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Bach: Goldberg Variations, BWV 988 (The Historic 1955 Debut Recording)

Bach: Goldberg Variations, BWV 988 (The Historic 1955 Debut Recording)

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Creators: Johann Sebastian Bach, Glenn Gould
Label: Sony
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy Used: $3.14
You Save: $10.84 (78%)

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New (30) Used (23) from $3.14

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 28518

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 52594
UPC: 074645259420
EAN: 0074645259420
ASIN: B0000028NE

Release Date: October 27, 1992
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Comes with Original Case and All Discs.

Tracks:

  • Aria
  • Variation 1
  • Variation 2
  • Variation 3
  • Variation 4
  • Variation 5
  • Variation 6
  • Variation 7
  • Variation 8
  • Variation 9
  • Variation 10
  • Variation 11
  • Variation 12
  • Variation 13
  • Variation 14
  • Variation 15
  • Variation 16
  • Variation 17
  • Variation 18
  • Variation 19
  • Variation 20
  • Variation 21
  • Variation 22
  • Variation 23
  • Variation 24
  • Variation 25
  • Variation 26
  • Variation 27
  • Variation 28
  • Variation 29
  • Variation 30
  • Aria da capo

Similar Items:

  • Bach: The Goldberg Variations
  • The Glenn Gould Edition - Bach: The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I
  • The Glenn Gould Edition - Bach: The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II
  • Bach: Goldberg Variations
  • Partitas 1 2 & 3 - 70th Anniversary Edition

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
In the main, sonic differences between Sony Classical's 20-bit remastering of this landmark 1955 recording and its previous incarnation in the CBS Great Performances series (CBS MYK 38479) are subtle rather than striking. Tape hiss is reduced, while ambient studio noise is heightened, bringing Glenn Gould's trademark humming and squeaky chair more into the foreground. One can also perceive slight changes in microphone setups between certain variations. Gould completists, however, will want this Glenn Gould Edition transfer for two fugues recorded in 1957, drastically different from the pianist's perverse remakes 13 years later for his complete Well Tempered Clavier Book II. Any respectable piano collection, however, should include Gould's debut Goldbergs, at any price. --Jed Distler


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Goldberg Variations a Classic Investment   December 6, 2007
M. E. Kucsmas (Boulder, Colorado)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

For anyone growing-up in the sixties, the Goldberg Variations were a new find in the world of classical interpretations of Bach. Clean, precise and passionate, the recordings set the standard for what the over-used word "classic" should be!


This CD version is that copy of the original LP pressings. This is one to own in any music collection... right next to Beethovan's Middle Quartets and the best of Moby Grape!

Cheers!



1 out of 5 stars A Minority Opinion   September 13, 2007
Giordano Bruno (Wherever I am, I am.)
7 out of 16 found this review helpful

Spurred by angry responses to my previous reviews of Gould recordings, I sat down to listen to the Goldbergs by Gould once more, at which time I made the following notes:

Aria - Too much rubato, ergo no stately declamation from which to develop the variations. Trills very awkward, ornaments overemphasized. Too moody, almost mawkish. Moaning out of tune.
VAR 1 - Downbeats too heavy, too percussive. Attacks too varied in arbitrary manner.
VAR2 - Over-played, ergo clumsy. Some bad notes.
VAR 3 - Right hand not independent of left, ergo counterpoint distorted. Once again, overplayed and clumsy sounding. (I do realize that this is subjective.)
VAR 4 - Clangy! Too much pedal. Right hand shapeless, bad notes in left.
VAR 5 - Impressive!
Var 6 - Just plain weird; incoherent in total context
VAR 7 - Rubato destroys all sense of continuity with other variations; graons annoyingly tuneless.
VAR 8 - Pouncy!
VAR 9 - Prissy! Mincing, not in keeping with other variations.
VAR 10 - Where did this mood come from?
Var 11 - No sense of poise in the dance rhythms; many bad notes
VAR 12 - THUMPY!
VAR 13 - syrupy, tentative in relation to other variations, no sense of the developing serenity of the whole structure
VAR 14 - Stride piano bass! Pouncing on the notes is UGLY
VAR 15 - Discontinuous in every way. Hideous moaning.
VAR 16 - He's indifferent to this one.
VAR 17 - Likewise
VAR 18 - Relatively straightforward, until the left hand starts pouncing again.
VAR 19 - NO sense of preparation for this dramatic shift. Jagged sounding passages, all arbitrary overplaying. Believe me, there ARE bad notes.
VAR 20 - Silly. Almost satirical.
VAR 21 - Sounds like Wagner in a wig, for gawd's sake; i can't stand the discontinuity of his leaps from variations to variation. Contrast is not the same as discontinuity.
VAR 22 - ?
VAR 23 - The "quickness" just seems exaggerated to me, and ungraceful.
VAR 24 - Mice on the keyboard! Is it intended to be satirical?
VAR 25 - Odd. Interesting in itself, but not established in relation to the other variations.
VAR 26 - Okay, plenty of flash, but the two hands don't connect well, so the form disintegrates itself.
VAR 27 - His rubato here sounds like plain old music-camp "rushing" to me.
VAR 28 - Persuasive; his cleanest playing in the whole structure.
VAR 29 - Also persuasive, but damn his groaning.
Var 30 - Anticlimactic without double register. Boring.
da capo - Maudlin rather than serene. Emotionally dissatisfying.




5 out of 5 stars Astounding   July 20, 2007
Mike Smith
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I have a thing for Bach, and Glenn Gould really does the great composer justice. The entire recording is highly engaging, well done, and at times does not sound humanly possible. I am very impressed by this performance. This work, like much of Bach's compositions, is stimulating yet relaxing. It draws you in and if you follow it, it takes you on a journey. I highly recommend this disc to all Bach lovers.


5 out of 5 stars Scintillating Performance!   June 19, 2007
Ruhama (Houston)
2 out of 4 found this review helpful

Glenn Gould's quintessential 1955 performance of the Goldberg Variations is an absolute "must have" for every classical music library. His marvelous precision and alacrity are breath-taking! Gorgeous music.


5 out of 5 stars Astounding performance - opening the doors to Bach!   April 18, 2007
Roberto Macedo Alves (Funchal, Madeira, PORTUGAL)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Before the first time I heard Gould's first rendition of the Goldberg Variations, I used to think the music by Johann Sebastian Bach was too dry and intellectual and boring for my tastes (that was before discovering the excellent period-instrument performances) - but the lightning-fast, emotive, astounding rendition recorded by Gould made me reconsider that opinion. Yes, we hear his intrusive humming and the squeaking of the chair and such - that many consider a turn-off regarding Gould recordings - but I think they are part of the charm of the performance, and I don't find them distracting at all.

I really prefer this version instead of the second Golberg recording, more calm and controlled. If you never heard any music from Bach, this is the recording to begin with, I think.


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