Glenn Gould- Turkish March

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2012
  • Glenn Gould plays Mozart's Rondo Alla Turca
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @BuckshotLaFunke1
    @BuckshotLaFunke1 6 лет назад +724

    So far so Gould.

  • @Moribus_Artibus
    @Moribus_Artibus 8 лет назад +1419

    We all heard this piece so many times and yet this version seems so new and fresh!

    • @ArmDota2
      @ArmDota2 7 лет назад +21

      GLOUD MY BOY GLOUD

    • @CushionOfWealth
      @CushionOfWealth 7 лет назад +10

      Mind the mumbling !

    • @giovanniangelucci1526
      @giovanniangelucci1526 7 лет назад +23

      Glenn Gould, for me, was a great piano genius. This version is unusual compared to other performers, but really brilliant at the same time.

    • @user-tw9pc5il9d
      @user-tw9pc5il9d 7 лет назад +2

      dominoes37 I from hungary Budapest i love you turkey and people an music ♡♡♡♡Turkey Istanbul and Hungsry budapest =♡♡♡♡♡♡13.03.2017

    • @jacobs9083
      @jacobs9083 7 лет назад +4

      Hava Sahin Mozart wasn't Turkish...

  • @irodragon7184
    @irodragon7184 3 года назад +250

    Mozart: play this legato
    Gould: No I don't think I will

    • @HowardTse
      @HowardTse 3 года назад +4

      Can we play legato sound on clavichord? I don't know.

    • @lmelc
      @lmelc 3 года назад +27

      @@HowardTse Mozart used a fortepiano

    • @irodragon7184
      @irodragon7184 3 года назад +4

      @@musopaul5407 that depends on editions. Yet doing a little research I believe the original manuscript has legato markings.

    • @jaspernatchez
      @jaspernatchez 3 года назад +2

      @@HowardTse "Can we play legato sound on clavichord?" Yes.

    • @flavienpodda132
      @flavienpodda132 3 года назад +1

      Mozart to Glenn:"So I'm a little master?Show me!"

  • @genlovell4662
    @genlovell4662 Месяц назад +7

    So incredibly fresh, sincere, innocent, youthful. He’s all youth, rebellion. Gorgeous man inside and out.

  • @davidsosa538
    @davidsosa538 3 года назад +108

    The only pianist that played it like an actual Turkish March

    • @gretalturdberg5954
      @gretalturdberg5954 3 года назад +8

      Only in your imagination, particularly because you are not Turkish, nor do you seem to know that the score says allegretto, not andante, nor have you listened to how a Turkish march sounded back in Mozart's day.

    • @davidsosa538
      @davidsosa538 3 года назад +5

      @@gretalturdberg5954 Ok Mom

    • @hauptmannbalalaika
      @hauptmannbalalaika Год назад +2

      The music sounds more Greek to me than Turkish which is not surprising because Greece was under the Ottomans in Mozart's times. The awareness of Greece and Greek was pretty low in those times; he could not have called it Greek March. Glenn Gould was a genius.

    • @MrHackTheGibson
      @MrHackTheGibson Год назад +20

      @@gretalturdberg5954 Interesting! Since you were clearly around in Mozart's day, perhaps you can describe to us what a Turkish march sounded like?

    • @hopelessviolin4690
      @hopelessviolin4690 Год назад +1

      @@MrHackTheGibson No need to describe.ruclips.net/video/JRbLyq52DTc/видео.html Here's what it sounded like. And checking the tempo marks what do you know it's at about 100 as opposed to Goulds 93ish. Gould is probably the pianist who has gotten closest to the true tempo of this style. Clearly you have never heard a march if you believe this to be andante speed

  • @hughmackay5200
    @hughmackay5200 2 месяца назад +8

    Such clarity, you can hear every note. There is no jumbling, no rushing, and the humour comes to the fore. Yes, the tempo is sedate, but Gould courted controversy. As an historical recording, this is Terribly important.

    • @simmo303
      @simmo303 14 дней назад

      It is supposed to be a march, not a sprint.

  • @yoshi_drinks_tea
    @yoshi_drinks_tea 4 года назад +1323

    With this tempo it sounds like Turkish music, no joke. I’m Turkish.

    • @anacharsis1070
      @anacharsis1070 4 года назад +14

      sani heryarde görirem. ünlü olmuşsun knk

    • @yoshi_drinks_tea
      @yoshi_drinks_tea 4 года назад +6

      FLstudpiano Nerede?

    • @anacharsis1070
      @anacharsis1070 4 года назад

      @@yoshi_drinks_tea hatırlamıyorum.

    • @mahakala
      @mahakala 4 года назад

      @@anacharsis1070 sus yalançi!!!

    • @agvnes.m
      @agvnes.m 4 года назад +15

      yoshi_drinks_tea ur right i agree
      Even though I’m not Turkish

  • @brucegreaves3204
    @brucegreaves3204 3 года назад +397

    THE BEST VERSION I have ever heard. This is a MARCH not a horse race. Love it and the clarity of ALL the notes is for me just wonderful. :-)

    • @juanpablo-wt2qe
      @juanpablo-wt2qe 3 года назад +5

      Same

    • @pianosbloxworld4460
      @pianosbloxworld4460 3 года назад +37

      Ok so many people play it fast that it can be called Turkish Car Grand Prix

    • @joaoguilherme9675
      @joaoguilherme9675 2 года назад

      Really

    • @anthonypashkov3999
      @anthonypashkov3999 2 года назад +8

      Absolutely agree. There's so much hidden beauty in this piece that gets uncovered at a slower tempo.

