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

Nature-Symphony 38
— Preliminary report on the unclimbed Mountain of Ten Thousand Ecstasies

Opus 72 (2024)Timing: 61'
derived from field recording of ensemble of two metal wind chimes with large and small bamboo chime


Basic details


Recording location for the metal chimes
A recording at the same spot during the previous session. The arrow points to the recorder. The bamboo chimes for this recording were properly placed: roughly same distance from recorder as the metal chimes, and well spaced apart.

  • Instrumentation — Part of field recording of two solo metal wind chimes plus large and small bamboo chime.

  • Original field recording location / date: 2 March 2017,  on steep ground just below the Hunter's Path (high up on north side of Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK, by Hunting Gate, at the highest point of that track.

    • Processing and deployment:
      No multi-layering; part of original recording, slowed to half-speed and given back-of-cathedral acoustic:
      1. Davis Blanchard Debussy Bells (8 tubes, tuned to the whole-tone scale, but with one or two clashing notes);
      2. Davis Blanchard Pluto (8 tubes, tuned to a a minor-scale note sequence incorporating a minor major seventh chord, a minor triad and an augmented triad).
      3. Indonesian bamboo chimes, large and small (6 tubes each; imprecise but very compatible tuning).

      Fuller details on the Freesound page for the work.

    • Distinguishing features — An intense sort of beauty, which many people would no doubt find difficult to connect with, while others gain from it something of a pinnacle musical / visionary experience. A lot of the power of this comes from certain recurrent sustained tones, which sometimes give a sense of the whole caboodle being driven by some sort of powerful dynamo that is beyond the comprehension of our everyday 'minds'.

      Nature-Symphony 39 (Progress on the unclimbed Mountain of Ten Thousand Ecstasies) is an elaboration of this work, using this whole work as one layer, and adds another layer containing a quarter-speed (2 octaves below original) version of part of the same recording, so adding complexity, variety and drama.