, or something like that. |
[07:09.96] | And I don't mean that. |
[07:11.00] | No, firm beats, a sense of rhythmic continuity has always been terribly important to me. |
[07:15.43] | But as I've grown older, I find many performances -- certainly the great majority of my own early performances -- just too fast for comfort. |
[07:22.70] | I guess part of the explanation is that all the music that really interests me -- not just some of it, all of it -- is contrapuntal music. |
[07:30.83] | Whether it's Wagner's counterpoint or Sch?nberg's or Bach's or Sphaling's (?) or Haydn's indeed, |
[07:36.14] | the music that really interests me is inevitably music with an explosion of simultaneous ideas, |
[07:41.27] | which counterpoint -- you know, when it's at its best -- is. |
[07:43.91] | And it's music where one I think implicitly acknowledges the essential equality of those ideas. |
[07:50.93] | And I think it follows from that with really complex contrapuntal textures, one does need a certain deliberation, a certain deliberateness, you know. |
[07:59.69] | And I think -- to come full circle -- that it's the occasional or even the frequent lack of that deliberation |
[08:05.53] | that bothers me most in the first version of the Goldberg. |
[08:09.61] | P: Well, I think it's time that we offered a example. |
[08:13.23] | Just to refresh your memory, let's hear a few bars of the theme from the original 1955 version of the Goldberg Variations |
[08:20.96] | which we played at the top of the program. |
[08:23.22] | G: Good idea. |
[08:24.45][MUSIC] | |
[08:44.16] | P: Now, by way of contrast, let's hear the whole theme as you played it in the new version. |
[08:50.14] | G: Okay. |
[08:51.52][MUSIC] | |
[11:57.81] | P: Well, Glenn, I put a stopwatch on that. |
[12:00.82] | Do you want to guess the relationship between the two tempi or do you know already? |
[12:05.72] | G: I know approximately; |
[12:06.69] | it's about 2:1, isn't it? |
[12:08.17] | P: Just about. |
[12:09.21] | The original version clocks in at 1 minute, 51 seconds, |
[12:12.67] | and the new version at 3 minutes, 4 seconds. |
[12:16.13] | Let's call it a ratio of -- a little quick math here -- |
[12:19.07] | G: Yes. Pocket calculator. P: 12:7. |
[12:21.12] | G: Well, I think my guess was close enough for government work. |
[12:23.10] | P: Sure? G: But the reprise of the theme, the aria de capo at the end, that's even slower, isn't it? |
[12:28.45] | P: Yes, indeed. |
[12:29.83] | P: Would you believe 3 minutes, 42 seconds, in the new version? G: You've got -- you've got them all there. |
[12:34.16] | G: You did come prepared. Yes, I believe that. |
[12:36.78] | P: Versus, uh -- let me get that. Versus 2 minutes, 7 seconds, in the de capo from the original version. |
[12:42.78] | G: I'm dealing with a stopwatch freak. |
[12:44.23] | P: Well, not really, but I did take a pulse of this recording -- if you don't mind a metaphor there. |
[12:49.77] | As a matter of fact, I timed all the variations in both versions. |
[12:53.61]G: Good, thanks Tim.[DROPS VOICE] | |
[12:55.25] | P: Because when I first heard the new recording -- |
[12:57.00] | specifically when I first heard the tempo of the theme -- |
[12:59.18] | I thought to myself, |
[13:00.16] | "Well, this has got to be a two-record set." |
[13:02.50] | G: Yes. |
[13:02.97] | P: Well, it's obviously not a two-record set. |
[13:05.01] | And I discovered eventually that it's only about thirteen minutes longer than the original 1955 version. |
[13:11.70] | G: That's right. It's about what? 51 minutes? Something like that? |
[13:13.28] | P: 51 minutes, 14 seconds. |
[13:15.75] | G: I stand corrected. |
[13:17.16] | P: Versus 38 minutes, 17 seconds, in 1955. |
[13:20.08] | G: Ahh, I was a speed demon in those days, I tell you. |
[13:23.30] | P: Well, not really, because -- |
[13:25.72] | you know what really puzzled me Glenn, and in fact got me onto this whole timing kick, was that in the new version you observe -- |
[13:32.16] | well, by no means all, but certainly a good number -- |
[13:35.30] | I guess about a dozen of the first repeats. |
[13:37.88] | G: Yeah, that's right. |
[13:38.69] | I did them in all the canons, so that would be -- that'd be nine. |
[13:41.67] | And then in the fuguetta, which is Variation 10, and the quadlivet, which is Variation 30, |
[13:46.89] | and a couple of the other fuguetta- like variations. |
[13:49.28] | I guess about -- I think thirteen in all have first repeats. |
[13:52.62] | P: Yeah, but you see my point. |
[13:53.75] | When you subtract the amount of time devoted to those repeats from the total 51 minutes or whatever, |
[13:59.65] | the overall timing is really not that different from the original version which didn't have any repeats at all. |
[14:05.10] | G: Son of a gun. |
[14:06.31] | P: So you did in fact observe tempi that were not that much slower in many cases in the new version. |
[14:11.93] | G: That's true. |
[14:13.02] | P: And in one or two very notable variations, |
[14:16.31] | you actually played more quickly |
[14:18.31] | and yet the feeling, the mood, the architecture of this performance is just so totally different that, |
[14:25.32] | frankly, I can't figure it out. |
[14:27.00] | G: Well, as a matter of fact, you practically have figured it out Tim. |
[14:30.79] | And I want to say right now, |
[14:32.20] | I was kidding when I asked if you were a stopwatch fetishist, |
[14:34.25] | because the way that this performance was constructed was worked out -- |
[14:38.34] | has in fact actually a great deal to do with something very like a stopwatch, you know. |
[14:42.06] | P: Uh-huh. |
[14:43.13] | G: Let me back up a little bit. |
[14:45.03] | I've come to feel over the years that a musical work -- |
[14:48.76] | however long it may be -- ought to have basically -- I was going to say "one tempo," |
[14:53.72] | but that's the wrong word -- |
[14:54.75] | one pulse rate, one constant rhythmic reference point. |
[14:58.21] | Now obviously there couldn't be any more deadly dull than to exploit one beat that goes on and on and on indefinitely. |
[15:04.70] | I mean, that's what drives me up the wall about, about rock, you know, |
[15:08.90] | and about -- |
[15:10.57] | I say this in the presence of his most committed advocate and art and propagandist -- about minimalism. |
[15:15.55] | P: Oh, I think we should argue that one another time ... |
[15:19.00] | G: Yeah, probably so. |
[15:19.69] | Anyway I would never argue in favor of a inflexible musical pulse. |
[15:23.69] | You know, that just destroys any music. |
[15:25.60] | But you can take basic pulse and divide it and multiply it -- |
[15:29.13] | not necessarily on a scale of 2, 4, 8, 16, 32 -- but often with far less obvious divisions, I think. |
[15:35.05] | And make the result of those divisions or multiplications act as a subsidiary pulse |
[15:39.44] | for a particular movement or section of a movement or whatever. |
[15:41.92] | And I think this doesn't in any way preclude blubatti. |
[15:47.48] | If you have an accelerando, for example, you simply use the accelerando as a transition between two aspects of the same basic pulse, you know. |
[15:52.60] | P: Sure, sure. |
[15:54.28] | G: So, in the case of the Goldberg, |
[15:55.13] | there is in fact one pulse which -- with a few very minor modifications, |
[16:00.24] | mostly modifications which I think take their cue from retards at the end of the preceding variation, something like that -- |
[16:06.36] | one pulse that runs all the way throughout. |
[16:08.87] | P: Can you give us an example of that? |
[16:11.42] | G: Sure. Well, maybe I shouldn't be so confident. |
[16:13.92] | I'll try. |
[16:15.59] | Let's see. |
[16:16.76] | Let's take the beginning of side two of the record, okay? |
[16:19.84] | P: Now that would be the French overture, Variation 16? |
[16:22.49] | G: Yeah, yeah. As you know, the French overture is divided into two sections: |
[16:25.45] | The dotted rhythm sequence, |
[16:27.42] | which gave it its name, |
[16:28.31] | which I guess from French opera tradition; |
[16:30.48] | and a little fuguetta for the second half. |
[16:33.32] | The first section is written with four quarter notes to the bar |
[16:37.78] | (humming:puang delililiyang tatamtata diyang dididididididididi) |
[16:45.45] | and the fuguetta, |
[16:47.39] | on the other hand, |
[16:48.18] | is in three-eight time. |
[16:49.47] | In other words, each bar in the fuguetta contains 1 1/2 quarter notes or dotted quarters, as musicians like to call it. |
[16:56.29] | (humming:down depapapapapingpangpang yapapapapabiyangpabidangden) so on. |
[17:01.44] | Now, you'll find, I think, |
[17:03.19] | that the quarter notes in the first half are almost identical to the dotted quarter notes in the second half. |
[17:08.78] | In other words, |
[17:09.31] | four bars of the second half of the fuguetta is approximately equal to one bar of the opening overture section. |
[17:16.14] | So the relationship, then, is something like this: |
[17:18.70] | (humming: puor rederededi tatamtatam dadadadadiyama yatatatata) |
[17:24.70] | P: I see. |
[17:25.74] | Now what happens in the next variation, |
[17:27.53] | in Variation 17. |
[17:29.53] | G: Well, now, that was a bit more complicated, |
[17:30.36] | because it's written in three-quarter time, with three quarter notes to the bar. |
[17:34.85] | There's nothing complicated about that,as Johann Strauss pretty conclusively proved. |
[17:38.83] | But what was complicated was that |
[17:41.02] | I wanted to relate it somehow to the fuguetta from Variation 16 with its three-eight time signature. |
[17:46.98] | And in fact at first, |
[17:47.97] | I considered just taking the beat from the full bar -- |
[17:51.43] | the dotted quarter note of the fuguetta -- |
[17:53.13] | and making that beat equivalent to the beat of the undotted quarter -- |
[17:57.77] | if I can coin a word -- of Variation 17. |
[18:00.66] | Now that would have resulted in a tempo something like |
[18:04.85] | (humming: yababababi babababababababababa ). |
[18:08.54] | You know, which sounds okay when you sing it, not bad at all. |
[18:11.43] | But Variation 17 is one of those rather skittish, slightly beheaded collections of scales and arpeggios |
[18:19.24] | which Bach indulged when he wasn't writing sober and proper things like fugues and canons. |
[18:23.39] | And it just seemed to me that there wasn't enough substance to it to warrant such a methodical, deliberate, Germanic tempo. |
[18:29.86] | P: In other words, you're basically saying that you didn't like it enough to play it slowly. |
[18:34.68] | G: You got it. |
[18:35.66] | So instead of using the dotted quarter from the fuguetta as my yardstick for Variation 17, |
[18:40.77] | I took two-thirds of it, two-thirds of a bar from the fuguetta and used the actual quarter note, |
[18:45.55] | which that two-thirds represents. |
[18:47.05] | Now, instead of the beat I sang before -- |
[18:49.49] | which was roughly (humming: yababababiyababababa) -- |
[18:52.89] | the new beat gave you three for the price of two and that applied to Variation 17 allowed for a much more effervescent tempo, |
[19:00.31] | something like (humming: bababababi bababababalabababi debaba). |
[19:03.82] | P: Uh-huh. And then of course, there's Variation 18, which is one of the canons. |
[19:07.64] | G: Yeah, the canon at the Sixth. |
[19:08.53] | I adore it, it's a gem. |
[19:10.39] | Well, I adore all the canons, really. |
[19:12.02] | But it's one of my favorite variations, certainly. |
[19:14.52] | Anyway, it's written with four quarter notes in a bar, but actually only two beats, two half notes to a bar. |
[19:22.10] | ( humming: yangdipangbi yapapang bababangbababangbababangbangbang) |
[19:27.57] | P: So basically what you did is turn the quarter note of Variation 17 into the half note of Variation 18. |
[19:33.01] | G: Exactly, yeah. |
[19:34.37] | P: Oh, well, Glenn. |
[19:35.83] | I don't think I can keep much more of this in my head at the moment. |
[19:38.61] | G: I'm sure that I can't either actually; |
[19:40.75] | it's been a struggle. |
[19:41.54] | P: I think we should listen to those three variations -- |
[19:44.01] | Variation 16 through 18 of Bach's Goldberg Variations -- right now. |
[19:48.34] | G: Good idea. |
[19:49.90][MUSIC] | |
[23:27.79] | P: Those were Variations 16 through 18 from Bach's Goldberg Variations in a new recording by Glenn Gould. |
[23:34.17] | You know something, Glenn? |
[23:35.27] | I felt it. |
[23:36.19] | I don't know if I would have actually been able to spot what you did just listening to it, |
[23:41.40] | but there was a link between those variations. |
[23:44.35] | I could -- oh, I could feel it in my bones. |
[23:47.75] | G: Well, I'm really glad, |
[23:48.87] | it's nice of you to say that, |
[23:49.64] | because I've been sitting here squirming in my chair, |
[23:52.37] | as you know, |
[23:52.88] | wishing I'd never said a word on the subject. |
[23:54.00] | P: Oh, don't be ridiculous. |
[23:55.24] | G: Well, you know, |
[23:56.00] | when one describes a process this way, |
[23:58.33] | it sounds just so relentlessly clinical, so ruthlessly sterile and anti-musical, really. |
[24:03.66] | And I -- |
[24:04.22] | it is at that level; |
[24:05.67] | it's almost embarrassing. |
[24:06.41] | I'm sorry, I apologize for ... |
[24:07.00] | P: Whoa, whoa. |
[24:07.76] | Don't -- please don't be embarrassed, |
[24:09.00] | because I think you've given us a remarkable insight into your working method. |
[24:12.84] | G: Well, thank you. |
[24:13.47] | But you know what I mean. |
[24:14.65] | On the face of it, |
[24:14.97] | it's exactly like analyzing a particular tone row of Schnberg, for example, and saying, |
[24:18.87] | "Well, this is a wonderfully symmetrical tone row, |
[24:21.22] | therefore it must inevitably lead to a wonderfully symmetrical work." |
[24:23.72] | P: I've heard that talk before. |
[24:25.38] | G: Exactly. |
[24:25.79] | And it ain't necessarily so. |
[24:27.07] | I think it's a technique, the idea of rhythmic continuity that's really only useful if everybody does feel it in their bones, |
[24:34.85] | you know, |
[24:35.33] | to use your words -- |
[24:35.91] | experiences it subliminally, |
[24:37.42] | in other words -- and absolutely nobody actually notices what's really going on. |
[24:42.21] | P: Which was exactly the way Schnberg felt about his tone rows. |
[24:45.25] | G: Precisely. |
[24:46.70] | P: Well, now, you didn't just invent this system for the Goldberg Variations on this. |
[24:50.01] | G: Oh, certainly not, no. |
