[f_minor] The Spectator, UK/Aus
maryellen jensen
maryellenjensen28 at hotmail.com
Mon Nov 5 16:33:52 MST 2012
Didn't Gould actually say it in traffic court in front of a judge? (Probably not). I'm too lazy to look it up now.
Mary
Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2012 10:19:42 +0100
From: bsi at intranette.de
To: f_minor at glenngould.org
Subject: Re: [f_minor] The Spectator, UK/Aus
Hello Tim,
This remark about his "stopping at green lights and never having
gotten credit for it" is to be found in Kevin Bazzana's biography
"Wondrous Strange. The Life and Art of Glenn Gould" (Oxford
University Press 2004, see page 329). Yet, where this information is
from, is not mentioned explicitly. On the back cover of the book it
says: "Drawing on twenty years of intensive research, including
unrestricted access to Gould's private papers and interviews with
scores of friends and colleagues, many of them never interviewed
before, Bazzana sheds new light on ..." So, one can assume it's part
of one of the interviewees' memories, I suppose.
Bruni
Cologne, Germany
Am 01.11.2012 07:00, schrieb Timothy
Conway:
I subscribe to that virulent anti-liberal magazine The Spectator,
although living in Australia what I get is The Australian
Spectator, but it amounts to the same thing.
A recent (6th October 2012) 'DIARY' piece by Craig Brown had,
inter alia, the following:
"This week
sees the 30th anniversary of the death (or 'untimely death',
as death is now invariably known) of Glenn
Gould.The fame of most classical musicians tends to wither
when
they die. But Gould's seems to grow and grow: his grave is the most visited in
Canada, he has appeared on The Simpsons, and not long ago in its apparently
straight-faced list of The 100 Most Important Canadians in
History, Maclean's magazine ranked him the No. 1
artist in the world. Such posthumous blossoming makes him
rather closer to a
rock star, which is,
in all but the most
literal sense, what he was. In fact, he makes most of today's
rock stars look doggedly conventional. He hated Mozart,
sunshine and Italian opera, and loved tomato ketchup, overcast
skies and Petula Clark. He was a rabid hypochondriac, taking a
briefcase of pills, a bottle of disinfectant and a
blood-pressure kit with
him wherever he went: he once hung up the phone when he heard
his friend sneeze on the other end of the line.
When
he still performed in public — he grew to hate audiences,
describing them as 'a force for evil' — Gould refused to wear
the customary white
tie and tails, preferring to appear in scruffy clothes and
mismatched socks, his shoes held together by rubber bands. He would then play his piano from
his special low chair, sitting just 14 inches from the ground,
so that his knees were a good deal higher than his buttocks. Thirty years on. his fame has
increased but for some reason his influence hasn't. Classical
musicians remain studiously starchy. One might have expected Gould's influence to
have liberated them, but far from it: the pious aura of the Sunday school
still hangs over classical concerts. We should be grateful,
though, that, in at
least one area his influence has been so negligible. He was a rotten
driver, generally driving with his legs crossed whilst singing
and conducting from a score open on the passenger seat. He
couldn't see what was wrong with it. "It's true that I've driven through
a number of red lights on occasion," he once protested. "But on the other hand, I've stopped at a lot of green ones and never been given credit for it."
That last
comment about green lights had me laughing my mismatched socks
off, but is it right? Does anyone know where it comes from?
Tim Conway
Geraldton,
Western Australia
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://ff0.org/pipermail/f_minor/attachments/20121106/38d99091/attachment.html>
More information about the f_minor
mailing list