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

Nature-Symphony 24
— Secret Forest — Bringer of joyful dreams

Opus 56 (2023) — Timing: 54'
derived from a field recording of a solo small bamboo wind chime plus another of a solo metal chime


Basic details


Original recording for Layer 1–3
The bamboo chime used in this work being recorded earlier in the same session. The original for this work was made a little higher up and facing uphill to minimize background sound from the river Teign far below.
Another recording from same session as this work's metal chime recording.
This is another recording from the same session as this work's metal chime recording. The scene looked just the same, but without the bamboo chimes.
  • Instrumentation —  Part of field recording of solo small Indonesian bamboo wind chime (longest tube 30cm), used as 3 layers, and the second, quieter, half of a larger 8-tube metal chime tuned to a gentle-sounding Blues scale, used as 2 layers.

  • Original field recording location / date:

    • Bamboo chime recording: 13 December 2023, on Piddledown, just in the top of the open woodland high up on north side of Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK, just a little above the Hunter's Path. 

    • Metal chime recording: 16 February 2017, a little way further east, on steep ground just below the Hunter's Path, by Hunting Gate, at the highest point of that track.
  • Processing — The layers were processed as follows:

    • Layer 1 (bamboo chime): Half-speed; pitch an octave below original;
    • Layer 2 (bamboo chime): Half-speed; pitch an octave plus a tritone below original;
    • Layer 3 (bamboo chime): 17.678% speed; pitch two octaves plus a tritone below original;
    • Layer 4 (metal chime): half-speed; pitch an octave below original;
    • Layer 5 (metal chime): 37.458% speed; pitch an octave plus a fourth below original.

    I give some more specifics about the chimes used, and the subsequent processing, on my Freesound page for the work.

  • Distinguishing features — I was really struck by the musical potential of the little bamboo chime, because its six tubes managed to sound a diminished triad, a second-inversion minor chord, a tritone and a minor sixth (its total range). Indeed really it has only five different notes because two of its tubes are almost the same pitch. My choice of overall pitch for each layer resulted in a strengthening of tritone in the mix, and in a proliferation of intervals and chords that are heard, all with a musical piquancy that haunts the air.

    The metal chime (Davis Blanchard 'The Blues', made of galvanized steel) is musically potent not just because of the its 'notes', but also because of its strong harmonics, which give it a different timbre from that of the normal, aluminium, chimes. This really shows up when the recordings are slowed down, as here.

    The overall effect of the interactions of the chime activity on the different layers strongly reminds me of two particular things:

    • wildlife in a large forest with big trees;
    • The birdsong impersonations in certain of Olivier Messiaen's organ compositions (e.g. Livre d’Orgue), when heard played in a very large church or cathedral.