[24:51.11] | I've used it for years. |
[24:52.20] | It's just that I've used it more and more rigorously as the years have gone by. |
[24:55.04] | P: Well, Glenn, I think I'd be doing something less than my duty as an interviewer |
[24:59.12] | if I failed to ask whether this rhythmic system of yours didn't perhaps have some small part to play in a rather celebrated brou-ha-ha -- |
[25:07.64] | G: Ah, I felt it coming. Yes. |
[25:08.20] | P: -- which took place about twenty years ago |
[25:10.25] | and involved you, |
[25:11.24] | the Brahms D Minor Concerto, |
[25:12.91] | Leonard Bernstein |
[25:14.28] | and the New York Philharmonic. |
[25:15.06] | G: It certainly did. |
[25:16.49] | That was one of the first really clear, really thorough demonstrations of this system. |
[25:20.84] | And, you know, Tim, |
[25:22.00] | I maintain to this day that what shocked everybody, vis-à-vis the interpretation -- |
[25:25.56] | of course there was some people who were just shocked by the onstage admission |
[25:28.35] | that a conductor and a soloist could have a profound disagreement, |
[25:31.05] | which everybody knows perfectly well goes on offstage anyway. |
[25:33.37] | But what shocked them about the interpretation, I think, was not the basic tempo itself. |
[25:37.84] | Certainly, the basic tempo was very slow, |
[25:41.00] | it was unusually slow, |
[25:41.62] | but I've heard many other performances which didn't shock anybody with opening themes very nearly as slow, |
[25:47.40] | sort of (humming: Viiiiiyoungpie jiuyangbing) |
[25:52.39] | It was -- to come back to our Goldberg discussion, |
[25:54.75] | the relationship between themes that shocked them. |
[25:56.67] | It was the fact, for example, that the second theme of the first movement of the Brahms -- |
[26:00.77] | (humming: Duadidididongdi) |
[26:04.94] | which, after all, is an inversion of the first theme -- |
[26:07.00] | was not appreciably slower than the first theme. |
[26:09.51] | It was, in fact, played with something like Haydnesque continuity |
[26:13.66] | instead of, I guess, what most people anticipate as Brahmsian contrast, you know. |
[26:17.05] | P: I'm going to anthropomorphize a bit here. |
[26:19.34] | G: Good heavens. |
[26:21.03] | P: And wager a guess that |
[26:23.35] | what they objected to was the fact that it didn't present the -- |
[26:27.48] | well, shall we say -- |
[26:28.42] | masculine-feminine contrast that one has come to expect. |
[26:30.00] | G: Mm-hm, mm-hm. |
[26:31.92] | Exactly. |
[26:32.69] | I -- I'll stick with your terms -- |
[26:34.00] | presented an asexual or maybe a unisexual view of the work, you know. |
[26:35.93] | P: Mm-hm. |
[26:37.88] | G: But you see, |
[26:38.26] | in the case of the Goldberg, |
[26:39.48] | I felt there was an ever greater necessity for this system than in a work like the Brahms D Minor. |
[26:44.95] | Because as you know, |
[26:45.52] | the Goldberg is an extraordinary collection of moods and textures. |
[26:48.75] | I mean, think of Variation 15 -- |
[26:50.37] | we haven't heard it yet today, |
[26:52.15] | but think of it anyway. |
[26:53.00][PAGE BEGINS TO MIMIC PASSAGE OF MUSIC] | |
[26:59.01] | G: Exactly. |
[26:59.32] | It's the most severe and rigorous and beautiful canon -- |
[27:02.40] | we didn't sing it all that severely and rigorously, |
[27:04.39] | but it is. |
[27:04.96] | The most severe and beautiful canon that I know. |
[27:07.76] | The canon, an inversion of the Fifth. |
[27:09.29] | To be so moving, |
[27:10.86] | so anguished |
[27:11.71] | and so uplifting at the same time, |
[27:13.88] | that it would not be in any way out of place in the St. Matthew Passion. |
[27:16.79] | Matter of fact, |
[27:17.41] | I've always thought of Variation 15 as the perfect Good Friday spell, you know. |
[27:20.92] | Well, anyway, |
[27:22.11] | a movement like that is preceded by Variation 14, |
[27:25.05] | logically enough, |
[27:25.66] | which is certainly one of the giddiest bits of neo-Scarlattism imaginable. |
[27:30.67] | P: Cross-hand versions and all. |
[27:32.21] | G: Yeah. |
[27:32.36] | And quite simply the trap in this work, |
[27:35.35] | in the Goldberg, |
[27:36.02] | is to avoid letting it come across as thirty independent pieces, |
[27:38.76] | because if one gives each of those movements their head, |
[27:40.94] | it can very easily do just that. |
[27:42.97] | So I thought that here in the Goldberg Variations, |
[27:45.66] | this system was a necessity. |
[27:47.60] | And quite frankly, |
[27:48.36] | in the version on this record, |
[27:50.00] | I applied it more rigorously than I ever have to any work before. |
[27:53.56] | P: Well, you mentioned Variation 15 |
[27:55.57] | and of course it's only one of three variations in the minor key, in G minor. |
[27:59.92] | There is another of that trio, No. 25, |
[28:03.64] | that I'd like to talk about for just a moment. |
[28:05.76] | I guess in many ways it's the most famous -- |
[28:07.95] | well, certainly the longest of all the variations. |
[28:09.70] | G: Absolutely. |
[28:10.92] | It's also the most talked-about among musicians, I think. |
[28:13.65] | P: Well, with good reason. |
[28:14.62] | I mean, what an extraordinary chromatic texture. |
[28:17.05] | G: Yeah, I don't think there's been a richer load of enharmonic relationships any place between Gezhwaldo and Wagner. |
[28:24.04] | P: Well, I remember you used it in your soundtrack for the film Slaughterhouse Five. |
[28:27.69] | G: That's right, |
[28:28.18] | and to accompany -- of all things -- the burning of Dresden. |
[28:31.23] | P: Indeed. |
[28:31.83] | Well, I want to play just a few bars of this variation in both versions. |
[28:36.40] | G: We really have to hear the early one, eh? |
[28:37.60] | P: Oh, I think we must. |
[28:39.40] | The contrast is, mmm, shall we say, striking? |
[28:43.04] | G: That it is. |
[28:43.81][MUSIC PLAYS UNDER THE FOLLOWING DIALOGUE] | |
[28:49.03] | P: Now, this is the 1955 version. |
[28:51.06] | G: Which sounds remarkably like a Chopin nocturne, doesn't it? |
[28:54.73] | P: No. I think on it's own terms though, Glenn, that this is really lovely playing. |
[28:59.75] | G: Well, yeah, it's okay, I guess, |
[29:00.62] | but there's a lot of piano-playing going on there. |
[29:03.69] | And I mean that as the most disparaging comment possible. |
[29:07.17] | You know, the line is being pulled every which way, |
[29:10.67] | there are cute little dynamic dips and tempo shifts -- |
[29:14.17] | like that one -- |
[29:15.22] | things that pass for expressive fervor in your average conservatory, I guess. |
[29:19.88] | P: Do you really despise this version? |
[29:22.93] | G: No, I don't despise it. |
[29:24.66] | I recognize -- you know, it's very well-done of its kind. |
[29:26.85] | I guess I just don't happen to like its kind very much any more. |
[29:30.26] | And I also recognize -- |
[29:31.40] | to be fair -- |
[29:31.97] | that many people will probably prefer this early version. |
[29:35.26] | They might -- people may find the new one rather stark and spare emotionally. |
[29:39.62] | But this variation -- number 25 -- |
[29:42.76] | represents everything that I mistrust in the early, in the early version of -- |
[29:47.30] | it wears its heart on its sleeve. |
[29:49.85] | It seems to say, |
[29:50.65] | "Please take note; this is tragedy." |
[29:52.94] | You know, it doesn't have the dignity to bear its suffering with a hint of quiet resignation. |
[29:59.09] | P: And the new version does. |
[30:01.00] | G: Well, I'm prejudiced, |
[30:02.50] | but I think it does, yeah. |
[30:03.59] | P: Well, we're approaching a cadence, |
[30:06.02] | so why don't we use that excuse to switch over to the new version? |
[30:10.05] | G: It couldn't come to soon for me. |
[30:11.49][MUSIC CONTINUES SANS DIALOGUE TO END] | |
[31:37.56] | P: Glenn, I do see your point. |
[31:39.26] | The 1955 version of this variation is definitely more romantic or, |
[31:44.09] | if you prefer, |
[31:45.67] | more pianistic. |
[31:46.73] | G: Yeah, exactly. |
[31:47.01] | P: And I dare say that no discussion of Bach |
[31:49.80] | would be complete without taking a crack at that old, |
[31:52.54] | somewhat tired question of the choice of instrument. |
[31:55.52] | G: Yeah. |
[31:55.83] | P: The piano versus the harpsichord and so on. |
[31:57.78] | G: Harpsichord and all that, yeah. |
[31:59.08] | No, I dare say not. |
[31:59.93] | You know, somebody said to me the other day that |
[32:02.52] | now that the fortepiano has staged such a remarkable comeback for Mozart and Beethoven and so on -- |
[32:07.77] | nd now that people are playing Chopin on period playelles or whatever -- |
[32:11.07] | in no time at all, |
[32:12.67] | there'll be nothing left for the contemporary piano to do, |
[32:14.49] | except maybe the Rachmaninoff Third. |
[32:15.96] | And even that -- |
[32:17.13] | if you take these archeological pursuits to their illogical extremes -- |
[32:20.47] | should really be played on a turn-of-the-century German Steinway or maybe a Bechstadt. |
[32:25.00] | P: That's really true. |
[32:26.04] | G: Yeah, well, |
[32:26.47] | I think frankly that the whole issue of Bach on the piano is a red herring. |
[32:31.44] | I love the harpsichord. |
[32:32.75] | As you know, |
[32:33.35] | I made a harpsichord record some years ago. |
[32:34.31] | P: Oh, sure, the Handel suites. |
[32:35.46] | G: Yeah. And I'm very fond of the fortepiano in such things as Mozart concertos and so forth. |
[32:40.98] | So I'm certainly not going to sit here and argue that the modern piano has some intrinsic value, |
[32:46.16] | just because of its modernness. |
[32:47.54] | I'm not going to argue that new is better. |
[32:49.25] | You know, new is simply new. |
[32:50.83] | But having said that, |
[32:52.56] | I must also say that the piano, |
[32:55.05] | at its best, |
[32:56.10] | offers a range of articulation that far surpasses any older instrument. |
[33:00.81] | That it actually can be made to serve the contrapuntal qualities of Bach, for example, |
[33:05.16] | the linear concepts of Bach in a way that the harpsichord -- |
[33:07.88] | for all its beauty and charm and authenticity -- |
[33:11.07] | you know, cannot. |
[33:12.32] | P: Well, I feel a little bit like I'm needling you, |
[33:15.30] | but it's been remarked by just about everybody at one time or another |
[33:19.37] | that your piano has actually always seemed to end up sounding a bit like surrogate harpsichords. |
[33:24.79] | And I don't know whether it's because of the way you play these instruments |
[33:28.09] | or the way you have them adjusted or -- |
[33:28.95] | G: Well, I think it's a combination. |
[33:30.74] | You know, I've always believed, |
[33:32.26] | you see, Tim, |
[33:33.22] | that one should start by worrying about the action of the instrument and not the sound. |
[33:36.80] | If you regulate an action with enormous care, |
[33:39.70] | make it so even and responsive and articulate that it just sort of sits there and looks at you and says, |
[33:45.00] | "You want to play this in E-flat, right?" you know. |
[33:47.04] | That it virtually plays itself, |
[33:48.35] | in other words, |
[33:49.02] | then the tone will just take care of itself. |
[33:51.50] | Because the tone,the sound, |
[33:53.28] | whatever you want to call it |
[33:54.32] | that one produces really ought to be part of the interpretive concept of the piece. |
[33:58.43] | And if you are dealing with an action that's totally responsive, |
[34:01.67] | you know, |
[34:02.00] | you are then free to really concentrate exclusively on the concept in all of its facets, which includes the tone. |
[34:08.08] | P: Nevertheless, |
[34:09.05] | the tone quality in all your records -- |
[34:11.24] | and certainly all your Bach records -- |
[34:12.96] | is remarkably similar. |
[34:14.89] | It's consistently crisp, |
[34:16.06] | a little dry perhaps, |
[34:17.89] | astonishingly varied in its detacher (?) way. |
[34:21.24] | As a matter of fact, |
[34:22.03] | it's often been likened to an X-ray of the music. |
[34:24.62] | G: Well, thank you, |
[34:25.15] | I take that as a compliment. |
[34:26.41] | P: Oh, it's actually meant to be. |
[34:27.54] | G: Thank you again. |
[34:28.52] | Well, you know, |
[34:29.51] | there are certain personal taboos, |
[34:31.27] | especially in playing Bach, |
[34:32.69] | that I almost never violate. |
[34:34.35] | P: Well, I know one of them for sure: |
[34:36.07] | You never use the sustaining pedal. |
[34:36.91] | G: That's right. |
[34:37.33] | P: Because I saw that German television film |
[34:40.21] | that was made when you actually recorded the new Goldbergs. |
[34:43.03] | G: Oh, yeah, yeah. |
[34:43.50] | P: And it was honestly rather astonishing |
[34:45.90] | to see you sitting there, |
[34:47.31] | thirteen inches off the floor, |
[34:49.47] | in your stocking feet. |
[34:50.89] | And when the camera pulled back, |
[34:52.47] | they were nowhere near the sustaining pedal. |
[34:54.82] | G: That's true. |
[34:55.68] | P: But you do use the soft pedal a good deal. |
[34:58.39] | G: Yes, I do, |
[34:59.00] | because by playing on two strings instead of three, |
[35:01.49] | you get a much more specific, much leaner quality of sound. |
[35:04.75] | But I think really that the primary tonal concept that I maintain with regard to Bach is that of -- |
[35:10.04] | well, I think you used the word detacher (?), |
[35:12.82] | but it's the idea anyway that a non-legato state, |
[35:16.58] | a non-legato relationship |
[35:18.02] | or a pointillistic relationship, |
[35:19.38] | if you want, |
[35:19.84] | between two consecutive notes is the norm, |
[35:23.00] | not the exception. |
[35:24.11] | That the legato link, indeed, is the exception. |
[35:27.06] | P: You realize, of course, |
[35:28.53] | that you're turning the basic premise of piano-playing inside out. |
[35:31.61] | G: Well, trying to, anyway. |
[35:33.01] | And as far as the question of whether it's appropriate to play this music on the piano is concerned, |
[35:37.98] | I think one has to remember that here was a man, |
[35:40.24] | Bach, |
[35:40.61] | who was himself one of the great transcribers of all time. |
[35:43.77] | You know, a man who took Marcello's oboe concerto, for example, |
[35:46.82] | and made a solo harpsichord piece of it -- |
[35:48.71] | I recently recorded it, so it's on my mind. |
[35:51.06] | Who rewrote his own violin concertos for the harpsichord or vice-versa. |
[35:55.27] | Who rewrote his harpsichord concerto just for the organ. |