    • @exentr
      @exentr 2 года назад +4

      Mozart were childish. Thus more tempo. I agreed on the clearity tho.

  • @gyulameszaros2388
    @gyulameszaros2388 3 года назад +74

    We are lucky to be born after Mozart and Gould.

  • @andrewcassese8945
    @andrewcassese8945 3 года назад +163

    I usually hate slower tempo versions of songs, but this one is amazing. So much detail and artistry. Glenn Gould was an incredible artist.

    • @hauptmannbalalaika
      @hauptmannbalalaika 2 года назад

      I keep hearing bouzouki lines in this piece. Greece was part of Turkey in Mozart's time so it could not be named Greek March. The bouzouki. of course came later, but I can still hear it, especially in Gould's tempo. There must have existed Greek music in Mozart's time that were leading to what we know today. .

    • @RegondiMusic
      @RegondiMusic 11 месяцев назад +2

      This is the real Tempo for sure.

    • @dwacheopus
      @dwacheopus 5 месяцев назад

      Pogorelich plays like that too! And even at faster tempo!!

  • @SteveMacD927
    @SteveMacD927 5 лет назад +1437

    I really prefer this version. Too many pianists race through it like it’s “Flight of the bumblebee.”

    • @frenkyb123
      @frenkyb123 5 лет назад +81

      Mostly people just play the piece. Gould made his own piece.

    • @agvnes.m
      @agvnes.m 4 года назад +19

      Steve Mac I agree like for example listen to Lang Lang like seriously

    • @RizaHariati
      @RizaHariati 4 года назад +3

      I AGREEEEEEEEE!!!

    • @jaspernatchez
      @jaspernatchez 4 года назад +20

      @@frenkyb123 "Gould made his own piece." But it's not his. It's Mozart's. Mozart gave instructions about how to execute it. Some of those instructions are black dots and some are words. Gould picked and chose which of those instructions he'd follow and which he'd ignore. That is disrespectful to Mozart.

    • @frenkyb123
      @frenkyb123 4 года назад +37

      @@jaspernatchez I agree with you. No Mozart, no Rondo ala turca, that is true. What I wanted to say is that a lot of people are playing this. But, nobody does it like Gould did. He added his own touch, slowing down tempo and all the other little but very important details which makes his version great.

  • @katerinaO_o
    @katerinaO_o 5 лет назад +229

    His humming is my favourite part.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 8 лет назад +98

    It's the incredible precision of Gould's touch that gets me. Every note slightly detached, but the timing and dynamics are so even, it's obvious even if you didn't know it was Gould, you would know it's the playing of a master pianist.

    • @Tennisisreallyfun
      @Tennisisreallyfun 3 месяца назад

      Detached and precise, yes, and yet also warm and richly textured. Whereas that style would sound empty and hollow under the hands of anyone but a master, in Gould’s hands it sounds like wedding bells!!! Just incredible🤩

  • @sciencereallyworks
    @sciencereallyworks 5 лет назад +266

    I never cared for this piece until I heard Gould's version. It may not be "correct", but it definitely works for me. The other versions I've heard seem more like athletic performances than musical performances to me: "Look how fast I can play without making any mistakes!"

    • @pianosbloxworld4460
      @pianosbloxworld4460 3 года назад +26

      I mean look at Lang Lang his interpretation is not a march but it’s a track meet

    • @andrewvincenti2664
      @andrewvincenti2664 3 года назад +13

      @@pianosbloxworld4460 Lang Lang is just blan blan - hot air

    • @Fumozart
      @Fumozart 2 года назад +1

      @@andrewvincenti2664 bruh

    • @mehjabeenrahman3848
      @mehjabeenrahman3848 2 года назад +11

      Well, Gould's version is the real interpretation of the sonata, as I believe. I do not find anything incorrect in is playing. He has been always my favorite.

    • @ExAnimoPortugal
      @ExAnimoPortugal Год назад +6

      If you see the actual rhythm of the real Turkish Janissary march that inspired Mozart to write the Rondo Alla Turca, the beat Gould uses actually matches it.

  • @stenjohansen4442
    @stenjohansen4442 7 лет назад +103

    Now THAT is a performance worthy of Mozart.. It seems all other pianists treat it like an ornamental toy a court jester would juggle. (example: Lang Lang). Gould makes it into a work of Art and it thrilled me to hear it taken seriously. Kudos to Gould!

    • @gretalturdberg5954
      @gretalturdberg5954 3 года назад +1

      I don't think Mozart intended his march to be played so slow or in staccato. Certainly the score doesn't make that clear.

    • @kskahf
      @kskahf 3 месяца назад +1

      @@gretalturdberg5954 Bin sicher, Mozart hätte seine Freude an dieser Variation - er war ein "offener Geist"

  •  2 года назад +12

    I love this.

  • @ankontini
    @ankontini 10 лет назад +207

    I am shocked at the clarity and the poise that comes through his play. Best Alla Turca ever!

