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

Nature-Symphony 9
— The ever-falling leaves of autumn

Opus 41 (2023) — Timing: 57'
derived from a Wind Chimes in the Wild field recording



Basic details


Another recording taking place during same session as this recording
Another recording taking place during this session. The small bamboo chime is beyond the metal (Pluto) chime, and difficult to see because of its tubes being coloured black.
  • Instrumentation — Wind chimes as follows:

    • Woodstock Chimes of Pluto (relatively high-pitched, sunny-sounding pentatonic scale)
    • Woodstock Gregorian Chimes (Tenor) (upbeat-sounding Gregorian chant scale)
    • Large and small set of bamboo chimes (cheaply purchased locally — imprecise tuning, with hint of whole-tone scale).
  • Original recording location / date — at a reasonably secluded spot at Sharp Tor, by the Hunter's Path, high up on north side of the Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK, on 21 November 2012.

  • Processing — (a) Halving of speed, rendering the whole show an octave lower than the original; (b) application of a cathedral acoustic with 'back of cathedral' perspective; (c) taming of the very strong low bass frequencies.

  • Primary distinguishing features — A big surprise if one has heard the original field recording. The airy, sunny sound is transformed into what sounds to me to be an impassioned enigmatic melancholy! Also, there's a weird sense of a slow, gently swinging melody in a loose 3/4 metre, repeating itself doggedly through the whole work, despite my not at all having contrived or 'meant' it. It's one of the surprises the creation of new Nature-Symphonies pretty regularly springs on me.

    The melody is never heard in simple completeness, and it's likely that most people wouldn't even notice it; it would presumably require a fairly musical ear and creative imagination for that. To me, it comes out even more strikingly in Nature-Symphony 9a, the elaborated version of this work.