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SoundStage! Update | ||
Instant Replay March 24, 2007 I can't say that I'm a lover of classical music, but there are certain compositions that I do love. Many of Bach's keyboard works, for example, have an intricacy that I find very compelling. Probably no recordings of Bach keyboard compositions are more renowned than Glenn Gould's two versions of the Goldberg Variations. Recorded in 1955 and 1981, Gould's Goldbergs stand as testaments to a singular talent and his unique interpretive powers. I've heard these recordings so many times that I have memorized every note and every one of Gould's well-known vocalizations. Gould died in 1982, but late last year he once again played the Goldberg Variations for a live audience thanks to Zenph Studios, a North Carolina-based company that has taken a technological approach to keyboard music. Zenph uses computers to reproduce recorded solo-piano performances note for note, phrase for phrase. Recordings are turned into MIDI files that are fed to a computer-controlled grand piano for playback identical to the original. Zenph calls the resulting music a "re-performance" -- a "live realization of the original interpretation."
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