    • @howibecameanartistin100day7
      @howibecameanartistin100day7 5 лет назад +3

      for me this has some outstanding peace/calmness (in German: Ruhe) and - like you said clarity. its like the power of a stream/river (In German Bach). what means poise?

    • @kornofulgur
      @kornofulgur Год назад

      Harpsichord. He sounds like if he played the harpsichord.

  • @WildEarthPhoto
    @WildEarthPhoto 2 года назад +55

    Sometimes I get discouraged about something or other but listening to Glenn Gould always puts me in a hopeful mood. No other pianist or music can do that except Glenn's.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 7 лет назад +54

    It's amazing how precise the tempo and dynamics are in this version. There is no hiding even the tiniest mistake when you play like this.

    • @magicmulder
      @magicmulder 2 года назад +1

      Yup, and that’s why you play that way during rehearsing at first. Once you’ve ironed out your mistakes, you increase speed. Gould seems to have skipped that part.

    • @PointyTailofSatan
      @PointyTailofSatan 2 года назад +9

      @@magicmulder Don't forget that it's a March.

    • @piano_dissent
      @piano_dissent 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@magicmulder What compelling evidence exists to increase the tempo a single bpm above what Gould has done here?

  • @Dizzyfingers2
    @Dizzyfingers2 4 года назад +16

    What I like about this is: Gould understands that a "march" (for the time) is something that is played as a band performs it while marching down through town ... one hears it in the distance ... it gets louder as it approaches ... and diminishes as it passes ... much like Beethoven's Turkish March - this is brilliant in its execution to the A-major section.

  • @mightylimau
    @mightylimau 10 лет назад +291

    The notes are so clean, speed is perfect and I can hear voices of someone singing... hahaha love it

    • @jpiscina
      @jpiscina 10 лет назад +90

      he used to sing while playing, it's his voice!

    • @LuisJimenez-nd2pl
      @LuisJimenez-nd2pl 6 лет назад +21

      Ahahaha, I took of the headphones to make sure I was not hearing voices.

    • @mirigardas
      @mirigardas 4 года назад +3

      Eight years after I'm still singing

    • @fabiolaquispeturpo5222
      @fabiolaquispeturpo5222 2 года назад +2

      Glenn s voice😁

    • @dwacheopus
      @dwacheopus Год назад +1

      ​​@@LuisJimenez-nd2pl but when you took them off, you still heard voices

  • @jamesrivas6394
    @jamesrivas6394 5 лет назад +100

    The genius of this man is lost on many,he personified musical genius.
    His life was filled with extraordinary accomplishments and yet he never managed to achieve what many of us take for granted,a normal life.
    Rest in peace Glenn,you've made a believer out of many of us.
    Your light is still shining bright.

  • @vsrr83
    @vsrr83 5 лет назад +35

    Must be the first time that Turkish March got me teary eyed. Just the changes in volume are pure genius.

  • @JaseBach
    @JaseBach 8 лет назад +96

    I think most of the commentators agree that Mr Gould wanted us to hear the music anew, but what was new and had been overlooked by musicologists and pianists alike? The clue, I think, lies in the first four notes of the movement, which was played detached, distinct and staccato-like. He wanted us to move away from the idea that these four notes are just an ornament. In fact, these four notes form a motif repeated and transformed many times; and the F sharp minor section, often called an episode, is in fact an upside image of these notes. You can hear the connection in Gould's performance but not in other faster versions.Mozart is well known to write deceptively simple music that can be appreciated on multiple levels. Lang Lang's interpretation is pure and innocent joy. Someone noted that Glenn Gould made it sound like poor Turks marching home after losing a battle. Actually, the Turkish part is the triumphant parts in A major. Amazingly, Mozart started the movement softly (p), nervously in the minor key and ended with a Turkish triumphal march in A major. Mozart clearly wanted this contrast, which is as stunning a reversal as the night-to-day and the evil-to-good transformation in the Magic Flute. Just as Zarathustra (Sorastro) turned out to be the good guy, the Turks beat the infidels in this movement.Gould's was undoubtedly a post-modern reading, capturing the drama, psychology and depth of the music like no other.

    • @yonghoonsheen824
      @yonghoonsheen824 8 лет назад +3

      +JaseBach Very interesting.. Coherency through out a piece seems quite important for Gould. He looks at a music piece as if it was an essay.

    • @Gruskinator
      @Gruskinator 8 лет назад +7

      +William Doubles Ignorance sure is bliss.
      *your

    • @jillbould470
      @jillbould470 8 лет назад

      +JaseBach I can appreciate that somebody who has had formal training in music might hear music in a totally different way than somebody, like me, who enjoys music for the pure enjoyment it brings me. I kind of feel sad that, something that is supposed to be purely emotional, now becomes purely intellectual where instead of just appreciating a persons interpretation that comes from their soul, now becomes an exercise in analyzing the addition or omission of a note.

    • @jillbould470
      @jillbould470 8 лет назад

      and I do not mean this as a comment directed at you, but an over all observation.

    • @MartinVanBoven
      @MartinVanBoven 8 лет назад +7

      +Jill Bould I am sure that to people who can appreciate music (or anything, for that matter) at an intellectual level, strong emotion is involved as a result of strong intellectualism displayed.

