Glenn Gould : the ecstasy and tragedy of genius / Peter Ostwald.

Author/creator Ostwald, Peter F.
Format Book
EditionFirst edition.
Publication InfoNew York : Norton, ©1997.
Description368 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Subjects

Contents The concert -- A little night music -- Infancy -- Child prodigy -- A childhood friend -- New teachers and further success -- Gaining a manager -- "My love affair with the microphone" -- Self-isolation -- Triumph in the states -- First contact with psychiatry -- Conflicting demands -- Telephone calls -- Traveling overseas -- Strange illnesses -- In search of a home -- Dr. Joseph Stephens -- The pitfalls of composing and performing -- Retirement from the stage -- The solitude trilogy -- Changing views of composers -- Impersonator, philosopher, and technician -- New faces, new challenges -- Approaching middle age -- The last years -- A fatal stroke.
Abstract The Canadian pianist Glenn Gould was a musical genius--a child prodigy whose rise to world fame was jump-started in 1955 by a sensational recording of Bach's daunting Goldberg Variations. As his career continued to blossom, Gould made his mark as a world-renowned pianist, composer, and conductor but also demonstrated his talent and intelligence as an influential critic, essayist, philosopher, actor, comedian, and filmmaker. But along with his charm, Gould was tragically disturbed - a recluse with nocturnal work habits, obsessed by physical and mental complaints, he relied heavily on prescription drugs. He consulted scores of doctors, avoided intimacy, and never married. Struggling against lifelong physiological and psychological problems that always threatened to overwhelm him, Gould neglected his health and died prematurely at age fifty of a massive stroke. Glenn Gould's life raises many questions about the phenomenon of genius. Was Gould's genius sponsored by his eccentricity or vice versa? Do men and women of genius sacrifice themselves in the service of a higher ideal while remaining personally unfulfilled? Dr. Peter Ostwald, a professor of psychiatry noted for his expertise in psychobiography and a skilled violinist who played chamber music with Gould, captures the brilliant fusion of genius and eccentricity that composed this highly mysterious and appealing figure.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 337-358) and index.
LCCN 96043854
ISBN0393040771

Availability

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Music Closed Stacks - Ask at Circulation Desk ML417.G68 O88 1997 ✔ Available Place Hold