That you know, opinion can be called opinion only (and only) when behind it there is some knowledge. So far you did not provide any, so if you are an intelligent person please instead of rambling, support your opinions with some substance, if you want them to have any value or credibility.
sure. lets do a bit of the scriabin that has been mentioned further up this page. (1969 Sony BMG)
with a title like drammatico you expect it to be dramatic. in my opinion gould's opening is more pathetic than dramatic, because of many things. for example :
scriabin marks forte - gould plays a sort of mezzo piano and for me personally this sounds ridiculous
scriabin puts a metronome marking (crotchet = 69). goulds is nearly half this speed
gould seems to spread most of the chords even though i feel a dramatic sound would be to play them as scriabin wrote them. i think he overdoes the spreads and it starts to sound a bit wimpy, and when scriabin
does write a spread, for me it totally loses its effect as that's how he's already played all the previous chords.
Scriabin marks the next section as mp - This isnt very far off the dynamic that Gould uses at the start, so, again .. it seems to lose its effect
so... is he playing scriabin or gould? it seems a bit insulting to scriabin to ignore virtually everything he's written...
thats the end of the first page.
i'll do some bach - goldberg variations (Recorded 1954/55) (Urania 2005)
Gould seems to play the bass note a split second before the rest (my teacher calls this arcing - not sure if anyone else uses this word). For me this is a bit too chopin-esque, and gives it a little too much of a romantic feel. it might be acceptable every once in a while, but gould does it with nearly every note so it just starts to sound a bit ridiculous (ker-chunk, ker-chunk etc)
Also, he uses a little too much rubato for my taste. again, it makes it sound too romantic. some will say that the aria is supposed to sound romantic - i think thats perfectly ok, but there are ways to do that other than the cheap tricks that gould uses.
after the first few bars, gould has cut his opening speed by about 20%. this is not an exaggeration. for me this gives it a sort of confusing feel, as if he doesnt quite understand what the speed should be.
he is inconsistent with his dotted rhythms - for example in bar 8 he double dots the last quaver but in bar 9 he doesnt. I personally think that when it comes to playing dotted rhythms in bach and to an extent all early music, it's best to be consistent with dotted rhythms.
in my opinion he uses too much sustain pedal, again it just makes it sound too romantic. as i mentioned before there are better ways to be expressive in bach
towards the end of the aria in the semiquaver passages gould again drastically changes speed. this gets a bit annoying for me as hes already done this near the beginning. it doesnt seem to make sense, and it seems to me as if he's not in control of what he's doing.
hope that suffices as an explanation. sure seemed easier to me to just say : "i don't like his playing"
i would honestly personally rather listen to lang lang than glenn gould anytime. both crap, but at least lang lang is entertaining crap. gould is just crap.