  • @ourson66
    @ourson66 2 месяца назад +3

    The best version of this I've ever heard. It's a march, not a horse-race, as someone else said here, most players try to speed through it, and you don't get any of the really good special effects that Mozart placed in there. Gould was a madman, but a genius madman ... he knew that tempo was a big factor in rethinking a piece, which is what he loved to do. So he played the Moonlight Sonata way faster than most pianists had played it, to reveal it's inner passion and movement, and played the Turkish March way slower than most pianists had played it, to reveal the brilliance of Mozart's writing.

  • @yourdo11y
    @yourdo11y 2 года назад +30

    3:21 love this part. so lovely

    • @fellow7091
      @fellow7091 Год назад +1

      I can see horses walking among soldiers in the parade and hear the horn bells here.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 5 лет назад +250

    The technique and dynamics are FLAWLESS. You can get away with murder playing super fast (i.e. Lang Lang). But played like this, you expose every tiny flaw in your playing. And Gould plays it like Orpheus.

    • @charlesdarnay5455
      @charlesdarnay5455 4 года назад +24

      This is absolutely perfect as you say. It paints a picture in sound. People think Gould didn't like Mozart but I think this shows that he understood Mozart perfectly and treated him with great respect. Gould is showing that this piece is all about the ornamentation, and he brings that into clear focus. Lang Lang plays this piece like Porky Pig.

    • @asterius4271
      @asterius4271 4 года назад +6

      I prefer this version than Lang Lang's but I will say that the tempo Lang Lang chose (possibly to push himself to his limit) he plays at very well and accurate. But yes, all that speed sacrifices the detail that you otherwise can get at the tempo Gould chose. I just think too many pianist's try play it fast without being capable to still make it sound like music.

    • @maxime9006
      @maxime9006 4 года назад +4

      PointyTailofSatan Lang lang is an amazing pianist, you clearly don’t know what you’re talking about.

    • @eclipse1201
      @eclipse1201 4 года назад +2

      @@maxime9006 Lang lang plays it fast, but he doesn't make mistakes, at least grievous ones. He is a world class pianist.

    • @maxime9006
      @maxime9006 4 года назад

      Jack Berg Exactly.

  • @Maguspy340
    @Maguspy340 2 года назад +9

    The best version ever. I can hear everything. At the right tempo.

  • @ronleunissen
    @ronleunissen 10 лет назад +25

    Gould makes the music transparant. Wonderful pianist.

  • @lmichaelgreenjr
    @lmichaelgreenjr 3 года назад +30

    Not sure if anybody’s talked about this but check out how at 2:15 he switches the voicing of the octave to the lower note, making the melody sound like it’s dropped an octave.

    • @pianosbloxworld4460
      @pianosbloxworld4460 3 года назад +4

      The Gould voicing trick
      Edit: I’m cophing it. I’m from Toronto, surely we have rights on it? Is the technique copyrighted?

    • @jakeaboy1232
      @jakeaboy1232 Год назад +1

      Woah man wild to see you here in the comments, absolutely love your music and have your piano conerctos theme stuck in my head 24/7 :)

  • @eskolintula9295
    @eskolintula9295 7 лет назад +9

    What a surprise. Gould plays the theme like a childrens' song, delaying each note a bit. Even the arpeggios in the refrain sound like fun for the kids. Wonderful

  • @alexcarter8807
    @alexcarter8807 4 года назад +10

    He plays it with feeling. That is important; that is what makes it music.

    • @michaelciancetta6397
      @michaelciancetta6397 3 года назад

      so Mozart who WROTE it at a faster tempo is an idiot right? aahahahahah

  • @zhuolin8802
    @zhuolin8802 2 года назад +26

    It's always an amazing experience discovering a "new" piece within a piece of music that you thought you know all too well, and Gould works that wonder right here. The parts in major key are so out of how this piece is usually played, yet so in character of Mozart. Thank you for uploading this!

  • @kagan4839
    @kagan4839 4 года назад +25

    Best version I have ever heard. Greetings from Turkey.

  • @NewZman23
    @NewZman23 Год назад +11

    I've always loved this piece and am a relative newcomer to Glen Gould's playing, but hearing this I am quite amazed at how delicate yet expressive and powerful it sounds. I'm now hearing it in a totally different light. Thanks Glen Gould.

    • @piano_dissent
      @piano_dissent 6 месяцев назад

      He’s my favorite musician. Period. Living/dead, composer/performer, across all musical genres at all points in history up until today. The 🐐

  • @artistictrance1758
    @artistictrance1758 8 лет назад +241

    best interpretation ever

    • @agamaz5650
      @agamaz5650 6 лет назад +6

      ArtisticTrance yesss absolutely agreed as a hardcore Chopin fan this is really fresh and gorgeous, I don't even like this piece when gould isn't playing it he is that good

    • @KrebSDani
      @KrebSDani 4 года назад +5

      no it isnt, but absolutely unique

    • @sneddypie
      @sneddypie 4 года назад +3

      Daniel Calfuan it actually sounds like a march tho

    • @mohammadshahade8753
      @mohammadshahade8753 4 года назад +5

      Daniel Calfuan
      Yes it is :)

    • @johnhunt4505
      @johnhunt4505 3 года назад

      Try finding an interpretation by Wanda Landowska ( hope I've spelled that correctly ) - harpsichordist - sublime !

