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

Nature-Symphony 46
— Peaceful sea at night, with What the hell's that?

Opus 80 (2024)Timing: 50'
derived from field recording of metal wind chime, with separately recorded natural soundscape of distant Manx Shearwaters


Basic details


Overlooking Cot Valley to coastline to south, with Manx shearwater
Overlooking mouth of Cot Valley, along coastline to SSE, with Sennen Cove and part of Land's End complex in distance. The Manx Shearwaters recording was made just a little way to left of this viewpoint, looking obliquely across the valley and out to sea.
Superimposed Manx shearwater photo courtesy James Sellen, and not to scale.
A different recording in the same session — without the Gypsy chime
A different recording taking place at the same spot in a later session — with a pair of Davis Blanchard chimes
  • Instrumentation — Part of field recording of a metal wind chime, and part of a separately recorded natural soundscape of distant Manx shearwaters.

  • Original field recording locations / dates: metal chime 16 February 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. Manx shearwaters: in early small hours of 25 June 2014, from top of north side of mouth of Cot Valley, near Cape Cornwall, St Just, Penwith, Cornwall, UK.

    • Processing and deployment: Four layers (2 chime, 2 Manx shearwaters ) were used, with different speed / pitch reductions, and different degrees of cathedral acoustic, except that the upper Manx shearwaters layer is as heard, apart from strong reduction of the sea sound.

      For fuller details please see the Freesound page for the work.

    • Distinguishing features — Very unusually for my Nature-Symphonies, the chime sounds are relegated to a dreamy atmosphere painting (the two layers pitched at two octaves, and that plus a tritone, below original), used as a backdrop for the Manx shearwaters — for many people one of the eeriest bird sounds one might hear.