The most important thing about Bach`s music is pholyphony. No other pianists has ever loved, understood or has been able to produce the pholyphonic texture of Bach`s music in the same way as Glenn Gould.
Well, this is more or less obvious, since it would be pretty much impossible for any pianist to produce the poliphonid texture of Bach in the same way as any other pianist. So your statememt is a trivial truism and applies to any pianist, not only to Gould.

Tempo: Bach`s music has no tempo markings. In other words if Gould plays anything faster than others that is the same thing as saying that they play it slower than him. There is no way of saying that one speed is better than the other. But in the dance movements he plays them in the right tempo.
Bach’s music, as Baroque music in general, depends primarily on articulation for expressive means (while romantic music, for instance depends more on dynamics and agogics). So even though we may not know exactly the tempo, the
range of tempo can be pretty well determined. But then again, I agree with you. Any piece of music of any composer will accept a range of tempos in which it is effective. Gould’s main departures from authentic interpretation are not really in that area.
Legato: Bach`s keyboard music was written for a harpsichord. And it isn`t possible to play legato on that instrument. Glenn Gould`s Bach is the closest you can come to playing Bach as it sounded when Bach played them himself because Gould understood Bach`s music and sometimes imitated the harpsichord on the piano. I have read that you don`t even like the harpsichord and than trhere is nothing strange about you not liking Gould`s recordings of Bach. It isn`t as if I like Hummel`s trumpet concerto when I don`t like Hummel or the trumpet.
This is highly arguable. First it is more or less accepted that Bach’s keyboard music is absolute music, in the sense that it is not particularly idiomatic to any instrument, and as long as you keep to the Baroque conventions, it can be played effectively in any instrument.
But second and perhaps more importantly, it is now accepted that most of Bach’s keyboard music (except for the works for organ) was actually written for the clavichord. It was Bach’s favourite keyboard instrument, and for very good reason. Contrary to the harpsichord, and exactly like the piano, the clavichord allows for dynamic variations and perfect legato. Then again, contrary to the piano where the keys act as levers to impulse a mallet to the strings, the keys in the clavichord contact the strings directly. So while on the piano, changes in touch beyond the escapement point make no difference whatsoever to the sound produced, this is not so on the clavichord, where a vibrato in the keys will result in a vibrato in sound. Indeed the expressive possibilities on a clavichord are well beyond what one can get in a modern piano. It is well known that Bach tried a few pianos and was not happy with them, and the main reason was because he was comparing them to a
clavichord.
The third point is that Bach was indeed very interested in legato, witness his first page of the “Inventions and Sinfonias” where he explicitly say that these are exercises to develop a
cantabile style of playing, which – as modern research has shown – is primarily intended for the clavichord, not the harpsichord. But even if it was intended for the clavichord, you seem to be missing a huge point here, and because Harnoncourt wrote beautifully about it, I will quote:
We cannot hear a long sustained note on a harpsichord or a lute; we hear only the onset of the tone, which then fades away. The imagination supplies the rest, while the actual tone disappears. This disappearance does not mean that the tone ceases, rather that it continues to be heard by the “inner ear” and is cancelled only by the onset of the subsequent note. If this tone were to continue to sound at it full strength, it would disturb the transparency of the composition’s texture and would cover up the entrance of the next tone; this outcome is often heard in the case of organ concerts as is theoretically possible to hold nay tone on the organ for as long as it is notated. The reality of a sustained sound; on the contrary, under certain circumstances the former can mask and interfere with our understanding of the latter.”(Nikolaus Harnoncourt – “Baroque Music Today: Music as Speech” - Amadeus Press)
Bach was supremely interested in his keyboard work with this legato of the mind. And the fact that apart from the organ none of the keyboard instruments available to him had perfect continuity of sound, but rather degrees of decay, does not imply that his keyboard works are non-legato.
In Gould’s defense I might perhaps add that most of this research started after the 1950s, being published in obscure musicological journals, so may be he was not aware of it.
Rythm: Glenn Gould`s rythm is about as steady as it gets. He doesn`t exactly play Bach with rubato. Also he was able to play extremely fast and very slow.
Steady is nothing to write home about. Just listen to Wolfgang Rubsam’s interpretations of Bach’s keyboard works for Naxos for a breath of fresh air in regards to flexibility of pulse.
Freedom: Bach`s music allows more freedom in interpretation than any other composers. No one is right or wrong. But Glenn Gould was definetly the one that played the pholyphony in the best way. Gould`s Bach is special and ideosyncratic and is not wrong nor is it right because no one is right.
Er… I am right, you are wrong

. (see below)
Taste: So it all falls down to taste.
No, it does not. Taste is of course important, but that does not mean that you can call bad taste good taste.
For instance, Gould’s staccato rendition of pralltrillers and other ornaments is historically unfounded. And since we are at it, let us consider his interpretation of prelude 1 in the WTC I, where he plays the whole thing staccato. It is wrong for a number of reasons:
1. The character of the prelude is vocal.
2. Almost all the intervals are small, which suggests legato at a slow tempo.
3. Given the quiet and sustained character of the piece, the theory of affects again stipulates legato playing.
Almost all critics lovs Gould`s Bach. And he is probably the one that most people like( not all of course).Muisc critics such as Tim Page, Jed Distler and David Hurwitz have been giving praise to Gould. And they have abviously gotten a lot more understanding of music than a 30++ man like you who uses most og his time at something as absurd as a piano forum.
Here is an interesting opinion:
Gould knew what he was doing, but he simply had no scruples about disregarding historical considerations whenever he thought he could dazzle his audience with a modern interpretation. In this, he undoubtedly succeeded world-wide. […] However, this has little to do with Bach’s intentions, which we do after all know fairly well nowadays. […] One cannot really object to modern distortions of works of art, e.g. Dali’s variations on the Mona Lisa, even when they are lacking in good taste. But in the case of Glenn Gould, many of his admirers are still convinced that he was playing in the spirit of Bach. It must be said in Gould’s defence that, as far as I know, he never claimed that his performances were historically authentic.” (Paul Badura-Skoda: “Interpreting Bach at the keyboard” – Oxford University Press).
Now, who gets more understanding of music? Badura-Skoda or Page/Distler/Hurwits? I know! Let us get a new thread started about it!

Haven’t you got it yet that ideas fall or stand on their own merits, and not because some “authority” subscribes to them?
The humming is almost non-auidable. I didn`t hear it before someone told me about it.
Have you considered having your ears checked? No wonder you love Gould so much, you can barely hear him!

And remember Gould did`t only play Bach. He played good Haydn, early Mozart, earli Beethoven and those rennesance composer, and most importantly Schoenberg, Hindemith and many other 20th century composers such as Fartein Valen.
Have a look at reply #24. The main reason he is associated mostly with Bach is that his interpretations of these other composers were so idiosyncratic that even his die hard fans were embarrassed and pretend they did not exist.

a 30++ man like you who uses most og his time at something as absurd as a piano forum.
It is a dirty work, but someone has to do it.

And I will be 13 next October.

I mean how can you like Hewitt`s performance more than Gould`s.
This is a funny remark. It says much about you. Who said I like x more than y? I like them all. From Jacques Loussier to Tatiana Nikolaieva. Sure, my favourite is Rosalyn Tureck, but why should I limit myself unnecessarily?
For crying out loud, you are worse than my five wives bickering about who is the favourite. I told them, and I tell you: None. I like them all the same (but Rosalyn is special).

Best wishes,
Bernhard.