  • @hopesonmakokha5217
    @hopesonmakokha5217 6 лет назад +21

    This is one the most unique interpretation I've heard. It really gives you the time to feel every note. Goul was a brilliant interpreter of classical music

  • @coozookoo
    @coozookoo 7 лет назад +33

    Mozart is such a beast to be able to compose this piece, and hail the Maestro Gould for this magnificent playing.

  • @douceplume7265
    @douceplume7265 6 лет назад +57

    Even if it wasn't his intent, here, I've always thought that Mozart's Turkish March was played too fast.
    Now, I am satisfied. Thanks Glenn, I guess.

    • @gretalturdberg5954
      @gretalturdberg5954 3 года назад

      It is played too fast nowadays, but Gould plays it too slow as well.

    • @mmcd3182
      @mmcd3182 2 года назад +1

      @@gretalturdberg5954 Gould could have obviously played at the prescribed speed, or faster. This is an interesting slow interpretation -- so clear, and you can hear with Glenn's voicings in the background -- that he's hearing 4-8 more voices to the piece! It's awesome.

  • @JamesLee-yk3jb
    @JamesLee-yk3jb 4 года назад +10

    Fascinating - doesn't matter if you are listening to this for the first or the umpteen time. Never fails to bring a whimsical, wolfish grin to your face! His rhythm is impossibly appropriate and SO tight! You can hate it but you can't fault it at all! Bravo!

  • @Kanuckbrewer
    @Kanuckbrewer 8 лет назад +1401

    Gould could make Mozart sound like Bach

    • @Timrath
      @Timrath 7 лет назад +150

      Not even Bach sounds like Bach when played by Gould, much less Mozart. Don't get me wrong; I consider him a genius, and his interpretations are always interesting, but it's alarming to me how many people go around, professing that Gould's way of playing Bach is the "correct" or "default" one. His interpretations disregarded many core rules of baroque musicianship.
      If you want a much better idea of what Bach most probably sounded like in Bach's time, check out Ton Koopman or Robert Hill. I'm not saying they're "better" for it, but they are much closer to the original.

    • @matthewquan1529
      @matthewquan1529 7 лет назад +21

      Try listen Gould's Chopin, it will give you a good laugh

    • @user-uc3pv4sh2x
      @user-uc3pv4sh2x 7 лет назад +17

      I don't believe Gould's way as the correct or default way to play Bach. How do we know what Baroque music sounded like? Even if we knew we would still be clueless about how to play Bach because he was different. Bach's technique was unique and his imagination never depleted. I agree that Gould's Bach is not correct because there is no correct version but neither any body else's.

    • @jamesa901
      @jamesa901 7 лет назад +34

      Bach wrote dance and choral music for the harpsichord and organ. You cannot judge an interpretation of Bach on a piano for originality, period, any more than you could on a Moog. What makes Bach Bach is that his music has so much depth that can be interpreted in ways never imagined by the composer. Given that, if it were possible to transport Bach 200 years to modern day and put him in front of a grand piano, after a little practice I think he'd play his own compositions much like Gould does. Gould channels Bach.

    • @youre100right3
      @youre100right3 6 лет назад +17

      Timrath you are seriously misunderstanding Bach if you think Koopman or Hill are offering an "original" interpretation. First of all, why do we assume the way "things sounded back then" is actually representative of the way things should sound? Not all composers wrote music that fulfills this criteria, which is Gould's entire premise when it comes to interpreting Bach. Second of all, there is a special kind of bias when we treat Baroque music. In reality, our understanding of how things were played back then is just as obscure as in Romantic music, but we treat all Baroque composers under one brush (whereas we treat Brahms and Chopin as having different characteristics... this is an ignorant standard).

  • @zanhuang7402
    @zanhuang7402 6 лет назад +71

    Holy shit this interpretation is a mad work of a genius.

    • @banjoboy01
      @banjoboy01 3 года назад +4

      brilliant work of a mad genius

  • @leodarkk
    @leodarkk 8 лет назад +675

    Lots of discussion in the comments about Gould's intention when choosing this tempo. Just to make it clear, he talks about it in an interview broadcasted on BBC, if you buy it on amazon, it's dvd5, second part.
    To sum up :
    He hated the turkish march, never played it as a kid just because it was overplayed.
    He wanted the public to be shocked for the sake of it.
    He still thinks that it sounds good this way, but not better than with the usual tempo.
    He wants everything to sounds like Bach. (Hence a very loud left hand, but this is not specific to this piece)
    Those are Gould's words, no need to speculate.

    • @yobbo3
      @yobbo3 7 лет назад +53

      it was Gould's lifelong nature to tell outlandish lies to interviewers, he got a big charge out of people believing any bizarre thing he said. So just because you have GG's words on tape, doesn't at all mean he's telling the truth. He claimed he thought Mozart was a terrible composer. But listen to GG's Turkish Rondo -- these sounds can only come from deep musical love.

    • @bluegender2005
      @bluegender2005 7 лет назад +3

      if I hadn´t heard him singing in it, I would have sworn, he treats turkish march like appassionata

    • @lararae3017
      @lararae3017 7 лет назад +6

      where do you get this idea he got a charge out of telling people bizarre things. he was erudite and sincere. what is your source for your bizarre and outlandish claim.

