Nature-Symphony 68
— Flies as musicians (3): half-diminished 7th (explicit)
Rannoch Moor Moods, 1
Basic details
-
Instrumentation — A field recording of flies and bumblebees, grasshopper(s), with occasional little flurries of linnet calls.
-
Original field recording location / dates: I made the original recording on 17 July 2024 on the summit area of Cranbrook Down in the south-west corner within the rounded square of the ancient hill fort Cranbrook Castle, 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 a half-diminished seventh chord, which morphs into a diminished seventh chord at the bottom, and a further layer to create a quite frequent drone effect, reminiscent of my use of a drone underpinning the half-diminished seventh in my Symphony 4 (Highland Wilderness).
-
Distinguishing features —
Here we have a bold attempt to use my little winged circus to emulate something of the inspiringly brooding essence of my Symphony 4, and its Scottish Highlands and especially Rannoch Moor resonances. To me at least, it does work well, though always with the quite severe constraints of a composition of this type — for example, the number of notes that one fly can sound is the number of layers that I use, and by the time I've got up to eight layers the sum total of background sound is almost (to distinctly) unacceptable, and the order and any rhythmic placement of the notes or other sounds is fixed for the whole work, which can sound distinctly, moronically, odd at times!
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 (sometimes sounding like a cross between that and a contrabassoon). At least for the most part the lower ones and those providing smoother notes of longer duration aren't true (two-winged) flies but bumblebees.