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

Nature-Symphony 61
— Steely-wiry sunrise echoes in a dark and rocky mountain forest

Opus 95 (2024)Timing: 63'
derived from 4 field recordings of metal and bamboo wind chimes


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 — Four different field recordings of wind chimes: three of respective ensembles, and one solo.

  • Original field recording location / dates: I made the Layer 1a and 1b recordings on 19 March 2014, on steep rough ground just below the Hunter's Path by Hunting Gate, highest point on that track, high up on north side of the Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK. Layer 2 recording was made on 24 February 2017, and the Layers 3–5 recording on 2 March 2017, both at the same spot by Hunting Gate.

    • Processing and deployment: This work has five layers, as detailed in the Freesound page for this work, where the processing is also described.

    • Distinguishing features — Among the metal chimes, at any one time we have one quintet of Woodstock chimes in Layer 1, itself with some complexity of sound because of the interactions between the five distinct musical scales. These are in contrast with the sterner, more steely tone of the Davis Blanchard Debussy Bells chime deployed in the other four layers) and its stern-but-magical tuning to the whole-tone scale (creatively deployed among its eight tubes). To further elaborate the play of contrasts, the second recording of the latter chime, used in Layers 3–5, also has a prominent pair of bamboo wind chimes, large and small. The bottom layer is pitch-reduced to 3½ octaves below original, which gets some breathtakingly low notes from the large bamboo chime.

      Those contrasts suggested to me a dark rocky mountain forest, with enigmatic penetrating steely-seeming sunrise rays appearing here and there among the dark shadows — and hence the title. The change-over of recording in Layer 1 just before 39' into the work gives a dramatic sense of uplift as new rays of sunlight unfold.