Hornbeam 'Fastigiate'

1 sound

Current age: Mature
Size at maturity: 20m
Species native to: Europe (including the British Isles)
Tree identification number: 0HDM

Composer name
Ellen Drewe

About the composer:
Ellen is a composer currently studying at the Royal Academy of Music. She has written pieces for the Martin Read Foundation, Pianist Nicola Meecham, BSO Kokoro Ensemble and more. Ellen has received awards for her compositions and was shortlisted for BBC Young Composer of the Year Award 2016. She has also taken part in the RPS Women Conductors Scheme.

About the tree:
The name comes from the old English 'horn' meaning iron and 'beam' meaning wood. The wood's strength was used for load bearing tasks in such as cartwheels, tool handles and chopping blocks. As the hornbeam loves heavy clay soils, it is a true tree of London!

About the composition:
What struck me the most about the Hornbeam ‘Fastigate’ was its curved shape, very dense leaves and that the branches are all directed to the sky. I represented this in creating lots of layers of recorded glissandi in the bass trombone. Bass Trombone - Samuel Taber


Part of this walk

Music for Trees

Music for Trees

Regents Park, London, UK
Download the walk. Press START. Put the phone in your pocket. Look up. Look at the trees which surround you. As you walk, sounds will come. As you wander, sounds will change and layer. Then, later, have a look at your phone. The trees you are beneath will be identified, as will the creator of the music that you’re listening to. Explore the app. Other trees can be identified by selecting them. This is a soundscape of geo-located music created for some of the trees of Regents Park. The app will play music created by students from the Royal Academy of Music, their compositions an interpretation of the trees’ qualities both as individual specimens and as members of species. Walk beneath tree foliage on a sunny day; the leaves glow shades of green with the backlight and shimmer in the wind. Look at the shape and movement of leaf types, the quality and depth of the greens in the foliage. A small tree stands alone, reaching for the sky. A large tree dominates its environment, the scale and spread of the branches and the evident strength of the structure inspiring awe. Elsewhere, a group of trees might have layered, low, interlinking canopies which create an enclosed, intimate environment. Music for Trees is a soundscape derived from this visual experience. The composers have been tasked with identifying and giving sound to the myriad qualities of trees, through an understanding of the characteristics of the different species and individual specimens. Each tree has its musical signature. Stand beneath a freestanding tree and the sound will play on its own. However, where canopies overlap, so will the sounds. Where many canopies overlap, multiple music sources may create a layering of sound, phasing effects, echoes and multiple shifting harmonies, an aural equivalent of the visual experience. The project was generated by an arboriculturist who has been working with the trees of Regents Park for the last five years, inspecting trees for their condition and health, but of course responding to them in other ways too. Being amongst trees makes all of us feel better, in simple and profound ways. The Royal Academy of Music were approached with this idea and we hope they’ve been inspired by this encounter with the natural world as we hope you enjoy the work they’ve created, share it with your friends, and learn something.
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