BBC Radio 3
The Idea of Gould
1999
Produced by Alan Hall , Tim Dee
A 5-hour celebration and exploration of the creative talent of Glenn Gould. Presented by Christopher Cook, Researched by Martin Smith.
"Thursday night was Glenn Gould night on Radio 3 five hours of continuous programming. Although not perfect, it was great treat. Really, there should be a Glenn Gould night every year." David Sexton, The Sunday Telegraph, 7 xi 1999
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The Idea Of Gould

David Sexton
Sunday Telegraph, 7 November
1999
Glenn Gould once claimed he could teach anyone to
play the piano 'given possession of their spirit for half an hour'. Perhaps he
could. Thursday night was Glenn Gould night on Radio 3 – five hours of
continuous programming. Although not perfect, it was great treat. Really, there
should be a Glenn Gould night every year. Christopher Cook compered a panel
consisting of Tim Page and Humphrey Burton, who both knew Gould, and Nicholas
Spice, a magazine publisher who writes extremely well about music, chatting
away in the interstices between features and performances.
The first and last truth about Gould is that, whatever his quirks and
aberrations, he added greatly to the stock of beauty in the world. And he took
nothing away. So what if he travestied Mozart? Mozart remains.
The right response is gratitude, then. But that got lost in the course of an
evening which ended up concentrating too much on the oddities. Right at the
start, we were solemnly told by one of the speakers that 'Gould would have
been, in the long run, so much more durable if he had gone to university' – as
if he could be posthumously be sent back to do better.
In the first feature, on the Goldberg Variations, people talked about
his 1955 recording of the work. Irritatingly they were not named until the end,
so that they could not be identified – although they included such people as
Angela Hewitt and Maggie Cole. It's a major annoyance that they could be
stamped out instantly by editorial fiat.
Most of the speakers paid tribute to the greatness of Gould's playing, as well
they might – but even here one harpsichord player wished Gould had been other
than he was. 'I just wanted to have more expanse and more humanity about it,'
she said.
The next feature, by an English don called Steven Connor, was a clever
heartless essay about the 'cult of genius', suggesting that Gould 'wanted to
play out the role of genius'. At one point he actually said, as only an
academic cultural historian could, that 'becoming immortal is a 19th
century concept'. Really?
So it went on. Gould's lovely performances were followed up by features on his
obsessive use of the telephone, his insomnia, his rejection of live
performance, his strange ideas about radio production …
Finally, Gould's 1981 recording of the Goldberg Variations was played.
It silenced all that talk. It's a performance full of pain and loneliness – but
it is also, as a certain best-selling novelist puts it, 'beautiful beyond
plight and time'. Impossible to be blasé about that.

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