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

Nature-Symphony 66
— Flies as musicians (1): wholetone scale (implicit)

Opus 100 (2024)Timing: 41'
derived from a recording of flies and willow warblers, with grasshopper(s)


Basic details

The original recording taking place
The original recording taking place.

  • Instrumentation — A field recording of flies and willow warblers, also with the odd quiet grasshopper.

  • Original field recording location / dates: I made the original recording on 31 July 2024 high up on Cranbrook Down, on the track from the Cranbrook byway track to the top of the hill (Cranbrook Castle, an ancient hill fort), high above the Teign Gorge (Drewsteignton, Devon, UK).

    • Processing and deployment: This work has seven layers, as detailed in the Freesound page for this work, where the processing is also described. They are tuned to the wholetone scale, but are well offset from each other so that we do not hear the wholetone scale and its chords as we would from an 'explicit' version with much closer offset of the layers.

    • Distinguishing features — For much of the time the willow warblers rather steal the show, and the flies' musical performance is a subtle one, thanks to the long offset between layers. This, thus, still has a feel of a natural soundscape with subtle musicality, rather than an obvious musical creation. An 'explicit' version of this, with much closer offsets won't be produced because that makes the willow warbler song rather a mess then. However, other flies recordings without such prominent birdsong will be processed to give both implicit and explicit versions for the respective chord, scale or musical motif.

      The flies' timbres are an important aspect of each Nature-Symphony using them. Generally, in these processed arrangements, each individual fly sounds remarkably like a fast tremolando orchestral strings section, albeit more precisely located but on the move. So, we get sonorities ranging from delicate sul ponticello violins right down to double-basses, which latter can sound really dramatic.