    • @yobbo3
      @yobbo3 7 лет назад +13

      a decade or 2 on the Yahoo GG e-group f_minor. a good introduction to Gould's goofy relationships with people (and truth) is the bio-documentary "Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould" (1993). He was partially erudite; he distanced and isolated himself from most of the non-musical world. His sincerity seemed to depend on the rare meetings he had with those he regarded as his intellectual or artistic equals. (He phoned them for hours in the middle of the night.) You're in for a treat: a huge library's been written about Gould. I'm a great fan of his remarkable CBC radio documentaries, the first and most famous is "The Idea of North."

    • @pierrenic.7682
      @pierrenic.7682 7 лет назад +1

      Lara Rae yeah you re right... off course Gould hated Mozart , but Chopin more as he hated sentimentalism...

  • @discerningacumen
    @discerningacumen 3 года назад +4

    Glenn Gould is a precious stone in the world, being always serious, seeking harmony at its best.

  • @torrinpierzynski
    @torrinpierzynski Год назад +5

    It feels as if Mozart and Glenn Gould are the only people who understand this song like I do.

  • @PDN11141
    @PDN11141 5 лет назад +10

    I adore the crispness of every note.

  • @malcolmabram2957
    @malcolmabram2957 4 года назад +6

    3:54 at this pace the final notes brings tears. A jouful reflection rather than a grand finale.

  • @romacon62
    @romacon62 2 года назад +5

    this is authentic tempo

  • @juantxovega7610
    @juantxovega7610 8 лет назад +62

    Just listen to it as it was the first time, don´t compare with any other version.. Them it´s absolutely beautifull.

    • @EugeneOneguine
      @EugeneOneguine 8 лет назад +6

      +Juantxo Vega Exactly. I wouldn't try to compare, this is a beautiful music. I think I will learn the turkish march just to play it like that.

  • @jvsochan5628
    @jvsochan5628 3 года назад +11

    i think people really miss whats the real beauty of this version. sure, the tempo is slowed down, but gould's use of dynamics and his staccato techniques are sooo on point. every part of the sheet music that demands to be repeated he does it differently everytime, adding incredible movement just by legatoing a certain note, or changing the dynamics (see 1:15 for instant pleasure).

  • @afrench100
    @afrench100 8 лет назад +19

    No one but GG could have completely transformed this piece and made it actually a pleasure to hear. I love every note!

  • @zardozrennie
    @zardozrennie 4 года назад +5

    He really paints a sonic picture here with his crescendos and decrescendos, the march coming closer as the auditor is standing in the street. And yes, the tempos is perfect, dignified and stately.

  • @btrzea
    @btrzea Год назад +13

    ¡¡¡ Sorprendente !!! La calma , la serenidad, la limpieza , el equilibrio . la claridad , la luz , el amor que me transmite este intérprete . ¡¡¡ Magnífico !!!

    • @piano_dissent
      @piano_dissent 6 месяцев назад

      I’ve marched more drill than I care to admit. Gould perfectly captures the EXACT spirit. Intention. Surety. Preparedness. Precision. Focus on the task at hand. Was not expecting to stumble across Gould playing the Alla Turka, but I’m glad I did.

  • @christophersykora3601
    @christophersykora3601 4 года назад +4

    I love that you can hear him singing.

  • @goyroyni
    @goyroyni 6 лет назад +2

    Once again the genius of Glenn Gould in a crystal clear demonstration of why the total is so much more than the sum of its parts.

  • @worldclass777
    @worldclass777 6 лет назад +6

    absolute and perfect purity and clarity. Mozart would have approved. Gould is and will forever be the best pianist ever to play Bach.

  • @BloggerMusicMan
    @BloggerMusicMan 10 лет назад +19

    I really like this version. It's more joyful than the standard versions you hear of this song. It has a "step" to it.

  • @phoebelinden9602
    @phoebelinden9602 5 лет назад +11

    A lovely selection of portraits of Gould. Thank you. Also, great humming in this recording. Wonderful.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 7 лет назад +4

    Gould's incredible dynamic control and precision here is amazing. There is nowhere for faulty technique to hide when you play something this way.

  • @Caniveteiro
    @Caniveteiro 5 лет назад +8

    Does not matter if him is playing mozart, bach or beethoven, Gould is unmistakable.

  • @alejandrobaca6350
    @alejandrobaca6350 4 года назад +10

    This is as Gould as it gets.

  • @anthonylebaron866
    @anthonylebaron866 5 лет назад +8

    OMG. this is the first time I have truly loved this piece. This is exactly how it should be played.

  • @sergioazevedo7390
    @sergioazevedo7390 8 лет назад +91

    This should be the correct tempo, it's a March, not a run (except if the soldiers are running afar from the ennemy...), everyone uses this march to show how they can play fast, Gould, even if he does not like it, plays it much better than everyone else! Only to show them how it's done :)

    • @danielgorguesesteve8043
      @danielgorguesesteve8043 7 лет назад

      take all the reason, many pianists try to show off playing it as fast as they can. Gould was a great pianist

    • @unchainedrengo9239
      @unchainedrengo9239 7 лет назад +2

      Because that's how it's supposed to be. That's how Mozart wrote it and that's how the score is. They can change it however much they want, but don't say it should be played the way 1 guy plays it. Not Gould, not Lang Lang and not Say. Just Mozart.

