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

Nature-Symphony 11
— The Eternal Astronomer's gaze

Opus 43 (2023) — Timing: 60'
derived from a Wind Chimes in the Wild field recording


Basic details


Another recording taking place during same session as this recording
The original recording taking place. The two bamboo chimes to left and the two Gypsy chimes to right.
  • Instrumentation — Wind chimes as follows:

    • Music of the Spheres Gypsy Chimes (mezzo and soprano) (tuned to different modes on an Eastern European Gypsy scale).
    • Large and small set of bamboo chimes (cheaply purchased locally — imprecise tuning, with hint of whole-tone scale).
  • Original recording location / date — by (just below) the Hunter's Path, high up on north side of the Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK, on 5 March 2013.

  • Processing — (a) Two copies of original used as layers, at different speeds and therefore different pitches — the top one being an octave lower than the original, bottom one a further minor seventh lower; (b) application of a cathedral acoustic with a moderate 'back of cathedral' perspective to all layers.

    Note that the additional slowing of layer 2 made it some 45' longer, and that excess length demanded tome that it be saved for use in another Nature-Symphony. The following day I quickly located another wind chimes field recording of mine to try as top layer with that remainder as layer 2, and the result can be heard in Nature-Symphony 12.

  • Primary distinguishing features — A dramatic contrast from the persistent sweetness and consonance in Nature-Symphony 10. The Gypsy chimes here give tension and drama, and the title says it all (well, almost!). It amazed me how directly this piece clicked together, so I already had it saved in definitive version the same day that I got the idea to try using that 45' remainder from the previous Nature-Symphony.