[35:58.01] | You know, the list just goes on and on. |
[35:59.05] | Who wrote -- |
[36:00.70] | as his masterpiece, I think -- |
[36:02.44] | The Art of the Fugue |
[36:03.06] | and gave us music that works on a harpsichord, |
[36:05.61] | on an organ, |
[36:06.76] | with a string quartet, |
[36:08.13] | with a string orchestra; |
[36:08.80] | he didn't specify. |
[36:09.40] | Certainly with a woodwind quartet or quintet, with a brass quartet. |
[36:13.20] | It works astonishingly well with a saxophone quartet; |
[36:15.41] | I heard it once that way. |
[36:15.59] | P: No kidding? No kidding. |
[36:16.50] | G: Yep. I just think that all the evidence suggests that |
[36:19.68] | Bach didn't give a hoot about specific sonority or even volume. |
[36:23.15] | But I think he did care-- |
[36:24.30] | to an almost fanatic degree -- |
[36:25.56] | about the integrity of his structures, you know. |
[36:27.53] | I think he would have been delighted by any sound that was born out of a respect for the necessity, |
[36:32.62] | the abstract necessity of those structures and appalled -- |
[36:36.03] | amused maybe, but appalled nonetheless -- |
[36:38.24] | by any sound that was born out of the notion that by glossing over those structures, |
[36:42.84] | it could improve upon them in some way. |
[36:44.09] | I don't think he cared whether the B minor mass was sung by sixteen or 160; |
[36:48.11] | I think he cared how they sang it. |
[36:50.05] | I certainly don't think that |
[36:51.94] | he who transposed practically everything of his own up and down the octave |
[36:56.19] | to suit himself |
[36:56.72] | and the particular needs of the court |
[36:58.20] | and the instruments he was writing for |
[36:59.30] | would have cared whether it was sung in B minor -- |
[37:01.47] | according to our current frequency readings -- |
[37:03.07] | or in B flat plus or minus A did(?), minor as is now the habit in certain Puritan circles. |
[37:08.83] | I think he would have to loved to hear his Brandenberg concertos as Wendy Carlos has realized them on the synthesizer. |
[37:14.25] | I think even delighted with what the Swingle Singers did in the ninth fugue from The Art of Fugue some years ago. |
[37:19.43] | But I think he would have been appalled by the way Arnold Schnberg orchestrally mangled his ... fugue, you know. |
[37:24.47] | P: His Stakovsky (?) and the D minor toccata. |
[37:26.00] | G: Yeah, or the way Busoni or Tosig (?) or some of those characters corrupted the keyboard, whereas -- |
[37:30.50] | I think it's a question of attitude, just that. |
[37:32.93] | I think the question of instrument, per se, |
[37:35.06] | you konw, is of no importance whatsoever. |
[37:37.84] | P: Well, I think that Bach would have been delighted |
[37:40.24] | with what you've done in this new recording of the Goldberg Variations on the piano. |
[37:44.10] | So why don't we just hear a little more of it? |
[37:46.38] | G: Okay. |
[37:46.56] | Well, we've already heard the opening aria at the beginning of the program, |
[37:48.82] | so how about beginning with Variation 1 and just playing on until we run out of time? |
[37:53.96] | P: Sounds good to me. |
[37:56.29][MUSIC PLAYS FOR ABOUT 15 MINUTES, GOING ON TO SECOND SIDE] | |
[47:55.00] | P: Those were excerpts from Glenn Gould's new digital recording on CBS of Bach's Goldberg Variations. |
[48:01.12] | Glenn, thanks very much for coming by and talking with us today. |
[48:04.03] | G: I had a great time, Tim, |
[48:05.27] | really enjoyed it, thank you. |
[48:06.51] | P: I'm Tim Page. |
[48:07.35] | Our technician was Kevin Doyle. |
[48:08.96] | I certainly hope you enjoyed this program. |
[48:10.57][MUSIC] | |
[50:46.34][END] |
ti: interview in 1982 | |
ar: Glenn Gloud | |
al: | |
[00:00.00][MUSIC] | |
[00:24.26] | PAGE: Hello, I' m Tim Page |
[00:25.09] | and the music in the background is the opening segment from one of the most celebrated keyboard discs of all time. |
[00:31.32] | The theme from Bach' s Goldberg Variations as recorded by Glenn Gould in 1955. |
[00:37.14] | The man responsible for that recording and for approximately 85 other recordings since is my guest on today' s program. |
[00:45.07] | Glenn, thanks a lot for coming by. |
[00:46.74] | GOULD: Tim, it' s my pleasure. |
[00:48.22] | P: Glenn Gould has recently rerecorded and CBS has just released a new version of the Goldberg Variations |
[00:54.39] | and I' m sure we' ll get around to comparing the two discs in the course of this program. |
[00:58.36] | But first: Glenn, are you one of those artists |
[01:02.03] | who avoids listening to their own early or earlier recordings |
[01:06.74] | or are you the type who positively relishes, basking in the glow of sessions passed? |
[01:12.64] | G: No, I don' t think I do much basking, Tim, |
[01:14.03] | but it doesn' t really dampen my spirits at least not usually to be confronted with the sins of my youth. |
[01:19.25] | I mean I' ve never understood |
[01:21.75] | I' ve never even believed this sort of interview that one hears again and again on talk shows, |
[01:25.88] | you know, with actors profess never to see or to have never seen their own films |
[01:30.77] | you' ve heard that sort of thing, haven' t you? |
[01:32.53] | P: Oh sure, you mean the sort of thing where the interviewer will begin with something like |
[01:36.42] | " Sir John, how do you feel now about your classic Oscarwinning performance in Bridge on the River Hudson?" |
[01:44.10] | G: " Bitch, Bitch on the River Hudson? |
[01:48.58] | Oh, oh, yes, yes, I see, I see, |
[01:50.75] | that was the film we did in America wasn' t it? |
[01:52.91] | Yes. Back in the fifties I think, yes. |
[01:54.04] | Well deucedly awkward location, |
[01:56.50] | you know, thoroughly contaminated streams. |
[01:58.58] | Very, yes, marshy, is swampland indeed. |
[02:00.65] | Mosquitos even, we all had black fly, don' t you know? |
[02:03.15] | No sense of landscape architecture, the Americans, badly ruined shoreline, I can tell you. |
[02:07.73] | Nothing like upper Thames, you know. |
[02:09.98] | Oh, Not at all, no." |
[02:11.34] | P: " But did you see the picture, Sir John?" |
[02:13.87] | G: " Oh, the picture. |
[02:14.71] | No. No, I never saw the picture in its entirety, of course not. |
[02:17.24] | Did drop in at the dailies once, |
[02:19.81] | I rather fancied that spot, where Sir Arthur lost a bus load or two of commuters when the center span gave way. |
[02:25.79] | Of course he was a stickler for detail, none of those bathtub mockups for him I can tell you. |
[02:30.68] | No, not at all." |
[02:31.98] | P: " Well thank you, Sir John, don' t call us, we' ll call you." |
[02:34.64] | G: " Ah, yes, well, please do. Of course they never do." |
[02:36.91] | P: So anyway Glenn, unlike Sir John, you do revisit the scenes of your discographic youth from time to time. |
[02:43.90] | G: Oh, sure, of course I do. Though I will admit that, |
[02:45.99] | specifically, in the case of the Goldberg Variations with a bit more reluctance than is usual for me, |
[02:50.80] | a bit more from a sense of duty than enthusiasm perhaps. |
[02:54.27] | P: This is in fact your very first recording. |
[02:54.41] | G: Yeah, indeed, so I have a lot of revisiting to do, I suppose. |
[02:59.81] | P: I' m surprised that you don' t like it better because |
[03:01.72] | I find it as I wrote in an article not too long ago, critics always love to quote themselves |
[03:08.53] | that it' s a performance of originality, intelligence, and fire. |
[03:13.60] | G: Well, I thank you for that comment, I was very touched by it when I read it and I don' t quite share it. |
[03:19.83] | P: Well, when did you last quite listen to this record? |
[03:22.00] | G: Oh, let' s see, I listened to it about 3 or 4 days before I went to New York to rerecord it and that would be in April 1981. |
[03:30.06] | I just sort of wanted to remind myself of what it was like. |
[03:32.68] | And to be honest and I don' t mean to sound like our friend Sir John over there |
[03:37.05] | it had at that point been so many years since I had heard that I really was curious about what I would find. |
[03:42.94] | P: What did you find? |
[03:45.07] | G: I found that I was a rather spooky experience. |
[03:46.97] | I listened to it with great pleasure in many respects. |
[03:50.06] | I found for example that it had a real sense of humor, I think, |
[03:53.77] | all sorts of crooky, spiky accents and so on, |
[03:56.80] | that gave it a certain buoyancy. |
[03:58.87] | And I found that I recognized at all points, really, |
[04:02.22] | the fingerprints of the party responsible. |
[04:04.72] | I mean, from a tactile standpoint, from purely mechanical standpoint, |
[04:08.48] | my approach to playing the piano really hasn' t changed all that much over the years. |
[04:12.23] | It' s remained quite stable, I think, static, some people might prefer to say. |
[04:16.97] | So I recognized the fingerprints, |
[04:18.79] | but and it is a very big but |
[04:21.39] | but I could not recognize or identify with the spirit of the person who made that recording. |
[04:26.99] | It really seemed like some other spirit had been involved and, |
[04:30.47] | as a consequence, I was just very glad to be doing it again. |
[04:33.15] | P: Uhhuh. Now, that' s unusual for you because you actually seldom record anything twice. |
[04:38.47] | G: Yeah, that' s quite true. |
[04:39.72] | I' ve only rerecorded two or three things over the years. |
[04:42.56] | I guess the most obvious recent example is the Haydn Eflat Major Sonata No. 59 |
[04:47.21] | which I, oh, originally did back in the monoonly days of the ' 50s, |
[04:51.87] | but which was digitally updated just last year. |
[04:55.30] | P: Well Glenn, when you look back at a record like that |
[04:58.19] | like the early version of that Haydn sonata |
[05:00.65] | do you have the same sense of discomfort, the same qualms, |
[05:05.06] | as in the case of the early Goldbergs? |
[05:07.10] | G: No, no, not at all. |
[05:08.21] | I prefer the later version of the Haydn, |
[05:10.58] | not just sonically, but interpretively, |
[05:12.01] | but I understand the early version, you know. |
[05:14.21] | I understand why I did what I did, |
[05:16.23] | even if I wouldn' t do it in quite the same way today. |
[05:18.55] | But I' ll give you a better example, Tim, |
[05:20.21] | the Mozart Sonata in C Major, K... 330. |
[05:24.73] | P: Which was originally paired with that Haydn sonata back in the ' 50s. |
[05:26.58] | G: Yeah. That' s right, and as you know I rerecorded the Mozart |
[05:29.97] | in 1970, I think it was. |
[05:31.97] | P: As part of your survey of the complete Mozart sonatas. |
[05:34.04] | G: Mmhm. And in that instance in the case of Mozart |
[05:36.66] | I really do prefer the early version. |
[05:38.29] | P: That' s interesting. |
[05:39.13] | I like them both in their way |
[05:40.64] | I guess it depends on my mood. |
[05:42.38] | G: Well, of course, as you know, |
[05:43.29] | I harbor shall we say rather ambivalent feelings for Wolfgang Amadeus and his works. |
[05:48.38] | We better not get into that here because we will never get back to Bach if we do, |
[05:51.71] | but by 1970 when the later version was made I had already confessed my true feelings about Mozart, of course. |
[05:57.86] | P: Well, you' d called him a lousy composer. |
[06:00.00] | G: I think I used maybe more slightly gentile language, sir, |
[06:02.45] | but words to that affect nonetheless. |
[06:04.34] | Whereas maybe back in 1958 |
[06:06.87] | even though my doubts about Mozart were certainly present |
[06:09.27] | I nevertheless covered them up somehow. |
[06:12.07] | I managed a leap of faith as the theologians like to say, which I guess I just couldn' t manage twelve years later. |
[06:18.28] | P: Well, the most obvious discrepancy between those performances is one of tempi. |
[06:23.80] | And you' ve pointed this out in various articles actually |
[06:27.24] | P: the early version of Mozart is very, very slow. |
[06:29.90] | G: Indeed. |
[06:30.40] | P: And the later one if I may say so goes like the preverbal bat out of hell. |
[06:35.80] | G: Yeah, that' s absolutely true. |
[06:36.91] | Well, I have a theory visa vis my own work anyway. |
[06:41.26] | Well, something less grand of a theory, really |
[06:43.64] | it' s more like a speculative premise. |
[06:45.21] | But anyway, it goes something like this: |
[06:46.45] | I think that the great majority of the music that moves me very deeply, is music that I want to hear played or want to play myself, as the case may be |
[06:54.65] | in a very ruminative, very deliberate tempo. |
[06:58.12] | P: That' s fascinating. |
[06:59.15] | In other words, you want to savor it, you want to |
[07:02.19] | G: I, no, I don' t think so, not quite savor, no. |
[07:04.38] | Because at least to me savor somehow suggests dawdling or lingering over, or something like that. |
[07:09.96] | And I don' t mean that. |
[07:11.00] | No, firm beats, a sense of rhythmic continuity has always been terribly important to me. |
[07:15.43] | But as I' ve grown older, I find many performances certainly the great majority of my own early performances just too fast for comfort. |
[07:22.70] | I guess part of the explanation is that all the music that really interests me not just some of it, all of it is contrapuntal music. |
[07:30.83] | Whether it' s Wagner' s counterpoint or Sch? nberg' s or Bach' s or Sphaling' s ? or Haydn' s indeed, |
[07:36.14] | the music that really interests me is inevitably music with an explosion of simultaneous ideas, |
[07:41.27] | which counterpoint you know, when it' s at its best is. |
[07:43.91] | And it' s music where one I think implicitly acknowledges the essential equality of those ideas. |
[07:50.93] | And I think it follows from that with really complex contrapuntal textures, one does need a certain deliberation, a certain deliberateness, you know. |
[07:59.69] | And I think to come full circle that it' s the occasional or even the frequent lack of that deliberation |
[08:05.53] | that bothers me most in the first version of the Goldberg. |
[08:09.61] | P: Well, I think it' s time that we offered a example. |
[08:13.23] | Just to refresh your memory, let' s hear a few bars of the theme from the original 1955 version of the Goldberg Variations |
[08:20.96] | which we played at the top of the program. |
[08:23.22] | G: Good idea. |
[08:24.45][MUSIC] | |
[08:44.16] | P: Now, by way of contrast, let' s hear the whole theme as you played it in the new version. |
[08:50.14] | G: Okay. |
