Music Compositions of Philip Goddard — www.philipgoddard-music.co.uk

Music From the Mountain Waters
- a contemplation of wilderness

Opus 22Timing: 10:48
for orchestra with piano
The tumbling stream in Lairig Leacach, Scottish Highlands
Lairig Leacach, with Stob Coire na Ceannain (Grey Corries group) on skyline, Scottish Highlands, May 1981
 

Listen on YouTube…

Listen to excerpts

Haunted by distant sound of rushing water heard from summit and high ridge-top…

Every spring from 1979 to 2000 I had a stay in the Scottish highlands and walked over a delectable selection of the mountains. In addition to musical material already captured in two other works of mine, without fail a particular six-note scale, in the form of a mysterious and rather scrunchy chord, emerged from the sound of distant rushing water on the mountains — particularly as heard from the summit ridges —, and it's this which forms the backbone of this nature poem.

The scale held as a quiet string chord — like the sound of rushing water heard from summit and high ridge-top
The scale held as a quiet scrunchy chord on upper strings, mimicking the sound of distant rushing water as I heard it far below…

That chord and scale seems to be a particular feature of my Scottish Highlands experience, for rushing water in the Alps, and on Dartmoor in my current home area, didn't have this particular musical effect upon me, at least with any particular vividness. This scale (effectively the octatonic scale with two missing notes that result in a respective minor- and major-third step) is implicit in parts of my 4th Symphony, and is explicit in my 5th Symphony as the basis of the main variation theme — and now it's explored in depth.

This short work is uncompromising music, with a strange repetitive tune and an almost hectoring quality created by adherence to its peculiar mode, and the presence, much of the time, of all the notes of the scale simultaneously. Within the silence is tumult, and within the tumult is silence. Listeners who themselves have walked high on the Scottish mountains will recognise the eerie alarm calls here and there of the ptarmigan (realized on the woodblock).

The strange repetitive tune already referred to has about it a suggestion of walking upon wild mountain terrain — the strong 6/8 swing liberally punctuated with halting and stumbling syncopations, and gathering a strong sense of intoxication with the experience. The work is a contemplation of mountain wilderness, rugged, untamed — ennobling for those who can open to it, and no doubt abhorrent to those who cannot. Although its idiom is highly individual, this work is the counterpart in my musical output to Tapiola and Egdon Heath among the works of Jean Sibelius and Gustav Holst respectively.


Related works

View to Glencoe mountains, from Beinn a' Bheithir
The Glencoe mountains, from the summit ridge of Beinn a' Bheithir (Scottish Highlands), April 1980

Obtain Scores from the Publisher…

Musik Fabrik


…Or you can purchase from the USA.
Music From The Mountain Waters — sheet music at www.sheetmusicplus.com Music From The Mountain Waters By Philip GODDARD. For study score. Published by Musik Fabrik. (mfpg008)
See more info…