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

Nature-Symphony 62
— Shifting colours of the deep forest trail, with lurking bears

Opus 96 (2024)Timing: 45'
derived from field recording of metal wind chimes sextet (with birds), plus separately recorded solo metal wind chime


Basic details

Another recording taking place in same session
Another recording taking place in the same session. The recorder (with light grey furry windshield) is perched on a branch.

  • Instrumentation — Two different field recordings of metal wind chimes: one of a sextet of Woodstock chimes, and the other of a solo Davis Blanchard chime, whose timbre is more steely, though here its steeliness rarely rings out because of the pitch-lowing processing.

  • 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 four layers, as detailed in the Freesound page for this work, where the processing is also described.

    • Distinguishing features — The title says much of it. The 'lurking bears' are suggested by the weird-seeming lowish chord transitions in the bottom of the four layers, which sound in a brazen bitonality against what's going on in the other layers. That strong bitonality keeps asserting itself through the work like a rather knobbly and humpy backbone, with a rather grotesque and menacing feel about it — that lower pole of the bitonality having a timbre unsettlingly resembling a cross between cello and French horn.

      Birds have a quite prominent part at times, robins being the main performers.