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Glenn Gould.

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The defining moment of  Glenn Gould 's career came in 1964 when, at the age of 31, he withdrew from all public performance. The move was viewed by audiences and critics as willful and bewildering, and was seen as evidence that despite his demonstrably supreme artistry he was, in the argot of the common man, a nut. But, as  George Szell  once said of him, "That nut [was] a genius." In his short international career, which spanned only 24 years,  Glenn Gould  changed the way the music world thought about performance practice, recording, and the music of  Johann Sebastian Bach . Glenn Gould  was born to comfortable middle-class parents in Toronto in 1932. A pampered only child,  Gould  demonstrated his remarkable talents quite early and in 1943 entered the Toronto Conservatory of Music, where he quickly came to the attention of its director,  Sir Ernest MacMillan . On MacMillan's recommendation,  Gould  was taken on as a student by the Chilean-born pedagogue