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

Nature-Symphony 27
— Quest for the ever-concealed mountain — Prelude to the mountaineer's 'Poem of Ecstasy')

Opus 58 (2023) — Timing: 63'
derived from a field recording of sextet of metal wind chimes, plus another of a solo small bamboo chime


Basic details


Recording skylarks during this session
The recording following that used in this work, which had two more chimes.
A different recording of the large bamboo chime, made a week or so later near the same spot
Recording the bamboo chime used in this work; the recorder was close to the ground, off to bottom and somewhat right, facing steeply upward to the chime,
  • Instrumentation —  Part of field recording of sextet of metal wind chimes, used as 2 layers, and part another of a solo medium bamboo chime (longest tube 42cm).

  • Original field recording location / date:

    • Metal chimes: 10 December 2013, high up on north side of Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK.
    • Bamboo chime recording: 21 November 2023, similar location.

  • Processing — The layers were processed as follows:

    • Layer 1 (metal chimes): half-speed, thus an octave below original;
    • Layer 2 (ditto): speed reduction to make it an octave plus minor seventh below original;
    • Layer 3 (bamboo chime): speed reduced to give pitch an octave plus a tritone below original;
    • Layer 4 (ditto): speed reduced to give pitch 3 (yes, three!) octaves below original.

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

  • Distinguishing features — An intense and visionary-sounding work, as intimated by the title. The metal chimes suggest the heights of aspiration, in a distinctly ungrounded state, while the much speed-reduced bamboo chime, giving some quite deep bass sound at times, is our grounding aspect of the work, reflecting everyday preoccupations down in the lowlands. The presence of the Woodstock Pluto and Mercury chimes in the metal chimes ensemble makes for a certain aspect of sweet wistfulness in the overall inspirational sound, as though hoping for or aspiring to future great things, but not actually being 'there' yet.

    That's in marked contrast to Nature-Symphony 28, which uses the same ensemble minus those two chimes. There, the sound is more sharp-etched, somewhat sterner but in the most positive way, with the incandescence of actually making the summits of achievement, always moving on to other achievements.