[08:51.52][MUSIC] | |
[11:57.81] | P: Well, Glenn, I put a stopwatch on that. |
[12:00.82] | Do you want to guess the relationship between the two tempi or do you know already? |
[12:05.72] | G: I know approximately |
[12:06.69] | it' s about 2: 1, isn' t it? |
[12:08.17] | P: Just about. |
[12:09.21] | The original version clocks in at 1 minute, 51 seconds, |
[12:12.67] | and the new version at 3 minutes, 4 seconds. |
[12:16.13] | Let' s call it a ratio of a little quick math here |
[12:19.07] | G: Yes. Pocket calculator. P: 12: 7. |
[12:21.12] | G: Well, I think my guess was close enough for government work. |
[12:23.10] | P: Sure? G: But the reprise of the theme, the aria de capo at the end, that' s even slower, isn' t it? |
[12:28.45] | P: Yes, indeed. |
[12:29.83] | P: Would you believe 3 minutes, 42 seconds, in the new version? G: You' ve got you' ve got them all there. |
[12:34.16] | G: You did come prepared. Yes, I believe that. |
[12:36.78] | P: Versus, uh let me get that. Versus 2 minutes, 7 seconds, in the de capo from the original version. |
[12:42.78] | G: I' m dealing with a stopwatch freak. |
[12:44.23] | P: Well, not really, but I did take a pulse of this recording if you don' t mind a metaphor there. |
[12:49.77] | As a matter of fact, I timed all the variations in both versions. |
[12:53.61]G: Good, thanks Tim.[DROPS VOICE] | |
[12:55.25] | P: Because when I first heard the new recording |
[12:57.00] | specifically when I first heard the tempo of the theme |
[12:59.18] | I thought to myself, |
[13:00.16] | " Well, this has got to be a tworecord set." |
[13:02.50] | G: Yes. |
[13:02.97] | P: Well, it' s obviously not a tworecord set. |
[13:05.01] | And I discovered eventually that it' s only about thirteen minutes longer than the original 1955 version. |
[13:11.70] | G: That' s right. It' s about what? 51 minutes? Something like that? |
[13:13.28] | P: 51 minutes, 14 seconds. |
[13:15.75] | G: I stand corrected. |
[13:17.16] | P: Versus 38 minutes, 17 seconds, in 1955. |
[13:20.08] | G: Ahh, I was a speed demon in those days, I tell you. |
[13:23.30] | P: Well, not really, because |
[13:25.72] | you know what really puzzled me Glenn, and in fact got me onto this whole timing kick, was that in the new version you observe |
[13:32.16] | well, by no means all, but certainly a good number |
[13:35.30] | I guess about a dozen of the first repeats. |
[13:37.88] | G: Yeah, that' s right. |
[13:38.69] | I did them in all the canons, so that would be that' d be nine. |
[13:41.67] | And then in the fuguetta, which is Variation 10, and the quadlivet, which is Variation 30, |
[13:46.89] | and a couple of the other fuguetta like variations. |
[13:49.28] | I guess about I think thirteen in all have first repeats. |
[13:52.62] | P: Yeah, but you see my point. |
[13:53.75] | When you subtract the amount of time devoted to those repeats from the total 51 minutes or whatever, |
[13:59.65] | the overall timing is really not that different from the original version which didn' t have any repeats at all. |
[14:05.10] | G: Son of a gun. |
[14:06.31] | P: So you did in fact observe tempi that were not that much slower in many cases in the new version. |
[14:11.93] | G: That' s true. |
[14:13.02] | P: And in one or two very notable variations, |
[14:16.31] | you actually played more quickly |
[14:18.31] | and yet the feeling, the mood, the architecture of this performance is just so totally different that, |
[14:25.32] | frankly, I can' t figure it out. |
[14:27.00] | G: Well, as a matter of fact, you practically have figured it out Tim. |
[14:30.79] | And I want to say right now, |
[14:32.20] | I was kidding when I asked if you were a stopwatch fetishist, |
[14:34.25] | because the way that this performance was constructed was worked out |
[14:38.34] | has in fact actually a great deal to do with something very like a stopwatch, you know. |
[14:42.06] | P: Uhhuh. |
[14:43.13] | G: Let me back up a little bit. |
[14:45.03] | I' ve come to feel over the years that a musical work |
[14:48.76] | however long it may be ought to have basically I was going to say " one tempo," |
[14:53.72] | but that' s the wrong word |
[14:54.75] | one pulse rate, one constant rhythmic reference point. |
[14:58.21] | Now obviously there couldn' t be any more deadly dull than to exploit one beat that goes on and on and on indefinitely. |
[15:04.70] | I mean, that' s what drives me up the wall about, about rock, you know, |
[15:08.90] | and about |
[15:10.57] | I say this in the presence of his most committed advocate and art and propagandist about minimalism. |
[15:15.55] | P: Oh, I think we should argue that one another time ... |
[15:19.00] | G: Yeah, probably so. |
[15:19.69] | Anyway I would never argue in favor of a inflexible musical pulse. |
[15:23.69] | You know, that just destroys any music. |
[15:25.60] | But you can take basic pulse and divide it and multiply it |
[15:29.13] | not necessarily on a scale of 2, 4, 8, 16, 32 but often with far less obvious divisions, I think. |
[15:35.05] | And make the result of those divisions or multiplications act as a subsidiary pulse |
[15:39.44] | for a particular movement or section of a movement or whatever. |
[15:41.92] | And I think this doesn' t in any way preclude blubatti. |
[15:47.48] | If you have an accelerando, for example, you simply use the accelerando as a transition between two aspects of the same basic pulse, you know. |
[15:52.60] | P: Sure, sure. |
[15:54.28] | G: So, in the case of the Goldberg, |
[15:55.13] | there is in fact one pulse which with a few very minor modifications, |
[16:00.24] | mostly modifications which I think take their cue from retards at the end of the preceding variation, something like that |
[16:06.36] | one pulse that runs all the way throughout. |
[16:08.87] | P: Can you give us an example of that? |
[16:11.42] | G: Sure. Well, maybe I shouldn' t be so confident. |
[16:13.92] | I' ll try. |
[16:15.59] | Let' s see. |
[16:16.76] | Let' s take the beginning of side two of the record, okay? |
[16:19.84] | P: Now that would be the French overture, Variation 16? |
[16:22.49] | G: Yeah, yeah. As you know, the French overture is divided into two sections: |
[16:25.45] | The dotted rhythm sequence, |
[16:27.42] | which gave it its name, |
[16:28.31] | which I guess from French opera tradition |
[16:30.48] | and a little fuguetta for the second half. |
[16:33.32] | The first section is written with four quarter notes to the bar |
[16:37.78] | humming: puang delililiyang tatamtata diyang dididididididididi |
[16:45.45] | and the fuguetta, |
[16:47.39] | on the other hand, |
[16:48.18] | is in threeeight time. |
[16:49.47] | In other words, each bar in the fuguetta contains 1 1 2 quarter notes or dotted quarters, as musicians like to call it. |
[16:56.29] | humming: down depapapapapingpangpang yapapapapabiyangpabidangden so on. |
[17:01.44] | Now, you' ll find, I think, |
[17:03.19] | that the quarter notes in the first half are almost identical to the dotted quarter notes in the second half. |
[17:08.78] | In other words, |
[17:09.31] | four bars of the second half of the fuguetta is approximately equal to one bar of the opening overture section. |
[17:16.14] | So the relationship, then, is something like this: |
[17:18.70] | humming: puor rederededi tatamtatam dadadadadiyama yatatatata |
[17:24.70] | P: I see. |
[17:25.74] | Now what happens in the next variation, |
[17:27.53] | in Variation 17. |
[17:29.53] | G: Well, now, that was a bit more complicated, |
[17:30.36] | because it' s written in threequarter time, with three quarter notes to the bar. |
[17:34.85] | There' s nothing complicated about that, as Johann Strauss pretty conclusively proved. |
[17:38.83] | But what was complicated was that |
[17:41.02] | I wanted to relate it somehow to the fuguetta from Variation 16 with its threeeight time signature. |
[17:46.98] | And in fact at first, |
[17:47.97] | I considered just taking the beat from the full bar |
[17:51.43] | the dotted quarter note of the fuguetta |
[17:53.13] | and making that beat equivalent to the beat of the undotted quarter |
[17:57.77] | if I can coin a word of Variation 17. |
[18:00.66] | Now that would have resulted in a tempo something like |
[18:04.85] | humming: yababababi babababababababababa . |
[18:08.54] | You know, which sounds okay when you sing it, not bad at all. |
[18:11.43] | But Variation 17 is one of those rather skittish, slightly beheaded collections of scales and arpeggios |
[18:19.24] | which Bach indulged when he wasn' t writing sober and proper things like fugues and canons. |
[18:23.39] | And it just seemed to me that there wasn' t enough substance to it to warrant such a methodical, deliberate, Germanic tempo. |
[18:29.86] | P: In other words, you' re basically saying that you didn' t like it enough to play it slowly. |
[18:34.68] | G: You got it. |
[18:35.66] | So instead of using the dotted quarter from the fuguetta as my yardstick for Variation 17, |
[18:40.77] | I took twothirds of it, twothirds of a bar from the fuguetta and used the actual quarter note, |
[18:45.55] | which that twothirds represents. |
[18:47.05] | Now, instead of the beat I sang before |
[18:49.49] | which was roughly humming: yababababiyababababa |
[18:52.89] | the new beat gave you three for the price of two and that applied to Variation 17 allowed for a much more effervescent tempo, |
[19:00.31] | something like humming: bababababi bababababalabababi debaba. |
[19:03.82] | P: Uhhuh. And then of course, there' s Variation 18, which is one of the canons. |
[19:07.64] | G: Yeah, the canon at the Sixth. |
[19:08.53] | I adore it, it' s a gem. |
[19:10.39] | Well, I adore all the canons, really. |
[19:12.02] | But it' s one of my favorite variations, certainly. |
[19:14.52] | Anyway, it' s written with four quarter notes in a bar, but actually only two beats, two half notes to a bar. |
[19:22.10] | humming: yangdipangbi yapapang bababangbababangbababangbangbang |
[19:27.57] | P: So basically what you did is turn the quarter note of Variation 17 into the half note of Variation 18. |
[19:33.01] | G: Exactly, yeah. |
[19:34.37] | P: Oh, well, Glenn. |
[19:35.83] | I don' t think I can keep much more of this in my head at the moment. |
[19:38.61] | G: I' m sure that I can' t either actually |
[19:40.75] | it' s been a struggle. |
[19:41.54] | P: I think we should listen to those three variations |
[19:44.01] | Variation 16 through 18 of Bach' s Goldberg Variations right now. |
[19:48.34] | G: Good idea. |
[19:49.90][MUSIC] | |
[23:27.79] | P: Those were Variations 16 through 18 from Bach' s Goldberg Variations in a new recording by Glenn Gould. |
[23:34.17] | You know something, Glenn? |
[23:35.27] | I felt it. |
[23:36.19] | I don' t know if I would have actually been able to spot what you did just listening to it, |
[23:41.40] | but there was a link between those variations. |
[23:44.35] | I could oh, I could feel it in my bones. |
[23:47.75] | G: Well, I' m really glad, |
[23:48.87] | it' s nice of you to say that, |
[23:49.64] | because I' ve been sitting here squirming in my chair, |
[23:52.37] | as you know, |
[23:52.88] | wishing I' d never said a word on the subject. |
[23:54.00] | P: Oh, don' t be ridiculous. |
[23:55.24] | G: Well, you know, |
[23:56.00] | when one describes a process this way, |
[23:58.33] | it sounds just so relentlessly clinical, so ruthlessly sterile and antimusical, really. |
[24:03.66] | And I |
[24:04.22] | it is at that level |
[24:05.67] | it' s almost embarrassing. |
[24:06.41] | I' m sorry, I apologize for ... |
[24:07.00] | P: Whoa, whoa. |
[24:07.76] | Don' t please don' t be embarrassed, |
[24:09.00] | because I think you' ve given us a remarkable insight into your working method. |
[24:12.84] | G: Well, thank you. |
[24:13.47] | But you know what I mean. |
[24:14.65] | On the face of it, |
[24:14.97] | it' s exactly like analyzing a particular tone row of Schnberg, for example, and saying, |
[24:18.87] | " Well, this is a wonderfully symmetrical tone row, |
[24:21.22] | therefore it must inevitably lead to a wonderfully symmetrical work." |
[24:23.72] | P: I' ve heard that talk before. |
[24:25.38] | G: Exactly. |
[24:25.79] | And it ain' t necessarily so. |
[24:27.07] | I think it' s a technique, the idea of rhythmic continuity that' s really only useful if everybody does feel it in their bones, |
[24:34.85] | you know, |
[24:35.33] | to use your words |
[24:35.91] | experiences it subliminally, |
[24:37.42] | in other words and absolutely nobody actually notices what' s really going on. |
[24:42.21] | P: Which was exactly the way Schnberg felt about his tone rows. |
[24:45.25] | G: Precisely. |
[24:46.70] | P: Well, now, you didn' t just invent this system for the Goldberg Variations on this. |
[24:50.01] | G: Oh, certainly not, no. |
[24:51.11] | I' ve used it for years. |
[24:52.20] | It' s just that I' ve used it more and more rigorously as the years have gone by. |
[24:55.04] | P: Well, Glenn, I think I' d be doing something less than my duty as an interviewer |
[24:59.12] | if I failed to ask whether this rhythmic system of yours didn' t perhaps have some small part to play in a rather celebrated brouhaha |
[25:07.64] | G: Ah, I felt it coming. Yes. |
[25:08.20] | P: which took place about twenty years ago |
[25:10.25] | and involved you, |
[25:11.24] | the Brahms D Minor Concerto, |
[25:12.91] | Leonard Bernstein |
[25:14.28] | and the New York Philharmonic. |
[25:15.06] | G: It certainly did. |
[25:16.49] | That was one of the first really clear, really thorough demonstrations of this system. |
[25:20.84] | And, you know, Tim, |
[25:22.00] | I maintain to this day that what shocked everybody, visa vis the interpretation |
[25:25.56] | of course there was some people who were just shocked by the onstage admission |
[25:28.35] | that a conductor and a soloist could have a profound disagreement, |
[25:31.05] | which everybody knows perfectly well goes on offstage anyway. |
[25:33.37] | But what shocked them about the interpretation, I think, was not the basic tempo itself. |
[25:37.84] | Certainly, the basic tempo was very slow, |
[25:41.00] | it was unusually slow, |
[25:41.62] | but I' ve heard many other performances which didn' t shock anybody with opening themes very nearly as slow, |
[25:47.40] | sort of humming: Viiiiiyoungpie jiuyangbing |
[25:52.39] | It was to come back to our Goldberg discussion, |
[25:54.75] | the relationship between themes that shocked them. |
[25:56.67] | It was the fact, for example, that the second theme of the first movement of the Brahms |
