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

Nature-Symphony 58
— Anticipation, eruption, remembering, remembrance

Opus 92 (2024)Timing: 37'
derived from field recording of metal wind chime quartet


Basic details

The smaller metal chime in a previous session at the same spot
This recording taking place; the Gypsy chimes are the ones with black tubes.

  • Instrumentation — Field recording of a quartet of metal wind chimes, with a part for some ravens flying around.

  • Original field recording location / date: on 10 December 2013 on rough steep ground beside Hunting Gate, highest point of the Hunter's Path, Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK

    • Processing and deployment: The chimes recording was deployed in 6 layers, with various speed and pitch reductions and degrees of cathedral acoustic.The clip of ravens towards and at the end was deployed in another 5 layers, each a tritone below the higher neighbour.

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

    • Distinguishing features — This is a relatively short Nature-Symphony. As its title suggests, it has a relatively quiet anticipatory earlier part (actually just over the first half), but then the wind picks up and the chimes go bananas, sounding crazy-dramatic. After a very brief lull, more subdued activity peaks follow, sounding like memories of the big 'eruption'.

      This work's overall tone harmonically is more gentle and less dissonant than some of the other recent Nature-Symphonies, and the influx of ravens in the ending, answering each other across tritone divides, adds a balancing humorous touch as the atmosphere becomes otherwise rather sombre.