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

Nature-Symphony 76
— Beauty of Mother Nature's ever-running dynamo

Opus 110 (2024)Timing: 46'
derived from two recordings of solo metal wind chimes, one combined with large and small bamboo chimes.


Basic details

The Gregorian + bamboo chimes recording taking place
The Gregorian + bamboo chimes recording taking place; the small bamboo chime is hidden behind the large one.

  • Instrumentation — (a) A field recording a solo metal wind chime (Davis Blanchard The Blues), plus (b) a field recording of another (Woodstock Gregorian, tenor) with large and small bamboo chimes.

  • Original field recording locations / dates:
    Gregorian and bamboo chimes at Sharp Tor, by the Hunter's Path, high up on north side of the Teign Gorge (Drewsteignton, Devon, UK), on 21 November 2012, and the The Blues chime on 16 February 2017 on steep rough ground just below Hunting Gate, at highest point on Hunter's path.

    • Processing and deployment: The recordings are deployed in two layers each, all at half-speed and variously pitch-shifted. Full details on this work's Freesound page.

    • Distinguishing features — To my ears this is one of the most exquisitely beautiful works I've yet come up with. Its sense of a driving purpose comes particularly from its subtle dynamo-like 'pedal' tone at alternating (A2+G2) and (A3+G3), which I emphasized a little because of its musical importance here, and 'driving-forward' higher tone at E5+D5 (usually concurrent and thus dissonant in a powerfully meaningful way. Everything seems to revolve around those two  double tones, even when either isn't sounding.

      There's a haunting quality about it all, which seems deeply meaningful, and yet which defies explanation. One thing that gives the music such a sense of a 'proactive transcendence' is all the microtonal intervals and harmonies, a lot of which are a result of the Gregorian chimes being tuned to the standard A440 and the Blues chime being tuned to the brighter A448, in addition to other microtonal effects that are a result as usual of the reduced speed causing harmonics to be heard as though they were fundamental or at least 'singing' pitches, and also caused by the just intonation system that both metal chimes are claimed to be tuned in.