[26:00.77] | humming: Duadidididongdi |
[26:04.94] | which, after all, is an inversion of the first theme |
[26:07.00] | was not appreciably slower than the first theme. |
[26:09.51] | It was, in fact, played with something like Haydnesque continuity |
[26:13.66] | instead of, I guess, what most people anticipate as Brahmsian contrast, you know. |
[26:17.05] | P: I' m going to anthropomorphize a bit here. |
[26:19.34] | G: Good heavens. |
[26:21.03] | P: And wager a guess that |
[26:23.35] | what they objected to was the fact that it didn' t present the |
[26:27.48] | well, shall we say |
[26:28.42] | masculinefeminine contrast that one has come to expect. |
[26:30.00] | G: Mmhm, mmhm. |
[26:31.92] | Exactly. |
[26:32.69] | I I' ll stick with your terms |
[26:34.00] | presented an asexual or maybe a unisexual view of the work, you know. |
[26:35.93] | P: Mmhm. |
[26:37.88] | G: But you see, |
[26:38.26] | in the case of the Goldberg, |
[26:39.48] | I felt there was an ever greater necessity for this system than in a work like the Brahms D Minor. |
[26:44.95] | Because as you know, |
[26:45.52] | the Goldberg is an extraordinary collection of moods and textures. |
[26:48.75] | I mean, think of Variation 15 |
[26:50.37] | we haven' t heard it yet today, |
[26:52.15] | but think of it anyway. |
[26:53.00][PAGE BEGINS TO MIMIC PASSAGE OF MUSIC] | |
[26:59.01] | G: Exactly. |
[26:59.32] | It' s the most severe and rigorous and beautiful canon |
[27:02.40] | we didn' t sing it all that severely and rigorously, |
[27:04.39] | but it is. |
[27:04.96] | The most severe and beautiful canon that I know. |
[27:07.76] | The canon, an inversion of the Fifth. |
[27:09.29] | To be so moving, |
[27:10.86] | so anguished |
[27:11.71] | and so uplifting at the same time, |
[27:13.88] | that it would not be in any way out of place in the St. Matthew Passion. |
[27:16.79] | Matter of fact, |
[27:17.41] | I' ve always thought of Variation 15 as the perfect Good Friday spell, you know. |
[27:20.92] | Well, anyway, |
[27:22.11] | a movement like that is preceded by Variation 14, |
[27:25.05] | logically enough, |
[27:25.66] | which is certainly one of the giddiest bits of neoScarlattism imaginable. |
[27:30.67] | P: Crosshand versions and all. |
[27:32.21] | G: Yeah. |
[27:32.36] | And quite simply the trap in this work, |
[27:35.35] | in the Goldberg, |
[27:36.02] | is to avoid letting it come across as thirty independent pieces, |
[27:38.76] | because if one gives each of those movements their head, |
[27:40.94] | it can very easily do just that. |
[27:42.97] | So I thought that here in the Goldberg Variations, |
[27:45.66] | this system was a necessity. |
[27:47.60] | And quite frankly, |
[27:48.36] | in the version on this record, |
[27:50.00] | I applied it more rigorously than I ever have to any work before. |
[27:53.56] | P: Well, you mentioned Variation 15 |
[27:55.57] | and of course it' s only one of three variations in the minor key, in G minor. |
[27:59.92] | There is another of that trio, No. 25, |
[28:03.64] | that I' d like to talk about for just a moment. |
[28:05.76] | I guess in many ways it' s the most famous |
[28:07.95] | well, certainly the longest of all the variations. |
[28:09.70] | G: Absolutely. |
[28:10.92] | It' s also the most talkedabout among musicians, I think. |
[28:13.65] | P: Well, with good reason. |
[28:14.62] | I mean, what an extraordinary chromatic texture. |
[28:17.05] | G: Yeah, I don' t think there' s been a richer load of enharmonic relationships any place between Gezhwaldo and Wagner. |
[28:24.04] | P: Well, I remember you used it in your soundtrack for the film Slaughterhouse Five. |
[28:27.69] | G: That' s right, |
[28:28.18] | and to accompany of all things the burning of Dresden. |
[28:31.23] | P: Indeed. |
[28:31.83] | Well, I want to play just a few bars of this variation in both versions. |
[28:36.40] | G: We really have to hear the early one, eh? |
[28:37.60] | P: Oh, I think we must. |
[28:39.40] | The contrast is, mmm, shall we say, striking? |
[28:43.04] | G: That it is. |
[28:43.81][MUSIC PLAYS UNDER THE FOLLOWING DIALOGUE] | |
[28:49.03] | P: Now, this is the 1955 version. |
[28:51.06] | G: Which sounds remarkably like a Chopin nocturne, doesn' t it? |
[28:54.73] | P: No. I think on it' s own terms though, Glenn, that this is really lovely playing. |
[28:59.75] | G: Well, yeah, it' s okay, I guess, |
[29:00.62] | but there' s a lot of pianoplaying going on there. |
[29:03.69] | And I mean that as the most disparaging comment possible. |
[29:07.17] | You know, the line is being pulled every which way, |
[29:10.67] | there are cute little dynamic dips and tempo shifts |
[29:14.17] | like that one |
[29:15.22] | things that pass for expressive fervor in your average conservatory, I guess. |
[29:19.88] | P: Do you really despise this version? |
[29:22.93] | G: No, I don' t despise it. |
[29:24.66] | I recognize you know, it' s very welldone of its kind. |
[29:26.85] | I guess I just don' t happen to like its kind very much any more. |
[29:30.26] | And I also recognize |
[29:31.40] | to be fair |
[29:31.97] | that many people will probably prefer this early version. |
[29:35.26] | They might people may find the new one rather stark and spare emotionally. |
[29:39.62] | But this variation number 25 |
[29:42.76] | represents everything that I mistrust in the early, in the early version of |
[29:47.30] | it wears its heart on its sleeve. |
[29:49.85] | It seems to say, |
[29:50.65] | " Please take note this is tragedy." |
[29:52.94] | You know, it doesn' t have the dignity to bear its suffering with a hint of quiet resignation. |
[29:59.09] | P: And the new version does. |
[30:01.00] | G: Well, I' m prejudiced, |
[30:02.50] | but I think it does, yeah. |
[30:03.59] | P: Well, we' re approaching a cadence, |
[30:06.02] | so why don' t we use that excuse to switch over to the new version? |
[30:10.05] | G: It couldn' t come to soon for me. |
[30:11.49][MUSIC CONTINUES SANS DIALOGUE TO END] | |
[31:37.56] | P: Glenn, I do see your point. |
[31:39.26] | The 1955 version of this variation is definitely more romantic or, |
[31:44.09] | if you prefer, |
[31:45.67] | more pianistic. |
[31:46.73] | G: Yeah, exactly. |
[31:47.01] | P: And I dare say that no discussion of Bach |
[31:49.80] | would be complete without taking a crack at that old, |
[31:52.54] | somewhat tired question of the choice of instrument. |
[31:55.52] | G: Yeah. |
[31:55.83] | P: The piano versus the harpsichord and so on. |
[31:57.78] | G: Harpsichord and all that, yeah. |
[31:59.08] | No, I dare say not. |
[31:59.93] | You know, somebody said to me the other day that |
[32:02.52] | now that the fortepiano has staged such a remarkable comeback for Mozart and Beethoven and so on |
[32:07.77] | nd now that people are playing Chopin on period playelles or whatever |
[32:11.07] | in no time at all, |
[32:12.67] | there' ll be nothing left for the contemporary piano to do, |
[32:14.49] | except maybe the Rachmaninoff Third. |
[32:15.96] | And even that |
[32:17.13] | if you take these archeological pursuits to their illogical extremes |
[32:20.47] | should really be played on a turnofthecentury German Steinway or maybe a Bechstadt. |
[32:25.00] | P: That' s really true. |
[32:26.04] | G: Yeah, well, |
[32:26.47] | I think frankly that the whole issue of Bach on the piano is a red herring. |
[32:31.44] | I love the harpsichord. |
[32:32.75] | As you know, |
[32:33.35] | I made a harpsichord record some years ago. |
[32:34.31] | P: Oh, sure, the Handel suites. |
[32:35.46] | G: Yeah. And I' m very fond of the fortepiano in such things as Mozart concertos and so forth. |
[32:40.98] | So I' m certainly not going to sit here and argue that the modern piano has some intrinsic value, |
[32:46.16] | just because of its modernness. |
[32:47.54] | I' m not going to argue that new is better. |
[32:49.25] | You know, new is simply new. |
[32:50.83] | But having said that, |
[32:52.56] | I must also say that the piano, |
[32:55.05] | at its best, |
[32:56.10] | offers a range of articulation that far surpasses any older instrument. |
[33:00.81] | That it actually can be made to serve the contrapuntal qualities of Bach, for example, |
[33:05.16] | the linear concepts of Bach in a way that the harpsichord |
[33:07.88] | for all its beauty and charm and authenticity |
[33:11.07] | you know, cannot. |
[33:12.32] | P: Well, I feel a little bit like I' m needling you, |
[33:15.30] | but it' s been remarked by just about everybody at one time or another |
[33:19.37] | that your piano has actually always seemed to end up sounding a bit like surrogate harpsichords. |
[33:24.79] | And I don' t know whether it' s because of the way you play these instruments |
[33:28.09] | or the way you have them adjusted or |
[33:28.95] | G: Well, I think it' s a combination. |
[33:30.74] | You know, I' ve always believed, |
[33:32.26] | you see, Tim, |
[33:33.22] | that one should start by worrying about the action of the instrument and not the sound. |
[33:36.80] | If you regulate an action with enormous care, |
[33:39.70] | make it so even and responsive and articulate that it just sort of sits there and looks at you and says, |
[33:45.00] | " You want to play this in Eflat, right?" you know. |
[33:47.04] | That it virtually plays itself, |
[33:48.35] | in other words, |
[33:49.02] | then the tone will just take care of itself. |
[33:51.50] | Because the tone, the sound, |
[33:53.28] | whatever you want to call it |
[33:54.32] | that one produces really ought to be part of the interpretive concept of the piece. |
[33:58.43] | And if you are dealing with an action that' s totally responsive, |
[34:01.67] | you know, |
[34:02.00] | you are then free to really concentrate exclusively on the concept in all of its facets, which includes the tone. |
[34:08.08] | P: Nevertheless, |
[34:09.05] | the tone quality in all your records |
[34:11.24] | and certainly all your Bach records |
[34:12.96] | is remarkably similar. |
[34:14.89] | It' s consistently crisp, |
[34:16.06] | a little dry perhaps, |
[34:17.89] | astonishingly varied in its detacher ? way. |
[34:21.24] | As a matter of fact, |
[34:22.03] | it' s often been likened to an Xray of the music. |
[34:24.62] | G: Well, thank you, |
[34:25.15] | I take that as a compliment. |
[34:26.41] | P: Oh, it' s actually meant to be. |
[34:27.54] | G: Thank you again. |
[34:28.52] | Well, you know, |
[34:29.51] | there are certain personal taboos, |
[34:31.27] | especially in playing Bach, |
[34:32.69] | that I almost never violate. |
[34:34.35] | P: Well, I know one of them for sure: |
[34:36.07] | You never use the sustaining pedal. |
[34:36.91] | G: That' s right. |
[34:37.33] | P: Because I saw that German television film |
[34:40.21] | that was made when you actually recorded the new Goldbergs. |
[34:43.03] | G: Oh, yeah, yeah. |
[34:43.50] | P: And it was honestly rather astonishing |
[34:45.90] | to see you sitting there, |
[34:47.31] | thirteen inches off the floor, |
[34:49.47] | in your stocking feet. |
[34:50.89] | And when the camera pulled back, |
[34:52.47] | they were nowhere near the sustaining pedal. |
[34:54.82] | G: That' s true. |
[34:55.68] | P: But you do use the soft pedal a good deal. |
[34:58.39] | G: Yes, I do, |
[34:59.00] | because by playing on two strings instead of three, |
[35:01.49] | you get a much more specific, much leaner quality of sound. |
[35:04.75] | But I think really that the primary tonal concept that I maintain with regard to Bach is that of |
[35:10.04] | well, I think you used the word detacher ?, |
[35:12.82] | but it' s the idea anyway that a nonlegato state, |
[35:16.58] | a nonlegato relationship |
[35:18.02] | or a pointillistic relationship, |
[35:19.38] | if you want, |
[35:19.84] | between two consecutive notes is the norm, |
[35:23.00] | not the exception. |
[35:24.11] | That the legato link, indeed, is the exception. |
[35:27.06] | P: You realize, of course, |
[35:28.53] | that you' re turning the basic premise of pianoplaying inside out. |
[35:31.61] | G: Well, trying to, anyway. |
[35:33.01] | And as far as the question of whether it' s appropriate to play this music on the piano is concerned, |
[35:37.98] | I think one has to remember that here was a man, |
[35:40.24] | Bach, |
[35:40.61] | who was himself one of the great transcribers of all time. |
[35:43.77] | You know, a man who took Marcello' s oboe concerto, for example, |
[35:46.82] | and made a solo harpsichord piece of it |
[35:48.71] | I recently recorded it, so it' s on my mind. |
[35:51.06] | Who rewrote his own violin concertos for the harpsichord or viceversa. |
[35:55.27] | Who rewrote his harpsichord concerto just for the organ. |
[35:58.01] | You know, the list just goes on and on. |
[35:59.05] | Who wrote |
[36:00.70] | as his masterpiece, I think |
[36:02.44] | The Art of the Fugue |
[36:03.06] | and gave us music that works on a harpsichord, |
[36:05.61] | on an organ, |
[36:06.76] | with a string quartet, |
[36:08.13] | with a string orchestra |
[36:08.80] | he didn' t specify. |
[36:09.40] | Certainly with a woodwind quartet or quintet, with a brass quartet. |
[36:13.20] | It works astonishingly well with a saxophone quartet |
[36:15.41] | I heard it once that way. |
[36:15.59] | P: No kidding? No kidding. |
[36:16.50] | G: Yep. I just think that all the evidence suggests that |
[36:19.68] | Bach didn' t give a hoot about specific sonority or even volume. |
[36:23.15] | But I think he did care |
[36:24.30] | to an almost fanatic degree |
[36:25.56] | about the integrity of his structures, you know. |
[36:27.53] | I think he would have been delighted by any sound that was born out of a respect for the necessity, |
[36:32.62] | the abstract necessity of those structures and appalled |
[36:36.03] | amused maybe, but appalled nonetheless |
[36:38.24] | by any sound that was born out of the notion that by glossing over those structures, |
[36:42.84] | it could improve upon them in some way. |
[36:44.09] | I don' t think he cared whether the B minor mass was sung by sixteen or 160 |
[36:48.11] | I think he cared how they sang it. |
[36:50.05] | I certainly don' t think that |
[36:51.94] | he who transposed practically everything of his own up and down the octave |
[36:56.19] | to suit himself |
[36:56.72] | and the particular needs of the court |
[36:58.20] | and the instruments he was writing for |
[36:59.30] | would have cared whether it was sung in B minor |
[37:01.47] | according to our current frequency readings |
