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  • For those looking to study an orchestration of a work originally for piano, a reminder regarding the above mentioned "Pictures at an Exhibition." I know some scores of the Ravel orchestration have the original Moussorgsky piano composition at the bottom of the page. The reader can immediately consider the piano score and study the orchestral expansion of registers, the filling in of inner voices, the interpretations of dynamic changes, etc.

    Perhaps scores for "Mother Goose" and "Daphnis" can be found with the original piano work also included. But it seems a common layout with the "Pictures" scores I've seen. I know the Boosey and Hawkes miniature score of "Pictures" has it.

  • Actually you did make a point, Evan, that's true. Ravel is orchestration applied to pre-existing musical ideas and Mahler is pure orchestral thinking. I didn't mean to make that distinction though it's a very good one - I was just talking about the best use of orchestra, period.

    One point that occurred to me in the middle of reading Evan's statement is something Varese said about Brahm's orchestration. He commented that people always acclaim a great orchestrator like Ravel but never even think of Brahms' orchestration because it is completely integrated into the music. It is not a spectacular addition, but a natural part of the expression and so more perfect than that of a composer whose orchestration "sticks out."

    I don't know if I fully agree with him but he has a point too. Though I told this to a conductor once and he said "Yes, but Varese was crazy."

  • Isn't this sort of a silly distinction? What then do you call it if Stravinsky writes everything at the piano? Does plonking out notes disqualify what you're doing from being called orchestration?

    (These are rhetorical questions, in case anyone was wondering... ) [[;)]]

  • What is silly about it? I wasn't talking about using a piano to figure out things. I'm talking about having a piano score in this case that was written without any instruments other than piano in mind. Then afterwards looking at the score and saying - this would work for violins, this would be good for flute, etc.

    In the case of Mahler, you do not have that situation (at least a lot of the time). He probably originally had in mind the sound of a trombone solo in the third symphony, or a trumpet solo in the fifth for example, that was completely integrated into the musical idea to begin with - was not separable from it.

    An example of the opposite is Bach - the Art of Fugue. There are no instruments at all specified. It is pure musical tones. Yet you can after the fact orchestrate these any way you want. These are two extremes - two distinctions - and there is nothing "silly" about them.

  • I just mean that orchestration = writing for orchestra, regardless of whether you're expanding a piano piece or writing a piece for orchestra from the beginning. The silliness comes in when someone tries to say that only the first is orchestration.

  • I was never trying to discriminate in a snobbish way like that and certainly don't - however you create something, if it sounds good it is good.

  • Understood.

  • I alos meant to mention Vaughn-Williams as one of my favorites. For an example of pure orchestration at its most colorful - the Seventh Symphony which was based on the film score to "Scott of the Antarctic." The depiction of the remote, inhuman landscape and awesome natural forces is brilliantly handled in that piece. Also the Sixth Symphony with its sustained pp finale (inspired perhaps by his friend Holst's "Neptune"); the Eighth with the slow movement and scherzo being done entirely by strings alone and winds alone respectively; and the Ninth with its inclusion of a "concertino" sax trio. Vaughn-Williams, along with Holst, innovated much of modern orchestration.

  • I'm just doing this for fun and to see if anyone agrees or has their own list - my favorite orchestrations of all time (which includes necessarily composition because I don't like anything that is just good orchestration but lousy music!) -

    Mahler's 2nd (probably my favorite of all pieces of music ever written with the RCA Ormandy Philadelphia LP the greatest music recording of all time - human beings cannot express more with sound than this)
    Strauss Alpine Symphony
    Strauss Thus Spake Zarathustra
    Strauss Death and Transfiguration
    Debussy Images
    Debussy Jeux
    Debussy La Mer
    Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique
    Stravinksy Firebird
    Stravinsky Rite of Spring (of course)
    Shostakovich 5th
    Shostakovich 10th
    Ravel Daphnis and Chloe
    Ravel Mother Goose Suite
    Rimsky Korsakov Capriccio Espagnol
    Holst The Planets
    Holst Egdon Heath
    Holst Perfect Fool Suite
    Vaughn Williams 4th, 6th, 7th, 9th symphonies
    Herrmann Vertigo
    Herrmann Journey to the Center of the Earth
    Herrmann Obession
    Herrmann Marnie
    Herrmann Jason and the Argonauts
    Tchaik 5th and 6th (another obvious one)
    Beethoven 3rd and 9th
    Stokowski Bach transcriptions: Komm Susser Tod, Chaconne from Partita in D
    Borodin b minor symphony
    Ravel orch. of Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition

    These are only some examples that spring to mind which emphasize orchestral use as well as great ideas. Of course many other great composers - like Mozart, Schubert, Brahms, and above all Bach - emphasize musical ideas with fairly conventional (or no) orchestration.

