Puneet Varma (Editor)

Glenn Gould's recordings with orchestra

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Released
  
October 1957 (1957-10)

Label
  
Columbia

Release date
  
October 1957

Length
  
51:48

Artist
  
Glenn Gould

Genre
  
Classical music

Recorded
  
April 9, 1957 (1957-04-09) – April 11, 1957 (1957-04-11) and April 30, 1957 (1957-04-30)

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Glenn Gould performed with orchestra on several recordings.

Contents

With Leonard Bernstein

Leonard Bernstein described his working together as a conductor with Gould as a pianist as "submit[ting] to a soloist's wholly new and incompatible concept".

Studio albums

Beethoven: Concerto No. 2 in B flat Major for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 19 - Bach: Concerto No. 1 in D Minor for Piano and Orchestra is the third album of the Canadian classical pianist Glenn Gould. It contained a 1957 recording of Ludwig van Beethoven's second Piano Concerto and Johann Sebastian Bach's Keyboard Concerto BWV 1052, with Leonard Bernstein conducting the Columbia Symphony Orchestra.

The recordings were made in 1957 at Columbia Records 30th Street studio in Manhattan over four days between April 9 and April 11 and April 30. Columbia Masterworks Records, the company's classical music division, released the album in October 1957. The album was produced by Howard H. Scott. This record is now in the catalog of Sony Classical Records.

The next studio album where Gould, Bernstein and the Columbia Symphony orchestra worked together was the 1960 recording of Beethoven's third piano concerto.

In 1961 Gould and Bernstein recorded Beethoven's fourth piano concerto with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra.

Glenn Gould conducting

On September 8, 1982, a few weeks before his death, Gould conducted a chamber orchestra in Wagner's Siegfried Idyll. Sony later released the recording together with three piano transcriptions of Wagner music by Gould, played by himself, from a 1973 album. Gould's performances of the Siegfried Idyll, both the piano and orchestral version, have an extremely slow tempo.

References

Glenn Gould's recordings with orchestra Wikipedia