[37:03.07] | or in B flat plus or minus A did?, minor as is now the habit in certain Puritan circles. |
[37:08.83] | I think he would have to loved to hear his Brandenberg concertos as Wendy Carlos has realized them on the synthesizer. |
[37:14.25] | I think even delighted with what the Swingle Singers did in the ninth fugue from The Art of Fugue some years ago. |
[37:19.43] | But I think he would have been appalled by the way Arnold Schnberg orchestrally mangled his ... fugue, you know. |
[37:24.47] | P: His Stakovsky ? and the D minor toccata. |
[37:26.00] | G: Yeah, or the way Busoni or Tosig ? or some of those characters corrupted the keyboard, whereas |
[37:30.50] | I think it' s a question of attitude, just that. |
[37:32.93] | I think the question of instrument, per se, |
[37:35.06] | you konw, is of no importance whatsoever. |
[37:37.84] | P: Well, I think that Bach would have been delighted |
[37:40.24] | with what you' ve done in this new recording of the Goldberg Variations on the piano. |
[37:44.10] | So why don' t we just hear a little more of it? |
[37:46.38] | G: Okay. |
[37:46.56] | Well, we' ve already heard the opening aria at the beginning of the program, |
[37:48.82] | so how about beginning with Variation 1 and just playing on until we run out of time? |
[37:53.96] | P: Sounds good to me. |
[37:56.29][MUSIC PLAYS FOR ABOUT 15 MINUTES, GOING ON TO SECOND SIDE] | |
[47:55.00] | P: Those were excerpts from Glenn Gould' s new digital recording on CBS of Bach' s Goldberg Variations. |
[48:01.12] | Glenn, thanks very much for coming by and talking with us today. |
[48:04.03] | G: I had a great time, Tim, |
[48:05.27] | really enjoyed it, thank you. |
[48:06.51] | P: I' m Tim Page. |
[48:07.35] | Our technician was Kevin Doyle. |
[48:08.96] | I certainly hope you enjoyed this program. |
[48:10.57][MUSIC] | |
[50:46.34][END] |
ti: interview in 1982 | |
ar: Glenn Gloud | |
al: | |
[00:00.00][MUSIC] | |
[00:24.26] | PAGE: Hello, I' m Tim Page |
[00:25.09] | and the music in the background is the opening segment from one of the most celebrated keyboard discs of all time. |
[00:31.32] | The theme from Bach' s Goldberg Variations as recorded by Glenn Gould in 1955. |
[00:37.14] | The man responsible for that recording and for approximately 85 other recordings since is my guest on today' s program. |
[00:45.07] | Glenn, thanks a lot for coming by. |
[00:46.74] | GOULD: Tim, it' s my pleasure. |
[00:48.22] | P: Glenn Gould has recently rerecorded and CBS has just released a new version of the Goldberg Variations |
[00:54.39] | and I' m sure we' ll get around to comparing the two discs in the course of this program. |
[00:58.36] | But first: Glenn, are you one of those artists |
[01:02.03] | who avoids listening to their own early or earlier recordings |
[01:06.74] | or are you the type who positively relishes, basking in the glow of sessions passed? |
[01:12.64] | G: No, I don' t think I do much basking, Tim, |
[01:14.03] | but it doesn' t really dampen my spirits at least not usually to be confronted with the sins of my youth. |
[01:19.25] | I mean I' ve never understood |
[01:21.75] | I' ve never even believed this sort of interview that one hears again and again on talk shows, |
[01:25.88] | you know, with actors profess never to see or to have never seen their own films |
[01:30.77] | you' ve heard that sort of thing, haven' t you? |
[01:32.53] | P: Oh sure, you mean the sort of thing where the interviewer will begin with something like |
[01:36.42] | " Sir John, how do you feel now about your classic Oscarwinning performance in Bridge on the River Hudson?" |
[01:44.10] | G: " Bitch, Bitch on the River Hudson? |
[01:48.58] | Oh, oh, yes, yes, I see, I see, |
[01:50.75] | that was the film we did in America wasn' t it? |
[01:52.91] | Yes. Back in the fifties I think, yes. |
[01:54.04] | Well deucedly awkward location, |
[01:56.50] | you know, thoroughly contaminated streams. |
[01:58.58] | Very, yes, marshy, is swampland indeed. |
[02:00.65] | Mosquitos even, we all had black fly, don' t you know? |
[02:03.15] | No sense of landscape architecture, the Americans, badly ruined shoreline, I can tell you. |
[02:07.73] | Nothing like upper Thames, you know. |
[02:09.98] | Oh, Not at all, no." |
[02:11.34] | P: " But did you see the picture, Sir John?" |
[02:13.87] | G: " Oh, the picture. |
[02:14.71] | No. No, I never saw the picture in its entirety, of course not. |
[02:17.24] | Did drop in at the dailies once, |
[02:19.81] | I rather fancied that spot, where Sir Arthur lost a bus load or two of commuters when the center span gave way. |
[02:25.79] | Of course he was a stickler for detail, none of those bathtub mockups for him I can tell you. |
[02:30.68] | No, not at all." |
[02:31.98] | P: " Well thank you, Sir John, don' t call us, we' ll call you." |
[02:34.64] | G: " Ah, yes, well, please do. Of course they never do." |
[02:36.91] | P: So anyway Glenn, unlike Sir John, you do revisit the scenes of your discographic youth from time to time. |
[02:43.90] | G: Oh, sure, of course I do. Though I will admit that, |
[02:45.99] | specifically, in the case of the Goldberg Variations with a bit more reluctance than is usual for me, |
[02:50.80] | a bit more from a sense of duty than enthusiasm perhaps. |
[02:54.27] | P: This is in fact your very first recording. |
[02:54.41] | G: Yeah, indeed, so I have a lot of revisiting to do, I suppose. |
[02:59.81] | P: I' m surprised that you don' t like it better because |
[03:01.72] | I find it as I wrote in an article not too long ago, critics always love to quote themselves |
[03:08.53] | that it' s a performance of originality, intelligence, and fire. |
[03:13.60] | G: Well, I thank you for that comment, I was very touched by it when I read it and I don' t quite share it. |
[03:19.83] | P: Well, when did you last quite listen to this record? |
[03:22.00] | G: Oh, let' s see, I listened to it about 3 or 4 days before I went to New York to rerecord it and that would be in April 1981. |
[03:30.06] | I just sort of wanted to remind myself of what it was like. |
[03:32.68] | And to be honest and I don' t mean to sound like our friend Sir John over there |
[03:37.05] | it had at that point been so many years since I had heard that I really was curious about what I would find. |
[03:42.94] | P: What did you find? |
[03:45.07] | G: I found that I was a rather spooky experience. |
[03:46.97] | I listened to it with great pleasure in many respects. |
[03:50.06] | I found for example that it had a real sense of humor, I think, |
[03:53.77] | all sorts of crooky, spiky accents and so on, |
[03:56.80] | that gave it a certain buoyancy. |
[03:58.87] | And I found that I recognized at all points, really, |
[04:02.22] | the fingerprints of the party responsible. |
[04:04.72] | I mean, from a tactile standpoint, from purely mechanical standpoint, |
[04:08.48] | my approach to playing the piano really hasn' t changed all that much over the years. |
[04:12.23] | It' s remained quite stable, I think, static, some people might prefer to say. |
[04:16.97] | So I recognized the fingerprints, |
[04:18.79] | but and it is a very big but |
[04:21.39] | but I could not recognize or identify with the spirit of the person who made that recording. |
[04:26.99] | It really seemed like some other spirit had been involved and, |
[04:30.47] | as a consequence, I was just very glad to be doing it again. |
[04:33.15] | P: Uhhuh. Now, that' s unusual for you because you actually seldom record anything twice. |
[04:38.47] | G: Yeah, that' s quite true. |
[04:39.72] | I' ve only rerecorded two or three things over the years. |
[04:42.56] | I guess the most obvious recent example is the Haydn Eflat Major Sonata No. 59 |
[04:47.21] | which I, oh, originally did back in the monoonly days of the ' 50s, |
[04:51.87] | but which was digitally updated just last year. |
[04:55.30] | P: Well Glenn, when you look back at a record like that |
[04:58.19] | like the early version of that Haydn sonata |
[05:00.65] | do you have the same sense of discomfort, the same qualms, |
[05:05.06] | as in the case of the early Goldbergs? |
[05:07.10] | G: No, no, not at all. |
[05:08.21] | I prefer the later version of the Haydn, |
[05:10.58] | not just sonically, but interpretively, |
[05:12.01] | but I understand the early version, you know. |
[05:14.21] | I understand why I did what I did, |
[05:16.23] | even if I wouldn' t do it in quite the same way today. |
[05:18.55] | But I' ll give you a better example, Tim, |
[05:20.21] | the Mozart Sonata in C Major, K... 330. |
[05:24.73] | P: Which was originally paired with that Haydn sonata back in the ' 50s. |
[05:26.58] | G: Yeah. That' s right, and as you know I rerecorded the Mozart |
[05:29.97] | in 1970, I think it was. |
[05:31.97] | P: As part of your survey of the complete Mozart sonatas. |
[05:34.04] | G: Mmhm. And in that instance in the case of Mozart |
[05:36.66] | I really do prefer the early version. |
[05:38.29] | P: That' s interesting. |
[05:39.13] | I like them both in their way |
[05:40.64] | I guess it depends on my mood. |
[05:42.38] | G: Well, of course, as you know, |
[05:43.29] | I harbor shall we say rather ambivalent feelings for Wolfgang Amadeus and his works. |
[05:48.38] | We better not get into that here because we will never get back to Bach if we do, |
[05:51.71] | but by 1970 when the later version was made I had already confessed my true feelings about Mozart, of course. |
[05:57.86] | P: Well, you' d called him a lousy composer. |
[06:00.00] | G: I think I used maybe more slightly gentile language, sir, |
[06:02.45] | but words to that affect nonetheless. |
[06:04.34] | Whereas maybe back in 1958 |
[06:06.87] | even though my doubts about Mozart were certainly present |
[06:09.27] | I nevertheless covered them up somehow. |
[06:12.07] | I managed a leap of faith as the theologians like to say, which I guess I just couldn' t manage twelve years later. |
[06:18.28] | P: Well, the most obvious discrepancy between those performances is one of tempi. |
[06:23.80] | And you' ve pointed this out in various articles actually |
[06:27.24] | P: the early version of Mozart is very, very slow. |
[06:29.90] | G: Indeed. |
[06:30.40] | P: And the later one if I may say so goes like the preverbal bat out of hell. |
[06:35.80] | G: Yeah, that' s absolutely true. |
[06:36.91] | Well, I have a theory visà vis my own work anyway. |
[06:41.26] | Well, something less grand of a theory, really |
[06:43.64] | it' s more like a speculative premise. |
[06:45.21] | But anyway, it goes something like this: |
[06:46.45] | I think that the great majority of the music that moves me very deeply, is music that I want to hear played or want to play myself, as the case may be |
[06:54.65] | in a very ruminative, very deliberate tempo. |
[06:58.12] | P: That' s fascinating. |
[06:59.15] | In other words, you want to savor it, you want to |
[07:02.19] | G: I, no, I don' t think so, not quite savor, no. |
[07:04.38] | Because at least to me savor somehow suggests dawdling or lingering over, or something like that. |
[07:09.96] | And I don' t mean that. |
[07:11.00] | No, firm beats, a sense of rhythmic continuity has always been terribly important to me. |
[07:15.43] | But as I' ve grown older, I find many performances certainly the great majority of my own early performances just too fast for comfort. |
[07:22.70] | I guess part of the explanation is that all the music that really interests me not just some of it, all of it is contrapuntal music. |
[07:30.83] | Whether it' s Wagner' s counterpoint or Sch? nberg' s or Bach' s or Sphaling' s ? or Haydn' s indeed, |
[07:36.14] | the music that really interests me is inevitably music with an explosion of simultaneous ideas, |
[07:41.27] | which counterpoint you know, when it' s at its best is. |
[07:43.91] | And it' s music where one I think implicitly acknowledges the essential equality of those ideas. |
[07:50.93] | And I think it follows from that with really complex contrapuntal textures, one does need a certain deliberation, a certain deliberateness, you know. |
[07:59.69] | And I think to come full circle that it' s the occasional or even the frequent lack of that deliberation |
[08:05.53] | that bothers me most in the first version of the Goldberg. |
[08:09.61] | P: Well, I think it' s time that we offered a example. |
[08:13.23] | Just to refresh your memory, let' s hear a few bars of the theme from the original 1955 version of the Goldberg Variations |
[08:20.96] | which we played at the top of the program. |
[08:23.22] | G: Good idea. |
[08:24.45][MUSIC] | |
[08:44.16] | P: Now, by way of contrast, let' s hear the whole theme as you played it in the new version. |
[08:50.14] | G: Okay. |
[08:51.52][MUSIC] | |
[11:57.81] | P: Well, Glenn, I put a stopwatch on that. |
[12:00.82] | Do you want to guess the relationship between the two tempi or do you know already? |
[12:05.72] | G: I know approximately |
[12:06.69] | it' s about 2: 1, isn' t it? |
[12:08.17] | P: Just about. |
[12:09.21] | The original version clocks in at 1 minute, 51 seconds, |
[12:12.67] | and the new version at 3 minutes, 4 seconds. |
[12:16.13] | Let' s call it a ratio of a little quick math here |
[12:19.07] | G: Yes. Pocket calculator. P: 12: 7. |
[12:21.12] | G: Well, I think my guess was close enough for government work. |
[12:23.10] | P: Sure? G: But the reprise of the theme, the aria de capo at the end, that' s even slower, isn' t it? |
[12:28.45] | P: Yes, indeed. |
[12:29.83] | P: Would you believe 3 minutes, 42 seconds, in the new version? G: You' ve got you' ve got them all there. |
[12:34.16] | G: You did come prepared. Yes, I believe that. |
[12:36.78] | P: Versus, uh let me get that. Versus 2 minutes, 7 seconds, in the de capo from the original version. |
[12:42.78] | G: I' m dealing with a stopwatch freak. |
[12:44.23] | P: Well, not really, but I did take a pulse of this recording if you don' t mind a metaphor there. |
[12:49.77] | As a matter of fact, I timed all the variations in both versions. |
[12:53.61]G: Good, thanks Tim.[DROPS VOICE] | |
[12:55.25] | P: Because when I first heard the new recording |
[12:57.00] | specifically when I first heard the tempo of the theme |
[12:59.18] | I thought to myself, |
[13:00.16] | " Well, this has got to be a tworecord set." |
[13:02.50] | G: Yes. |
[13:02.97] | P: Well, it' s obviously not a tworecord set. |
[13:05.01] | And I discovered eventually that it' s only about thirteen minutes longer than the original 1955 version. |
[13:11.70] | G: That' s right. It' s about what? 51 minutes? Something like that? |
