Those people who claim gould was autistic make me sick. Gould was a genius, and he simply was anti-social.
Maybe he was anti-social because he was autistic(I don't know if he was). I don't think he was necessarily anti-social, he had close friends but he certainly wasn't a party guy and as a child he was not socialized the way most kids are. He grew up in a bubble and that made life in the real world problematic for him, at least in terms of the day to day social interactions that most of us are conditioned to early on. On the other hand he was one of the greatest pianists of all time, a radio and television genius, good composer and brilliant stock market investor.
His behavior was of the highest intelligence and made him accomplish great things.
That sentence doesn't scan but I think I understand you. But behavior and intelligence are not necessarily linked. He could have been completely "normal" and accomplished everything that he did.
I would call it dedication rather than excentrism.
(sp) Eccentricity.
The overcoat and gloves without fingers at the piano story is kinda erroneous (I heard the real story by Gould himself in an interview). He was to play in a very cold hall ONCE and put fingerless gloves because it was way too cold if he didn't.
And this was considered strange because it was in Jerusalem, in an air conditioned hall in the desert. He was sensitive to cold, this probably had something to do with his erratic blood pressure. But the press seized on that (and his chair) and he became an "eccentric". And the press loved him, people liked to read about him so he sold papers and magazines.
He got his scarf too. Since this time people say he does wear them often, but it simply isn't true.
He was cold but they became part of his image, and for himself a sort of alter ego like his imaginary television characters Theodore Slotz, Sir Nigel Twitt-Thornwaite, and (my favorite

) Karlheinz Klopweiser. People are so caught up in Gould's pianist persona that they forget he was an actor. The act extended to his public image and it protected him. It seems that only a few people (notably his cousin Jessie Grieg, Andrew Kazdin, his girlfriend Cornelia Foss
https://www.thestar.com/article/249787) knew him as he really was. Whatever else he may have been he certainly was a loner who valued his privacy above all other things.
As for his little chair, it was simply the perfect height for him, because he wanted to be as close to the keys as possible, wich was the base of control for him. We can all witness it DID work. Gould was genius, far from being autistic.
The chair did work for him but it also became part of the act. Yes he was a genius and while he may not have been autistic he was definitely different, so much so that he is remembered for that almost as much as his art. Just like Thelonious Monk, his virtual contemporary in jazz. I've always been struck by the similarities between their lives and personalities.
Anyway, you've sure changed your mind.
https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php/topic,21463.msg238063.html#msg238063Next you'll be extolling the virtues of Thelonious Monk!
