On Roger Waters, as quoted in Rock Compact Disc (September 1992)
“I wasn't motivated to do it [re-record Bach's Goldberg Variations] until rather recently, when it occurred to me, on one of my rare relistenings to that early recording, that it was very nice, but that it was perhaps a little bit like thirty very interesting but somewhat independent-minded pieces, going their own way, and all making a comment on the ground bass on which they are all formed and to which they all conform. And I suddenly felt, not having played it in, well, since I stopped playing concerts, about 20 years, having not played it in all that time, that maybe I wasn't savaged by any over-exposure to it, and that if I looked at it again, I could find a way of making some sort of almost arithmetical correspondence between the theme and the subsequent variations, so that there would be some sort of temporal relationship, I don't want to say just exactly 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, that kind of correspondence, but, you know what I mean, there would be a sense in which, substituting for the fact that Bach had absolutely no melodic design that is continuous but rather a base harmonic design that is continuous, there would be at least a rhythmic design that is continuous, and the sense of pulse that went through it. And that seemed to me sufficient justification […] to do it all over again.”
transcribed from The Glenn Gould Collection vol 13 (Sony laserdisc).
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Glenn Gould 8
Canadian pianist 1932–1982Related quotes
Korean Quarterly 1998 http://www.koreanquarterly.org/Summer98/sarahchang.asp
On her early married life with her first husband Ben Hagman, p. 39
My Heart Belongs (1976)
GQ Interview (2005)
laughs
Richard Hallebeek's interview with Shawn Lane (2001)
If you’re in tune with your story then the characters do come at you organically. There isn’t an order to how they might appear.
Source: On how she invests part of herself in her characters in “JESSICA HAGEDORN” http://www.tayoliterarymag.com/jessica-hagedorn in TAYO Literary Magazine
Without this you can’t play Chopin, you can’t play Mozart, and lastly absolutely not the Goldbergs.
Talkings on Bach
On how he switched from drums to bass
Modern Electric Bass, Jaco Pastorius (1985)