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Published: Thursday, 14 November 2024 at 17:34 PM


With his groundbreaking Bach and idiosyncratic personality, Glenn Gould was one of the 20th century’s most captivating performers. Humphrey Burton remembers an icon of the piano

When I first met Glenn Gould over half a century ago, he was 28 and artist in residence at the 1960 Vancouver Festival.

Who was Glenn Gould?

He was already a world-famous pianist, fabulously good-looking in the James Dean mould and blessed, so it seemed, with a warm, outgoing personality. And he was media-savvy, yet utterly devoted to music.

A pair of fly-on-the-wall films about Glenn, On the Record and Off the Record (both from 1959), had recently been shown on the BBC and made a huge impression, as did a Leonard Bernstein show called The Creative Performer, in which Gould played the Bach Piano Concerto in D minor; Stravinsky was the other guest and it was spellbinding.