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

Nature-Symphony 60
— Dancing Song of the Earth: There shall be no more war!

Opus 94 (2024)Timing: 38'
derived from field recordings respectively of solo metal wind chime, and trio of small metal chimes with large+small bamboo chime


Basic details

The chimes ensemble recording taking place
This recording taking place; the arrows point to chimes that are difficult to see from this position. The recorder (with light grey furry windshield) is perched on a branch.

  • Instrumentation — Field recordings, respectively, of a solo metal wind chime, and a trio of small metal chimes with a large plus small bamboo chime.

  • Original field recording location / dates: main ensemble recording on rough steep ground beside Hunting Gate, highest point of the Hunter's Path, Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK. The solo chime recording was made on 2 January 2014 near Sharp Tor, by Hunter's Path, Teign Gorge.

    • Processing and deployment: The solo chime was deployed in one layer, but that was a mix of the half-speed version with a copy of that version pitch-shifted up by a fifth, so adding incandescence to this chime's timbre. The ensemble was deployed in three layers, the bottom two layers being slowed and pitch-shifted to achieve impressive deep notes from the large bamboo chime.

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

    • Distinguishing features — It's the bamboo chimes that give this work such a dance-like feel a lot of the time. In layers 2–4 we have those chimes plus a trio of small pentatonic metal chimes whose sound is basically radiant and potentially joyful. However, their different levels of pitch-reduction make the harmonic nature of their pentatonic sound more complex. There is still a joyfulness in their sound, but with a sense of depth and impassionedness. This in turn is often heckled by the plaintive cries from the basically melancholy-sounding Woodstock Olympus chimes, until near the end, when those quite anguished cries cease, leaving the stage to the underlying sense of celebration.