[13:13.28] | P: 51 minutes, 14 seconds. |
[13:15.75] | G: I stand corrected. |
[13:17.16] | P: Versus 38 minutes, 17 seconds, in 1955. |
[13:20.08] | G: Ahh, I was a speed demon in those days, I tell you. |
[13:23.30] | P: Well, not really, because |
[13:25.72] | you know what really puzzled me Glenn, and in fact got me onto this whole timing kick, was that in the new version you observe |
[13:32.16] | well, by no means all, but certainly a good number |
[13:35.30] | I guess about a dozen of the first repeats. |
[13:37.88] | G: Yeah, that' s right. |
[13:38.69] | I did them in all the canons, so that would be that' d be nine. |
[13:41.67] | And then in the fuguetta, which is Variation 10, and the quadlivet, which is Variation 30, |
[13:46.89] | and a couple of the other fuguetta like variations. |
[13:49.28] | I guess about I think thirteen in all have first repeats. |
[13:52.62] | P: Yeah, but you see my point. |
[13:53.75] | When you subtract the amount of time devoted to those repeats from the total 51 minutes or whatever, |
[13:59.65] | the overall timing is really not that different from the original version which didn' t have any repeats at all. |
[14:05.10] | G: Son of a gun. |
[14:06.31] | P: So you did in fact observe tempi that were not that much slower in many cases in the new version. |
[14:11.93] | G: That' s true. |
[14:13.02] | P: And in one or two very notable variations, |
[14:16.31] | you actually played more quickly |
[14:18.31] | and yet the feeling, the mood, the architecture of this performance is just so totally different that, |
[14:25.32] | frankly, I can' t figure it out. |
[14:27.00] | G: Well, as a matter of fact, you practically have figured it out Tim. |
[14:30.79] | And I want to say right now, |
[14:32.20] | I was kidding when I asked if you were a stopwatch fetishist, |
[14:34.25] | because the way that this performance was constructed was worked out |
[14:38.34] | has in fact actually a great deal to do with something very like a stopwatch, you know. |
[14:42.06] | P: Uhhuh. |
[14:43.13] | G: Let me back up a little bit. |
[14:45.03] | I' ve come to feel over the years that a musical work |
[14:48.76] | however long it may be ought to have basically I was going to say " one tempo," |
[14:53.72] | but that' s the wrong word |
[14:54.75] | one pulse rate, one constant rhythmic reference point. |
[14:58.21] | Now obviously there couldn' t be any more deadly dull than to exploit one beat that goes on and on and on indefinitely. |
[15:04.70] | I mean, that' s what drives me up the wall about, about rock, you know, |
[15:08.90] | and about |
[15:10.57] | I say this in the presence of his most committed advocate and art and propagandist about minimalism. |
[15:15.55] | P: Oh, I think we should argue that one another time ... |
[15:19.00] | G: Yeah, probably so. |
[15:19.69] | Anyway I would never argue in favor of a inflexible musical pulse. |
[15:23.69] | You know, that just destroys any music. |
[15:25.60] | But you can take basic pulse and divide it and multiply it |
[15:29.13] | not necessarily on a scale of 2, 4, 8, 16, 32 but often with far less obvious divisions, I think. |
[15:35.05] | And make the result of those divisions or multiplications act as a subsidiary pulse |
[15:39.44] | for a particular movement or section of a movement or whatever. |
[15:41.92] | And I think this doesn' t in any way preclude blubatti. |
[15:47.48] | If you have an accelerando, for example, you simply use the accelerando as a transition between two aspects of the same basic pulse, you know. |
[15:52.60] | P: Sure, sure. |
[15:54.28] | G: So, in the case of the Goldberg, |
[15:55.13] | there is in fact one pulse which with a few very minor modifications, |
[16:00.24] | mostly modifications which I think take their cue from retards at the end of the preceding variation, something like that |
[16:06.36] | one pulse that runs all the way throughout. |
[16:08.87] | P: Can you give us an example of that? |
[16:11.42] | G: Sure. Well, maybe I shouldn' t be so confident. |
[16:13.92] | I' ll try. |
[16:15.59] | Let' s see. |
[16:16.76] | Let' s take the beginning of side two of the record, okay? |
[16:19.84] | P: Now that would be the French overture, Variation 16? |
[16:22.49] | G: Yeah, yeah. As you know, the French overture is divided into two sections: |
[16:25.45] | The dotted rhythm sequence, |
[16:27.42] | which gave it its name, |
[16:28.31] | which I guess from French opera tradition |
[16:30.48] | and a little fuguetta for the second half. |
[16:33.32] | The first section is written with four quarter notes to the bar |
[16:37.78] | humming: puang delililiyang tatamtata diyang dididididididididi |
[16:45.45] | and the fuguetta, |
[16:47.39] | on the other hand, |
[16:48.18] | is in threeeight time. |
[16:49.47] | In other words, each bar in the fuguetta contains 1 1 2 quarter notes or dotted quarters, as musicians like to call it. |
[16:56.29] | humming: down depapapapapingpangpang yapapapapabiyangpabidangden so on. |
[17:01.44] | Now, you' ll find, I think, |
[17:03.19] | that the quarter notes in the first half are almost identical to the dotted quarter notes in the second half. |
[17:08.78] | In other words, |
[17:09.31] | four bars of the second half of the fuguetta is approximately equal to one bar of the opening overture section. |
[17:16.14] | So the relationship, then, is something like this: |
[17:18.70] | humming: puor rederededi tatamtatam dadadadadiyama yatatatata |
[17:24.70] | P: I see. |
[17:25.74] | Now what happens in the next variation, |
[17:27.53] | in Variation 17. |
[17:29.53] | G: Well, now, that was a bit more complicated, |
[17:30.36] | because it' s written in threequarter time, with three quarter notes to the bar. |
[17:34.85] | There' s nothing complicated about that, as Johann Strauss pretty conclusively proved. |
[17:38.83] | But what was complicated was that |
[17:41.02] | I wanted to relate it somehow to the fuguetta from Variation 16 with its threeeight time signature. |
[17:46.98] | And in fact at first, |
[17:47.97] | I considered just taking the beat from the full bar |
[17:51.43] | the dotted quarter note of the fuguetta |
[17:53.13] | and making that beat equivalent to the beat of the undotted quarter |
[17:57.77] | if I can coin a word of Variation 17. |
[18:00.66] | Now that would have resulted in a tempo something like |
[18:04.85] | humming: yababababi babababababababababa . |
[18:08.54] | You know, which sounds okay when you sing it, not bad at all. |
[18:11.43] | But Variation 17 is one of those rather skittish, slightly beheaded collections of scales and arpeggios |
[18:19.24] | which Bach indulged when he wasn' t writing sober and proper things like fugues and canons. |
[18:23.39] | And it just seemed to me that there wasn' t enough substance to it to warrant such a methodical, deliberate, Germanic tempo. |
[18:29.86] | P: In other words, you' re basically saying that you didn' t like it enough to play it slowly. |
[18:34.68] | G: You got it. |
[18:35.66] | So instead of using the dotted quarter from the fuguetta as my yardstick for Variation 17, |
[18:40.77] | I took twothirds of it, twothirds of a bar from the fuguetta and used the actual quarter note, |
[18:45.55] | which that twothirds represents. |
[18:47.05] | Now, instead of the beat I sang before |
[18:49.49] | which was roughly humming: yababababiyababababa |
[18:52.89] | the new beat gave you three for the price of two and that applied to Variation 17 allowed for a much more effervescent tempo, |
[19:00.31] | something like humming: bababababi bababababalabababi debaba. |
[19:03.82] | P: Uhhuh. And then of course, there' s Variation 18, which is one of the canons. |
[19:07.64] | G: Yeah, the canon at the Sixth. |
[19:08.53] | I adore it, it' s a gem. |
[19:10.39] | Well, I adore all the canons, really. |
[19:12.02] | But it' s one of my favorite variations, certainly. |
[19:14.52] | Anyway, it' s written with four quarter notes in a bar, but actually only two beats, two half notes to a bar. |
[19:22.10] | humming: yangdipangbi yapapang bababangbababangbababangbangbang |
[19:27.57] | P: So basically what you did is turn the quarter note of Variation 17 into the half note of Variation 18. |
[19:33.01] | G: Exactly, yeah. |
[19:34.37] | P: Oh, well, Glenn. |
[19:35.83] | I don' t think I can keep much more of this in my head at the moment. |
[19:38.61] | G: I' m sure that I can' t either actually |
[19:40.75] | it' s been a struggle. |
[19:41.54] | P: I think we should listen to those three variations |
[19:44.01] | Variation 16 through 18 of Bach' s Goldberg Variations right now. |
[19:48.34] | G: Good idea. |
[19:49.90][MUSIC] | |
[23:27.79] | P: Those were Variations 16 through 18 from Bach' s Goldberg Variations in a new recording by Glenn Gould. |
[23:34.17] | You know something, Glenn? |
[23:35.27] | I felt it. |
[23:36.19] | I don' t know if I would have actually been able to spot what you did just listening to it, |
[23:41.40] | but there was a link between those variations. |
[23:44.35] | I could oh, I could feel it in my bones. |
[23:47.75] | G: Well, I' m really glad, |
[23:48.87] | it' s nice of you to say that, |
[23:49.64] | because I' ve been sitting here squirming in my chair, |
[23:52.37] | as you know, |
[23:52.88] | wishing I' d never said a word on the subject. |
[23:54.00] | P: Oh, don' t be ridiculous. |
[23:55.24] | G: Well, you know, |
[23:56.00] | when one describes a process this way, |
[23:58.33] | it sounds just so relentlessly clinical, so ruthlessly sterile and antimusical, really. |
[24:03.66] | And I |
[24:04.22] | it is at that level |
[24:05.67] | it' s almost embarrassing. |
[24:06.41] | I' m sorry, I apologize for ... |
[24:07.00] | P: Whoa, whoa. |
[24:07.76] | Don' t please don' t be embarrassed, |
[24:09.00] | because I think you' ve given us a remarkable insight into your working method. |
[24:12.84] | G: Well, thank you. |
[24:13.47] | But you know what I mean. |
[24:14.65] | On the face of it, |
[24:14.97] | it' s exactly like analyzing a particular tone row of Schnberg, for example, and saying, |
[24:18.87] | " Well, this is a wonderfully symmetrical tone row, |
[24:21.22] | therefore it must inevitably lead to a wonderfully symmetrical work." |
[24:23.72] | P: I' ve heard that talk before. |
[24:25.38] | G: Exactly. |
[24:25.79] | And it ain' t necessarily so. |
[24:27.07] | I think it' s a technique, the idea of rhythmic continuity that' s really only useful if everybody does feel it in their bones, |
[24:34.85] | you know, |
[24:35.33] | to use your words |
[24:35.91] | experiences it subliminally, |
[24:37.42] | in other words and absolutely nobody actually notices what' s really going on. |
[24:42.21] | P: Which was exactly the way Schnberg felt about his tone rows. |
[24:45.25] | G: Precisely. |
[24:46.70] | P: Well, now, you didn' t just invent this system for the Goldberg Variations on this. |
[24:50.01] | G: Oh, certainly not, no. |
[24:51.11] | I' ve used it for years. |
[24:52.20] | It' s just that I' ve used it more and more rigorously as the years have gone by. |
[24:55.04] | P: Well, Glenn, I think I' d be doing something less than my duty as an interviewer |
[24:59.12] | if I failed to ask whether this rhythmic system of yours didn' t perhaps have some small part to play in a rather celebrated brouhaha |
[25:07.64] | G: Ah, I felt it coming. Yes. |
[25:08.20] | P: which took place about twenty years ago |
[25:10.25] | and involved you, |
[25:11.24] | the Brahms D Minor Concerto, |
[25:12.91] | Leonard Bernstein |
[25:14.28] | and the New York Philharmonic. |
[25:15.06] | G: It certainly did. |
[25:16.49] | That was one of the first really clear, really thorough demonstrations of this system. |
[25:20.84] | And, you know, Tim, |
[25:22.00] | I maintain to this day that what shocked everybody, visà vis the interpretation |
[25:25.56] | of course there was some people who were just shocked by the onstage admission |
[25:28.35] | that a conductor and a soloist could have a profound disagreement, |
[25:31.05] | which everybody knows perfectly well goes on offstage anyway. |
[25:33.37] | But what shocked them about the interpretation, I think, was not the basic tempo itself. |
[25:37.84] | Certainly, the basic tempo was very slow, |
[25:41.00] | it was unusually slow, |
[25:41.62] | but I' ve heard many other performances which didn' t shock anybody with opening themes very nearly as slow, |
[25:47.40] | sort of humming: Viiiiiyoungpie jiuyangbing |
[25:52.39] | It was to come back to our Goldberg discussion, |
[25:54.75] | the relationship between themes that shocked them. |
[25:56.67] | It was the fact, for example, that the second theme of the first movement of the Brahms |
[26:00.77] | humming: Duadidididongdi |
[26:04.94] | which, after all, is an inversion of the first theme |
[26:07.00] | was not appreciably slower than the first theme. |
[26:09.51] | It was, in fact, played with something like Haydnesque continuity |
[26:13.66] | instead of, I guess, what most people anticipate as Brahmsian contrast, you know. |
[26:17.05] | P: I' m going to anthropomorphize a bit here. |
[26:19.34] | G: Good heavens. |
[26:21.03] | P: And wager a guess that |
[26:23.35] | what they objected to was the fact that it didn' t present the |
[26:27.48] | well, shall we say |
[26:28.42] | masculinefeminine contrast that one has come to expect. |
[26:30.00] | G: Mmhm, mmhm. |
[26:31.92] | Exactly. |
[26:32.69] | I I' ll stick with your terms |
[26:34.00] | presented an asexual or maybe a unisexual view of the work, you know. |
[26:35.93] | P: Mmhm. |
[26:37.88] | G: But you see, |
[26:38.26] | in the case of the Goldberg, |
[26:39.48] | I felt there was an ever greater necessity for this system than in a work like the Brahms D Minor. |
[26:44.95] | Because as you know, |
[26:45.52] | the Goldberg is an extraordinary collection of moods and textures. |
[26:48.75] | I mean, think of Variation 15 |
[26:50.37] | we haven' t heard it yet today, |
[26:52.15] | but think of it anyway. |
[26:53.00][PAGE BEGINS TO MIMIC PASSAGE OF MUSIC] | |
[26:59.01] | G: Exactly. |
[26:59.32] | It' s the most severe and rigorous and beautiful canon |
[27:02.40] | we didn' t sing it all that severely and rigorously, |
[27:04.39] | but it is. |
[27:04.96] | The most severe and beautiful canon that I know. |
[27:07.76] | The canon, an inversion of the Fifth. |
[27:09.29] | To be so moving, |
[27:10.86] | so anguished |
[27:11.71] | and so uplifting at the same time, |