    • @sergioazevedo7390
      @sergioazevedo7390 7 лет назад +10

      You are wrong my friend, a score does not exist by itself, it needs a performer to bring it to life, that's why we refer to "Arrau's Chopin" or "Barenboim's Chopin". I understand what you want to say, but I am afraid it does not work that way. A score is nothing, is the performer who decides what to do with it. I am a composer, I know what I am talking about, even I don't possess the truth of my own music if i am going to play it. Regards.

    • @mnichee
      @mnichee 7 лет назад

      Sérgio Azeved

    • @navigator1383
      @navigator1383 7 лет назад +1

      very good point

  • @fabiograssi670
    @fabiograssi670 8 месяцев назад +5

    The pace of this interpretation is exactly the pace of the marches of the jannissaries. Indeed, Mozart marks allegretto. This is the correct pace and probably the best interpretation. The other ones are too fast.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 7 лет назад +5

    Gould plays it like it was Bach counterpoint, with his characteristic semi-staccato style, and it sounds AWESOME. Every note as clear as a bell.

  • @clemenstremens1940
    @clemenstremens1940 2 года назад +5

    Love he is singing through the music👍

  • @Joseph-mv3rz
    @Joseph-mv3rz Год назад +2

    This Is why we love him...

  • @KK-hp1sx
    @KK-hp1sx 5 лет назад +10

    1979年NHKFM、音楽のすべてで、この曲の5つの演奏からグレングールドの演奏はどれか?と番組内quizが出され、すぐに分かりましたが、以来虜になりました。何回聴いても飽きませんね。

  • @Ms-mk9yq
    @Ms-mk9yq 8 лет назад +6

    absolute beauty
    piano's not about how accurate or how skillful, or how many difficult songs one pianist can play. Gould is proving it

  • @tedoud4738
    @tedoud4738 9 лет назад +78

    I like it because it is different than what I expected. I don't think Gould was particularly concerned whether others liked it or not. It was his interpretation at the moment he played it. Nothing more and nothing less.

    • @moonpagan
      @moonpagan 9 лет назад +5

      Ted Oud I couldn't agree more, Ted. People can't seem to fathom this iteration done by Glenn Gould because the vast majority are so hell-bent on hearing this in blistering speeds instead of true artistic and even introspective precision that only the mastery of a keyboard genius can achieve. As you say, Glenn did it his way, and that's the only way to go.

    • @luispiano1129
      @luispiano1129 9 лет назад +1

      thank you for saying this!!!! could not.agree. more !!! some people.they just too stupid to understand glenn.gould

    • @peterpiers5601
      @peterpiers5601 9 лет назад +4

      Ted Oud Oh yes, yes, yes. I'm immediately struck because it's so *different* from what I expected. And on the heels of that is how *good* it sounds. It's not Mozart's version, by all means - it's Glenn Gould's. Love it or hate it. I love it. I especially love his guts in playing it this way. And doing it so well!

    • @barbaraminardi71
      @barbaraminardi71 9 лет назад +3

      +Ted Oud it's different from others because it's the only right Mozart's interpretation and only Glenn Gould can do it because it's a genius not only a good pianist.

    • @donkeyekyo7676
      @donkeyekyo7676 6 лет назад

      Ted Oud the music itself is good whatever so many comment it bad or good

  • @therainforest4314
    @therainforest4314 6 лет назад +6

    I love how introspectively he's picking through this piece, with such surgical precision. Beautiful. :-)

  • @otfried
    @otfried 4 года назад +14

    This interpretation reflects the childlike and innocent character of a young Mozart.

  • @RizaHariati
    @RizaHariati 4 года назад +16

    I never fall in love with Turkish march until I listen to this version!!!

  • @vincentlem2534
    @vincentlem2534 3 года назад +13

    Speed is subjective. When I write a song, tempo is important and sometimes is difficult to decide. Here Glen takes a piece everyone has heard and slows it down so we can hear it in more detail. It is like looking at a painting though a magnifying glass or watching a scene from a movie in slow motion. Bravo Glen for doing something different. My Dad went to School with Glen. He said all the kids thought he was weird because he always wore gloves. I think he was the Greatest Pianist in the world!

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 6 лет назад +5

    Just listen to the evenness and perfection of each note. Flawless.

  • @linkinthegame2574
    @linkinthegame2574 5 лет назад +303

    I think Mozart himself should be interested by this interpretation

    • @violettavalery857
      @violettavalery857 5 лет назад +2

      Florent Tagnarès Lei ed io siamo dello stesso parere. V.V.. -:)

    • @gabrielmitzrael6522
      @gabrielmitzrael6522 5 лет назад +4

      I am sure he would (':

    • @kasper6873
      @kasper6873 4 года назад +2

      The mundane nature of Mozart's compositions, leads me to believe he wouldn't have been.

    • @markwilliam3723
      @markwilliam3723 4 года назад +4

      @Great Destroyer wtf did you just said?!

