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

Nature-Symphony 77
— Threnody for a dying planet

Opus 111 (2024)Timing: 49'
derived from one recording of a solo metal wind chime, and another of a quintet of them, with some bird calls.


Basic details

Another recording in the same session as the quintet taking place.
Another recording in the same session as the quintet taking place. The recorder is perched on a branch by means of a GorillaPod.

  • Instrumentation — (a) A field recording of a solo metal wind chime (Davis Blanchard The Blues), plus (b) a field recording of a quintet of metal chimes — Woodstock Gregorian, tenor with 4 smaller chimes (Woodstock Pluto, Polaris, Mercury and Mars).

  • Original field recording locations / dates:
    Both on steep rough ground just below Hunting Gate, at highest point on the Hunter's Path, high up on north side of the Teign Gorge (Drewsteignton, Devon, UK), the ensemble on 19 March 2014, and the The Blues chime on 16 February 2017.

    • 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 — This relatively subdued but profound four-layer work seems overall to be near-static, yet always slowly seething with inner change, both actual and implied. Three of its layers(the chimes ensemble)  paint a landscape now shrouded in a terminal sadness, through which the planet's beauties are still trying to shine, while one layer ('The Blues' chime) shines out now and again with its inherent radiance and apparent sense of trust in one's imminently 'moving on' and reincarnating in some far-beyond planetary system.

      Overall, an uneasy ambivalence presides, with much 'creative dissonance' when the radiant and the despairing parties are roughly in balance — but to those truly with 'ears to hear', even those more dissonant patches have their own intense sort of beauty, which lies in the constant morphing of dissonant intervals and chords into sweet consonances, which in turn morph into dissonance again while other consonances are emerging.