[27:13.88] | that it would not be in any way out of place in the St. Matthew Passion. |
[27:16.79] | Matter of fact, |
[27:17.41] | I' ve always thought of Variation 15 as the perfect Good Friday spell, you know. |
[27:20.92] | Well, anyway, |
[27:22.11] | a movement like that is preceded by Variation 14, |
[27:25.05] | logically enough, |
[27:25.66] | which is certainly one of the giddiest bits of neoScarlattism imaginable. |
[27:30.67] | P: Crosshand versions and all. |
[27:32.21] | G: Yeah. |
[27:32.36] | And quite simply the trap in this work, |
[27:35.35] | in the Goldberg, |
[27:36.02] | is to avoid letting it come across as thirty independent pieces, |
[27:38.76] | because if one gives each of those movements their head, |
[27:40.94] | it can very easily do just that. |
[27:42.97] | So I thought that here in the Goldberg Variations, |
[27:45.66] | this system was a necessity. |
[27:47.60] | And quite frankly, |
[27:48.36] | in the version on this record, |
[27:50.00] | I applied it more rigorously than I ever have to any work before. |
[27:53.56] | P: Well, you mentioned Variation 15 |
[27:55.57] | and of course it' s only one of three variations in the minor key, in G minor. |
[27:59.92] | There is another of that trio, No. 25, |
[28:03.64] | that I' d like to talk about for just a moment. |
[28:05.76] | I guess in many ways it' s the most famous |
[28:07.95] | well, certainly the longest of all the variations. |
[28:09.70] | G: Absolutely. |
[28:10.92] | It' s also the most talkedabout among musicians, I think. |
[28:13.65] | P: Well, with good reason. |
[28:14.62] | I mean, what an extraordinary chromatic texture. |
[28:17.05] | G: Yeah, I don' t think there' s been a richer load of enharmonic relationships any place between Gezhwaldo and Wagner. |
[28:24.04] | P: Well, I remember you used it in your soundtrack for the film Slaughterhouse Five. |
[28:27.69] | G: That' s right, |
[28:28.18] | and to accompany of all things the burning of Dresden. |
[28:31.23] | P: Indeed. |
[28:31.83] | Well, I want to play just a few bars of this variation in both versions. |
[28:36.40] | G: We really have to hear the early one, eh? |
[28:37.60] | P: Oh, I think we must. |
[28:39.40] | The contrast is, mmm, shall we say, striking? |
[28:43.04] | G: That it is. |
[28:43.81][MUSIC PLAYS UNDER THE FOLLOWING DIALOGUE] | |
[28:49.03] | P: Now, this is the 1955 version. |
[28:51.06] | G: Which sounds remarkably like a Chopin nocturne, doesn' t it? |
[28:54.73] | P: No. I think on it' s own terms though, Glenn, that this is really lovely playing. |
[28:59.75] | G: Well, yeah, it' s okay, I guess, |
[29:00.62] | but there' s a lot of pianoplaying going on there. |
[29:03.69] | And I mean that as the most disparaging comment possible. |
[29:07.17] | You know, the line is being pulled every which way, |
[29:10.67] | there are cute little dynamic dips and tempo shifts |
[29:14.17] | like that one |
[29:15.22] | things that pass for expressive fervor in your average conservatory, I guess. |
[29:19.88] | P: Do you really despise this version? |
[29:22.93] | G: No, I don' t despise it. |
[29:24.66] | I recognize you know, it' s very welldone of its kind. |
[29:26.85] | I guess I just don' t happen to like its kind very much any more. |
[29:30.26] | And I also recognize |
[29:31.40] | to be fair |
[29:31.97] | that many people will probably prefer this early version. |
[29:35.26] | They might people may find the new one rather stark and spare emotionally. |
[29:39.62] | But this variation number 25 |
[29:42.76] | represents everything that I mistrust in the early, in the early version of |
[29:47.30] | it wears its heart on its sleeve. |
[29:49.85] | It seems to say, |
[29:50.65] | " Please take note this is tragedy." |
[29:52.94] | You know, it doesn' t have the dignity to bear its suffering with a hint of quiet resignation. |
[29:59.09] | P: And the new version does. |
[30:01.00] | G: Well, I' m prejudiced, |
[30:02.50] | but I think it does, yeah. |
[30:03.59] | P: Well, we' re approaching a cadence, |
[30:06.02] | so why don' t we use that excuse to switch over to the new version? |
[30:10.05] | G: It couldn' t come to soon for me. |
[30:11.49][MUSIC CONTINUES SANS DIALOGUE TO END] | |
[31:37.56] | P: Glenn, I do see your point. |
[31:39.26] | The 1955 version of this variation is definitely more romantic or, |
[31:44.09] | if you prefer, |
[31:45.67] | more pianistic. |
[31:46.73] | G: Yeah, exactly. |
[31:47.01] | P: And I dare say that no discussion of Bach |
[31:49.80] | would be complete without taking a crack at that old, |
[31:52.54] | somewhat tired question of the choice of instrument. |
[31:55.52] | G: Yeah. |
[31:55.83] | P: The piano versus the harpsichord and so on. |
[31:57.78] | G: Harpsichord and all that, yeah. |
[31:59.08] | No, I dare say not. |
[31:59.93] | You know, somebody said to me the other day that |
[32:02.52] | now that the fortepiano has staged such a remarkable comeback for Mozart and Beethoven and so on |
[32:07.77] | nd now that people are playing Chopin on period playelles or whatever |
[32:11.07] | in no time at all, |
[32:12.67] | there' ll be nothing left for the contemporary piano to do, |
[32:14.49] | except maybe the Rachmaninoff Third. |
[32:15.96] | And even that |
[32:17.13] | if you take these archeological pursuits to their illogical extremes |
[32:20.47] | should really be played on a turnofthecentury German Steinway or maybe a Bechstadt. |
[32:25.00] | P: That' s really true. |
[32:26.04] | G: Yeah, well, |
[32:26.47] | I think frankly that the whole issue of Bach on the piano is a red herring. |
[32:31.44] | I love the harpsichord. |
[32:32.75] | As you know, |
[32:33.35] | I made a harpsichord record some years ago. |
[32:34.31] | P: Oh, sure, the Handel suites. |
[32:35.46] | G: Yeah. And I' m very fond of the fortepiano in such things as Mozart concertos and so forth. |
[32:40.98] | So I' m certainly not going to sit here and argue that the modern piano has some intrinsic value, |
[32:46.16] | just because of its modernness. |
[32:47.54] | I' m not going to argue that new is better. |
[32:49.25] | You know, new is simply new. |
[32:50.83] | But having said that, |
[32:52.56] | I must also say that the piano, |
[32:55.05] | at its best, |
[32:56.10] | offers a range of articulation that far surpasses any older instrument. |
[33:00.81] | That it actually can be made to serve the contrapuntal qualities of Bach, for example, |
[33:05.16] | the linear concepts of Bach in a way that the harpsichord |
[33:07.88] | for all its beauty and charm and authenticity |
[33:11.07] | you know, cannot. |
[33:12.32] | P: Well, I feel a little bit like I' m needling you, |
[33:15.30] | but it' s been remarked by just about everybody at one time or another |
[33:19.37] | that your piano has actually always seemed to end up sounding a bit like surrogate harpsichords. |
[33:24.79] | And I don' t know whether it' s because of the way you play these instruments |
[33:28.09] | or the way you have them adjusted or |
[33:28.95] | G: Well, I think it' s a combination. |
[33:30.74] | You know, I' ve always believed, |
[33:32.26] | you see, Tim, |
[33:33.22] | that one should start by worrying about the action of the instrument and not the sound. |
[33:36.80] | If you regulate an action with enormous care, |
[33:39.70] | make it so even and responsive and articulate that it just sort of sits there and looks at you and says, |
[33:45.00] | " You want to play this in Eflat, right?" you know. |
[33:47.04] | That it virtually plays itself, |
[33:48.35] | in other words, |
[33:49.02] | then the tone will just take care of itself. |
[33:51.50] | Because the tone, the sound, |
[33:53.28] | whatever you want to call it |
[33:54.32] | that one produces really ought to be part of the interpretive concept of the piece. |
[33:58.43] | And if you are dealing with an action that' s totally responsive, |
[34:01.67] | you know, |
[34:02.00] | you are then free to really concentrate exclusively on the concept in all of its facets, which includes the tone. |
[34:08.08] | P: Nevertheless, |
[34:09.05] | the tone quality in all your records |
[34:11.24] | and certainly all your Bach records |
[34:12.96] | is remarkably similar. |
[34:14.89] | It' s consistently crisp, |
[34:16.06] | a little dry perhaps, |
[34:17.89] | astonishingly varied in its detacher ? way. |
[34:21.24] | As a matter of fact, |
[34:22.03] | it' s often been likened to an Xray of the music. |
[34:24.62] | G: Well, thank you, |
[34:25.15] | I take that as a compliment. |
[34:26.41] | P: Oh, it' s actually meant to be. |
[34:27.54] | G: Thank you again. |
[34:28.52] | Well, you know, |
[34:29.51] | there are certain personal taboos, |
[34:31.27] | especially in playing Bach, |
[34:32.69] | that I almost never violate. |
[34:34.35] | P: Well, I know one of them for sure: |
[34:36.07] | You never use the sustaining pedal. |
[34:36.91] | G: That' s right. |
[34:37.33] | P: Because I saw that German television film |
[34:40.21] | that was made when you actually recorded the new Goldbergs. |
[34:43.03] | G: Oh, yeah, yeah. |
[34:43.50] | P: And it was honestly rather astonishing |
[34:45.90] | to see you sitting there, |
[34:47.31] | thirteen inches off the floor, |
[34:49.47] | in your stocking feet. |
[34:50.89] | And when the camera pulled back, |
[34:52.47] | they were nowhere near the sustaining pedal. |
[34:54.82] | G: That' s true. |
[34:55.68] | P: But you do use the soft pedal a good deal. |
[34:58.39] | G: Yes, I do, |
[34:59.00] | because by playing on two strings instead of three, |
[35:01.49] | you get a much more specific, much leaner quality of sound. |
[35:04.75] | But I think really that the primary tonal concept that I maintain with regard to Bach is that of |
[35:10.04] | well, I think you used the word detacher ?, |
[35:12.82] | but it' s the idea anyway that a nonlegato state, |
[35:16.58] | a nonlegato relationship |
[35:18.02] | or a pointillistic relationship, |
[35:19.38] | if you want, |
[35:19.84] | between two consecutive notes is the norm, |
[35:23.00] | not the exception. |
[35:24.11] | That the legato link, indeed, is the exception. |
[35:27.06] | P: You realize, of course, |
[35:28.53] | that you' re turning the basic premise of pianoplaying inside out. |
[35:31.61] | G: Well, trying to, anyway. |
[35:33.01] | And as far as the question of whether it' s appropriate to play this music on the piano is concerned, |
[35:37.98] | I think one has to remember that here was a man, |
[35:40.24] | Bach, |
[35:40.61] | who was himself one of the great transcribers of all time. |
[35:43.77] | You know, a man who took Marcello' s oboe concerto, for example, |
[35:46.82] | and made a solo harpsichord piece of it |
[35:48.71] | I recently recorded it, so it' s on my mind. |
[35:51.06] | Who rewrote his own violin concertos for the harpsichord or viceversa. |
[35:55.27] | Who rewrote his harpsichord concerto just for the organ. |
[35:58.01] | You know, the list just goes on and on. |
[35:59.05] | Who wrote |
[36:00.70] | as his masterpiece, I think |
[36:02.44] | The Art of the Fugue |
[36:03.06] | and gave us music that works on a harpsichord, |
[36:05.61] | on an organ, |
[36:06.76] | with a string quartet, |
[36:08.13] | with a string orchestra |
[36:08.80] | he didn' t specify. |
[36:09.40] | Certainly with a woodwind quartet or quintet, with a brass quartet. |
[36:13.20] | It works astonishingly well with a saxophone quartet |
[36:15.41] | I heard it once that way. |
[36:15.59] | P: No kidding? No kidding. |
[36:16.50] | G: Yep. I just think that all the evidence suggests that |
[36:19.68] | Bach didn' t give a hoot about specific sonority or even volume. |
[36:23.15] | But I think he did care |
[36:24.30] | to an almost fanatic degree |
[36:25.56] | about the integrity of his structures, you know. |
[36:27.53] | I think he would have been delighted by any sound that was born out of a respect for the necessity, |
[36:32.62] | the abstract necessity of those structures and appalled |
[36:36.03] | amused maybe, but appalled nonetheless |
[36:38.24] | by any sound that was born out of the notion that by glossing over those structures, |
[36:42.84] | it could improve upon them in some way. |
[36:44.09] | I don' t think he cared whether the B minor mass was sung by sixteen or 160 |
[36:48.11] | I think he cared how they sang it. |
[36:50.05] | I certainly don' t think that |
[36:51.94] | he who transposed practically everything of his own up and down the octave |
[36:56.19] | to suit himself |
[36:56.72] | and the particular needs of the court |
[36:58.20] | and the instruments he was writing for |
[36:59.30] | would have cared whether it was sung in B minor |
[37:01.47] | according to our current frequency readings |
[37:03.07] | or in B flat plus or minus A did?, minor as is now the habit in certain Puritan circles. |
[37:08.83] | I think he would have to loved to hear his Brandenberg concertos as Wendy Carlos has realized them on the synthesizer. |
[37:14.25] | I think even delighted with what the Swingle Singers did in the ninth fugue from The Art of Fugue some years ago. |
[37:19.43] | But I think he would have been appalled by the way Arnold Schnberg orchestrally mangled his ... fugue, you know. |
[37:24.47] | P: His Stakovsky ? and the D minor toccata. |
[37:26.00] | G: Yeah, or the way Busoni or Tosig ? or some of those characters corrupted the keyboard, whereas |
[37:30.50] | I think it' s a question of attitude, just that. |
[37:32.93] | I think the question of instrument, per se, |
[37:35.06] | you konw, is of no importance whatsoever. |
[37:37.84] | P: Well, I think that Bach would have been delighted |
[37:40.24] | with what you' ve done in this new recording of the Goldberg Variations on the piano. |
[37:44.10] | So why don' t we just hear a little more of it? |
[37:46.38] | G: Okay. |
[37:46.56] | Well, we' ve already heard the opening aria at the beginning of the program, |
[37:48.82] | so how about beginning with Variation 1 and just playing on until we run out of time? |
[37:53.96] | P: Sounds good to me. |
[37:56.29][MUSIC PLAYS FOR ABOUT 15 MINUTES, GOING ON TO SECOND SIDE] | |
[47:55.00] | P: Those were excerpts from Glenn Gould' s new digital recording on CBS of Bach' s Goldberg Variations. |
[48:01.12] | Glenn, thanks very much for coming by and talking with us today. |
[48:04.03] | G: I had a great time, Tim, |
[48:05.27] | really enjoyed it, thank you. |
[48:06.51] | P: I' m Tim Page. |
[48:07.35] | Our technician was Kevin Doyle. |
[48:08.96] | I certainly hope you enjoyed this program. |
[48:10.57][MUSIC] | |
[50:46.34][END] |