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

Nature-Symphony 2
— Deep cave waterfall celebrating its own splendour

Opus 34 (2023) — Timing: 60'
derived from a Wind Chimes in the Wild field recording



Basic details


Location of original recording
Location of original field recording. The recorder was beside about the furthest you can see of the river in this view, off to the left.
  • Instrumentation — Wind chimes (one set only) as follows:

    • Woodstock Gregorian Chimes (Tenor)

  • Original recording location / date — Just a little downstream of Drogo Weir, Teign Gorge (near Castle Drogo), Devon, UK, 6 February 2013

  • Processing — (a) 50% speed reduction, which means sounding an octave lower; (b) application of 'deep cave' acoustic.

  • Primary distinguishing features — The rather pretentious-seeming upbeat sound of the Gregorian Chimes has been transformed into something much more potent and majestic in the best sense. The huge reverberation coupled with low speed and octave-lower pitch produces all sorts of harmonies that one would never directly from the chimes.

    When the chimes are sounding gently, their strike tones are heard little or not at all, and the waterfall sound is simply teasingly coloured with their sustaining sounds. When the wind makes them more active, the strike tones come out dramatically, sounding as though from a completely different instrument from what is producing the sustained tones.