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

Nature-Symphony 31
— Springtime forest tableau: On seeing the most beautiful thing one could never see

Opus 64 (2024)Timing: 18'
derived from a field recording of quartet of metal wind chimes with accompanying birds and an obliging passing fly (sic)


Basic details


A different recording taken during same session as the original for this work
Another recording taking place, in the same session as the recording used in this work.
  • Instrumentation —  Part of field recording of quartet of metal wind chimes, used as 5 main layers (three of them duplicated and used out of sync with respective parent layer), plus four dedicated layers for the two fly episodes..

  • Original field recording location / date:

    • 1 April 2014, high up on north side of Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK.
  • Processing and deployment: Complex! I give some more specifics about the recording, chimes used, and the subsequent processing, on my Freesound page for the work.

  • Distinguishing features — An extension and elaboration of Nature-Symphony Prelude 1. Whereas that used just three layers, each consisting of the same tiny clip from the original field recording, this uses a more generous initial clip, including a few minutes either side of what the Prelude used, and it's deployed through five differently processed layers, the top three of which are duplicated to start at later points in the work.

    The proliferation of layers also means a lot of birdsong, variously slowed-down, helping to make our forest sound quite surreal. We also have a closely passing fly (not kidding!). This is used in four additional dedicated layers at the beginning to usher us into the inner auditorium, and again at the end to usher us safely to the outside world.