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(Improved version of https://freesound.org/people/Philip_Goddard/sounds/688246/ and https://freesound.org/people/Philip_Goddard/sounds/688247/ , correctly zoomed this time, with more solid soundstage, and with long uneventful lead-in much reduced)
This recording is backed and surrounded by a whole mass of related and often inspirational story. To put myself back there on that night for writing these notes, I'm in touch again with the power and 'electricity' of that night's experience, with shivers up the spine and near-tearfulness that this was all really happening, and not just a dream sent to torment me with the waking-up. — But this is the spot for the basic info, and a fuller, more contextual, account (connecting with a big and convoluted personal story), is to be found at my page The inspiring frisson of an all-night recording session out in the wilds.
I made this recording as part of an all-night recording session on 18-19 June 2014. The exact location was at a carefully chosen spot on the top of the precipitous crag known as Sharp Tor, beside the Hunter's Path, Teign Gorge, Drewsteignton, Devon, UK, quite near the well-known Castle Drogo. That is nearly a kilometre to west of Hunting Gate, where I made my other, concurrent dawn chorus recording.
This is a somewhat less quiet panorama than that one, because we're lower down, less distant from the River Teign and the birds in the lower part of the valley. The river is louder here too because of some rapids below, and also some sound is presumably being picked up from Drogo Weir, a little further upstream.
Another difference is how the two choruses start. Here, prior to the main chorus, we hear a gentle (i.e., fairly distant) ensemble of nightjars. These are persistent, and form a foundation for the build-up of the main chorus, gradually getting buried in it and quietly bowing out, leaving it to the others to continue building this uplifting symphony. The kick-off of the start of the main chorus comes from robins, not song-thrush as in the Hunting Gate recording.
Advisory
Because of this being a primarily distant and thus quiet panorama, it's NOT a good idea to turn the volume up beyond a sensible normal setting. If you do so, you would certainly hear still more detail, but that would not be as I was hearing it, and also you'd find the occasional really close bird song very uncomfortably loud.

The Sharp Tor crag, from the Hunter's path just to the east of it. The arrow points to the recorder on its tripod, which is clearly visible in the full-resolution version of this image, while the little patch of valley fog is in the Chagford area, and high Dartmoor forms the distant skyline.
The techie stuff (recording session):
I took with me two Sony PCM-M10 recorders, so I could record two concurrent dawn choruses, some distance apart (in the event, nearly a kilometre apart). Actually I started this recording about 1.30 a.m. BST, but this edited version starts probably about 3.45. The recorders were each fitted with a Røde DeadKitten furry windshield (the original, more effective, light grey version).
I placed the one for this recording perched on top of the Sharp Tor crag just by the seat, so it was just as well it was night and nobody was going to come here to sit and admire the non-view! The recorder was on a diminutive Hama Mini Tripod (something I'd not use nowadays, especially as the PCM-D100 recorder is really to heavy for it). It took me quite some time to find the likely best spot among the irregularities on the crag-top.
The point was that I realized that much of the birdsong would be more or less distant, and that the sound of the River Teign here, as one would normally hear it, would mask quite a bit of that birdsong. So, the name of the game was to get an optimal balance between minimizing the river sound by bringing the recorder back from the absolute top prominences, and maximizing exposure to the distant birdsong by bringing it forward, to overlook the bottom of the valley.
This involved my having to keep getting down into funny positions to try to assess the river sound as heard at the level of the recorder on that tiny tripod. As there was virtually no birdsong then, I could work only on the basis of the river sound — which meant in practice having to imagine the distant birdsong while I listened to the river sound at recorder level, and choose the minimum distance back from the edge that reduced the river sound just enough, set against my imaginary distant dawn chorus. Surely at least somebody out there will agree with me that I did a bloody good job in taking that little bit of trouble! ![]()

The recorder just waiting for me to take it down, having done a brilliant job!
Techie stuff (post-recording)
Initial post-recording processing was to apply an EQ curve to compensate for muffling from the furry windshield, but much more recently I used the A1 Stereo Control VST plugin to widen and dramatically sharpen-up the appalling stereo imaging of the PCM-M10 (widening to 160%), then with an EQ tilt away from the treble to compensate for the over-brightening of the recording caused by the widening.
… And a reminder, that there's a fuller, more contextual account of that recording session at The inspiring frisson of an all-night recording session out in the wilds!
Please remember to give this recording a rating! ![]()
This recording can be used free of charge, provided that it's not part of a materially profit-making project, and it is properly and clearly attributed. The attribution must give my name (Philip Goddard) and link to https://freesound.org/people/Philip_Goddard/sounds/833156/
Type
Flac (.flac)
Duration
116:16.659
File size
574.2 MB
Sample rate
44100.0 Hz
Bit depth
16 bit
Channels
Stereo