Strange wind chimes duo, half-speed! — Debussy Bells, bamboo
<b>Even more strange and other-worldly in this half-speed version — and sure to be detested by some!</b> <img src="https://www.broad-horizon-nature.co.uk/me-icon_wink.gif">
<b>Half-speed version of part of <a href="https://freesound.org/people/Philip_Goddard/sounds/686153/" rel="nofollow">https://freesound.org/people/Philip_Goddard/sounds/686153/</a> — a deliciously strange duo, recorded on 2 March 2017 at my usual wind chimes recording spot, by Hunting Gate, at the highest point on the Hunter's Path, high up on the north side of the Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK — as always, with a backdrop of the quiet rushing sound of the River Teign far below in the bottom of the valley. What I'm presenting here is part of a 1h 33' recording.</b>
<b>Chimes used:</b>
<b>1. Davis Blanchard Debussy Bells</b> (left)
<b>3. Bamboo chimes — cheap ones bought from a local store. These are a large and a small set, which I always used together as though they were one instrument.</b> (right)
This is one of the many fruits of my <i><b>Wind Chimes in the Wild</b></i> project. Perhaps perversely, I'm uploading my recordings in reverse chronological order — most recent first —, so the most 'advanced' sounds are tending to come earlier rather than later.
<b><a href="https://www.philipgoddard.com/shop/store-2-windchimes.htm" rel="nofollow">Detailed information about the Davis Blanchard chimes</a></b>
Birds don't figure strongly in this particular day's recordings.
<img alt="Recording Davis Blanchard chimes just below Hunter's Gate" src="https://www.broad-horizon-nature.co.uk/170224_recording_wind_chimes_high_up_in_teign_gorge.jpg">
<i>Recording two Davis Blanchard chimes plus a large and small set of cheap bamboo chimes in an earlier session at the same spot (no photos for this session). The arrow points to the recorder, with its black furry windshield.</i>
<b>Techie stuff:</b>
The recorder was a Sony PCM-D100, with two nested furry windshields — the inner being a Movo one <b>of rectangular box shape*</b>, and the outer a custom Windcut one —, and it was placed on a mini Zipshot tripod.
* <i>Note that I <strong>WARN AGAINST</strong> use of windshields that are of any sort of box shape, for I soon found that they were inherently unsuitable for any decent-quality recording. While no doubt non-box-shaped windshields from Movo would be okay, the presence of relatively flat surfaces, edges and corners creates internal narrow resonance peaks in the treble, which give the latter an abrasive and rather 'screamy' quality, no matter who's made the particular windshields.  When I realized why my recordings had developed that nasty treble quality I had to go back through all recordings made with that dratted box-shaped windshield, and use Voxengo CurveEQ to enable me to precisely neutralize two narrow treble peaks and thus enable the recordings to sound wonderfully natural rather than bafflingly stressful.</i>
Post-recording processing was to apply EQ in Audacity to correct for the muffling effect of the windshields and correction for the D100's weakness in very low bass — and then, later on, the aforementioned remedial EQ measure using Voxengo CurveEQ to remove the two narrow treble peaks kindly added by that rogue model of furry windshield.
<b>Please remember to give this recording a rating — Thank you!</b>  <img src="https://www.broad-horizon-nature.co.uk/me-icon_wink.gif">