    • @nima4797
      @nima4797 4 года назад +4

      @Great Destroyer you are either a troll or tone deaf

  • @frogmouth
    @frogmouth 4 года назад +5

    I love Glen Gould.. This tempo is do good you can hear everything

  • @soongsoong123
    @soongsoong123 5 лет назад +6

    Best Turkish March. perfect touch and perfect tempo!

  • @aikiminomori2261
    @aikiminomori2261 7 лет назад +5

    I think I can play the piece at this tempo! Glenn Gould was a rare genius with amazing intuition, vision, interpretational power and imagination.

  • @jimhendricks88
    @jimhendricks88 7 лет назад +62

    Only Gould could make this sound great at this tempo and with this type of articulation.

  • @modernmozart813
    @modernmozart813 6 лет назад +12

    Lovely version I have ever heard

  • @abouttodie6165
    @abouttodie6165 4 года назад +7

    This tune is often played very fast,but I feel slower is more beautiful.

  • @primuladinverno
    @primuladinverno 8 лет назад +309

    Who cares about the score? His interpretation is really beautiful. Love you Glenn!

    • @moonpagan
      @moonpagan 8 лет назад +16

      +Isia Sooth I couldn't agree more, Isia. It's kind of an interesting irony here, considering Glenn usually blistered through these pieces and most musicians do this with this one in particular. Instead, Glenn chose to play it in a much slower, more introspective approach, which I absolutely love. :-)

    • @youre100right3
      @youre100right3 8 лет назад +17

      He always does the opposite of the conventional way :p . This is not to say he was non-conformist for the sole purpose of non-conforming... only that he believed that most pieces have the potential to sound beautiful in many different ways and if so, one should offer something new and enlightening.

    • @professordeportugadoyt113
      @professordeportugadoyt113 7 лет назад +4

      Isia Sooth He was very inteligent

    • @sexybarney3223
      @sexybarney3223 7 лет назад +1

      I'm sorry but if you don't follow the score it sounds shittttyyyyyy

    • @jaspernatchez
      @jaspernatchez 6 лет назад +2

      "I'm sorry but if you don't follow the score it sounds shittttyyyyyy" Yup. But it's more than that. To willfully disrespect a great composer who's dead and can't defend himself is disgusting.

  • @georgefelty6357
    @georgefelty6357 4 года назад +30

    When Mozart played back in his time, he was always concerned about strict time and preciseness and was not carried away by speed!

  • @ralphberney7768
    @ralphberney7768 9 лет назад +6

    The wonder of this is that he brings a lightness of touch and highlit melody, with a deft sense of step, rhythm and march to something that in reality was a charge to war, battle and all the bloodletting, death, maiming and carnage, the dreadful suffering and torment that ensued. GG captures, enshrines Mozart's brilliant, humane transcription into a vein of humble, perceptive parody that escapes this horror, yet does not deny it.

  • @ymbertbonaventuredickens8878
    @ymbertbonaventuredickens8878 5 лет назад +5

    i love how glenn gould this is, one of all time greats in music.

  • @lifedoom2922
    @lifedoom2922 4 года назад +7

    best interpretation i have ever heard of this magnificent piece

  • @craftmarne
    @craftmarne 3 года назад +6

    Such a delicate and precise touch! Magnificent!

  • @macflower1
    @macflower1 2 года назад +3

    Gould is the best . GENIUS.

  • @kurtlaurentz5346
    @kurtlaurentz5346 5 лет назад +3

    The sound of music reaches the soul and that is a virtue, no matter the attitudes.

    • @hurrdurr3603
      @hurrdurr3603 5 лет назад

      in other words, that's the shit

    • @kurtlaurentz5346
      @kurtlaurentz5346 5 лет назад +1

      It seems that you only know how to be musicians You do not understand the words . Your interpretation was magnificent, that is the most important.

  • @flutura2769
    @flutura2769 5 лет назад +5

    Haha I love Glenn Gould. He always surprises me with new interpretations ^^

  • @SarkarKaty
    @SarkarKaty 8 лет назад +18

    Indeed, indeed, a march, a march!! Amazing that an interpretation such as this could exist. Thanks so much for the upload.

  • @morrisal
    @morrisal 3 года назад +11

    I have a huge crush on him, retrospectively.

  • @stephanegenilloud1139
    @stephanegenilloud1139 4 года назад +5

    This is the first time ever I enjoy hearing this piece.

  • @pwnedd11
    @pwnedd11 11 месяцев назад +1

    Proving that the magic of Glenn Gould has never really been about his speed!!!

  • @pancreasdragonheart9765
    @pancreasdragonheart9765 6 лет назад +5

    Is it just me or does the decrease in speed and extremely clear playing bring out some meditative feelings? It feels like I actually have the time to hear and understand what's going on and almost ride with the music throughout the piece.

  • @pomonakernow7686
    @pomonakernow7686 5 лет назад +7

    Its so slow you can hear the beauty in it!!!❤️❤️❤️❤️😊

  • @mikemason6069
    @mikemason6069 6 лет назад +12

    Never heard anything quite like it. GG is amazing.

  • @fka1608
    @fka1608 7 лет назад +4

    I just love how in some of the pieces he always slows the tempo a bit. Proof that speed isn't everything! This is brilliant!!!

  • @williamtickhill1905
    @williamtickhill1905 3 месяца назад +1

    I played it through my stereo, and i can hear him humming along.