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

Nature-Symphony 52
— The sound of one mountain applauding its climbers

Opus 86 (2024)Timing: 65'
derived from field recording of metal wind chime sextet, with two small clips from a bamboo chimes recording


Basic details

A different recording in the same session — without the Gypsy chime
This recording taking place, not all the chimes being clearly visible in this view.
A different recording in the same session — without the Gypsy chime
Yes, the title is deliberately a humorous nod to the Zen koan What is the sound of one hand clapping?!
(An AI image generated by Bing Image Creator to my specification)
  • Instrumentation — Part of field recording of a potent trio of metal wind chimes and a pair of bamboo chimes (large and small).

  • Original field recording location / date: 10 December 2013, 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. The bamboo chimes recording was made on 21 November 2012 at Sharp Tor, further west along the Hunter's Path, Teign Gorge.

    • Processing and deployment: Three main layers were used, with different speed / pitch reductions, and different degrees of cathedral acoustic. A fourth layer consists of just two short clips (the one at the end very short indeed) from an earlier bamboo chimes recording, suitably slowed and pitch-reduced.

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

    • Distinguishing features — Like the last two Nature-Symphonies, the density and complexity of the sound is suggestive of complex mountain terrain, though the different chimes combined with both Gypsy chimes give overall a sweeter, less steely sound, with the abundant creative dissonances being less pugnacious.

      This work is also gentler because I opened up the texture more by making a few gaps in Layers 1 (especially) and 2, so exposing the other layers, including some relatively quiescent passages that otherwise would have passed unnoticed. Those are points of particularly exquisite peaceful repose and delicacy, which give more dramatic effect to the denser, wilder, sections.

      The title is a humorous reference to the Zen koan ('impossible' riddle) What is the sound of one hand clapping?. In fact that title is effectively a compound koan.