[f_minor] The Spectator, UK/Aus
Jörgen Lundmark
jorgen.lundmark at mypost.se
Mon Nov 5 20:55:18 MST 2012
I asked the source and found out where the quote is from:
"The Zany Genius of Glenn Gould: A Lively
Portrait of Canada's Cultural One-Man Show," published in the magazine
Holiday, Vol. 35/No. 4 (April 1964), pages 149-54 and 156.
Regards,
Jorgen
>
> 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
>
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