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

Nature-Symphony 49
— An unexpected planetary configuration telling its own story…

Opus 83 (2024)Timing: 52'
derived from field recording of metal wind chime duo and separately recorded solo small bamboo chime


Basic details

A different recording in the same session — without the Gypsy chime
A different recording taking place at the same spot in an earlier session — with a pair of Davis Blanchard chimes
  • Instrumentation — Part of field recording of a duo of metal wind chimes, and part of a separate recording of a solo small bamboo chime.

  • Original field recording locations / dates: metal chimes 10 May 2018, 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. Bamboo chime 11 December 2023, isolated oak tree just below Hunter's Path, on Piddledown.

    • Processing and deployment: Four layers (2 metal chimes, 2 bamboo chime) were used, with different speed / pitch reductions, and different degrees of cathedral acoustic.

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

    • Distinguishing features — This is as dissonant (at times) as any of my Nature-Symphonies could get, particularly owing to a marked tuning mismatch between the two metal chimes. This, however, works to our advantage. The dissonances, including fascinating 'beats' and shimmering vibrations, resolve into recognisable pitches, intervals and harmonies, so they quickly become meaningful once the listener has got over any initial shock of the opening little pile of dissonance. These interactions and the interference patterns created by the tuning mismatches create a sense of some intriguingly alien landscape — and so hence the title.