[f_minor] GG and Wolferl
maryellen jensen
maryellenjensen28 at hotmail.com
Sat Nov 1 20:59:44 MDT 2014
Correction to my last message:
After all, Gould didn't make the damn thing for it to be left unseen.
There. That's better.
Just what exactly are an artist's rights? To be left unheard and unseen according to the Paley Center?
According to whom? Certainly not according to the interested public, apparently.
A heap of shame on you all who support the present system.
Mary
From: maryellenjensen28 at hotmail.com
To: f_minor at glenngould.org
Date: Sun, 2 Nov 2014 03:25:10 +0100
Subject: Re: [f_minor] GG and Wolferl
GG and Bernstein live 1959 (listen for Gould's left hand):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qV_lnAtLYkU
I agree with you about GG's "How Mozart..." Let's get something going: e-mails to Paley Center and the GG Foundation. Get the damn program out on some site somewhere please.
After all, Gould didn't make the damn thing for it to be left unseen.
Mary
------------------
pzumst at bluewin.ch
To: f_minor at glenngould.org
Date: Sun, 2 Nov 2014 00:58:18 +0100
Subject: Re: [f_minor] GG's birthday
G’day Anita
Well, I for one do agree with your teacher. Mozart is
overrated. Yet the reasons why I and Mr. Gould have or had issues with
Mozart are different. Mine are aesthetic, I reckon that Mr. Goulds were more
compositorial (if such a word exists).
Mozart was allright, he wrote some nice riffs and riddims, I for one
associate Mozart with candy floss and porcelain dolls and for some strange
reason Andrew Lloyd Webber. Makes one wonder if he wrote most of his music to
please and impress other people and not for himself. Bach never had that problem
as far as I can see. Maybe he would have ripened with time and age, the Requiem
definetly was a step in that direction. Imagine that, an alternate universe
where Beethoven and Mozart were in competition....
As for Mr. Goulds legendary distaste of Mozart – well – being a
non-musician I suspect he had issues with how Wolferl composed. Or how he
as a pianist was more or less forced to play the stuff. Not to mention the
bloody romantic composers.....
Yet Mr. Gould was one of the few people who stood up and said what they
thought about Mozart and because this story is a vital part in the Hagiographia
Gouldiana it would be awfully nice to see that short feature being released to
the public in one form or another.
Now - how about it ?
Pat
From: Anita Monroe
Sent: Monday, October 27, 2014 9:57 PM
To: Discussion of the Canadian pianist Glenn
Gould.
Subject: Re: [f_minor] GG's birthday
Pat, my teacher Yehuda Guttman did not like much of Mozart's
music, unlike most of the rest of the world. Yehuda thought that it was
the
music of a "young mind" and if he had lived a longer life there would have
been more complex music..I don't agree with him since I love
so many of Mozart's melodies...
Best,
Anita
On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 12:43 PM, Pat <pzumst at bluewin.ch> wrote:
Hi all
I would like to second Our Mary’s motion. I wanna see Mr. Gould rant
about Mozart. There must be a way to do it somehow. Maybe we can crowdfund for
the copyright or a limited license or summet ? Who brings the arrow root
cookies if I bring along some Poland Water for the screening ?
My gift ? Either form or mathematics, depends on your point of view. Yet
I must point out this is NOT a GG recording:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GyU8Qf8h3IA
Pat
From:
maryellen jensen
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2014 11:59 PM
To: f_minor at glenngould.org
Subject: [f_minor] GG's birthday
Our Glenn Gould is looking
forward to yet another birthday in a day or two - depending on where you
live on the globe.
Time to begin sharing presents.
I ask The
Glenn Gould Foundation to host an internet screening of Gould's rarely seen
"How Mozart Became A Bad Composer" on their website. I know they can ask for
the rights for a screening (from The Paley Center for Media in NYC). It can be
done. So do it.
My present? Colours.
Les couleurs du Moyen-Âge
par Michel Pastoureau Conférences en lignehttp://www.louvre.fr/les-couleurs-du-moyen-agepar-michel-pastoureau
Colour. Those pearly notes of Gould's all over
his Bach - contrasting with the flashes of white, yellow, red, blue, brown,
black.
best I can do at the
moment,
Mary
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