    Who have I left out? If anyone has their own favorites I'd be interested to know.

  • ...

  • Dvorak - of course. He was a great one I left out. The 7th symphony, the 9th of course, many others. He was probably as much a master of orchestration as Tchaikovsky whose orchestral treatment he reminds me of.

    Bruckner is one of my favorites purely as a composer, though some people take issue with his orchestration, accusing it of being "block-like" as if too much influenced by his organ background. I don't agree with that and really like it - especially the extreme dynamic contrasts he was so fond of between tutti ff and pp solos, the majestic brass writing, and the great soaring string lines. His music was infinitely simpler than Mahler's, almost as if the simple spirituality of his nature (being a very devout countryman who only moved to the big city) and his love of nature were reflected in the rock-solid, huge forms of his symphonies.

    Whereas Mahler - a Jew who converted to Christianity, a neurotic but very sophisticated urbanite, was reflected in the restless, even agitated qualities of his music which had the deepest lows and highest peaks conceivable. The 6th symphony in particular is a tremendous, surging dynamo of everchanging emotions.

  • Mahler's 6th Bernstein NY
    Berg Vln Cto, 7 Last Songs, Wozzeck
    Beethoven Beethoven Beethoven
    Elliot Carter Vatiations for Orch
    Zemlinsky Lyriche Symph
    Copeland 3rd Symph
    Schumann Symph's and Orch Works
    Dvorak
    Brahms
    Mendelsohn
    Wagner (did tons for modern orchestration)
    Debussey
    Ravel
    Britten
    Walton
    Bach
    Wolfgang
    Barber
    Bartok

    I guess I havn't posted here because you just want to put down all the major guys. I can't really list works cause there are so many.

    DC

  • Anothers Great modern orchestrators for me:
    Albert roussel,sinfonie
    Oliver Messiaen,most orchestral works
    Ottorino respighi,powerful

  • A little surprise here maybe but...

    Puccini is an absolute monster ochestrator. La Boheme is masterful. He is one of the most difficult to apprehend (for me) as far as his entire approach. He has a way of passing things off that is brilliant. Colin Davis the great British conductor has voiced his marvel at Puccini's handling of the orchestra.

    Debussy perhaps exemplifies the concept of composition/orchestration as a singular endeavor as much as anyone (Afternoon of a Faun an astonishing example.) No one presented their work in the orchestra any better than that man. A great, great musician.

    DC

  • ...

  • How did we manage to leave Vaughn Williams out? (Paul rectified that thankfully - standing up for his fellow countryman I suppose.)

    The Lark Ascending is a beautiful piece if music to be sure. Think I'll pull that LP out.

    Is it just me or is Vaughn Williams growing in stature? His music is holding up very well and he is as copied as anyone it seems.

    In a phone conversation with David Raksin I mentioned to him I thought he sounded like Mahler to which he replied, "A lot of people say Vaughn Williams" which I thought was interesting.

    DC

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    @PaulR said:

    William puts Vaugn Williams in his list next to Holst.


    Heavens you're right Paul. Not paying attention. And he lists some dandy symphonies (leaving out the 2nd and 5th however which are also gems.) VW's 5th is being "borrowed from" right and left these days. Gorgeous string writing at the and of it btw. The Klingon theme in Star Trek V is right out of it for sure. The 4th also has very intense writing and orchestration that's found it's way into film.

    It seems that film writing behaves so often as the step child of the Classical literature. I must agree that Bernard Herman (as William advocates) is the least derivative although Mr. Goldsmith and North have also been stunningly original -oops - wrong thread.

    dave

  • Prokofiev too!

  • Good Heavens we left dear Sergei Prokfiev out! "Close Encounters" would not have been the same score had Mr. P. not penned Cinderella all those years before. He is one of the most emulated in orchestral color (and downright music) in Hollywood to be sure.

    On the original liner notes to the soundtrack of Close Encounters Spielberg mentions JWilliams instruction to him on "the importance of Russian composers." Also, at a JGoldsmith session I attended (Super Girl) Alexander Courage his orchestrator then said, " For musical development - German composers, for film development - Russian. He explained how the Russians would develop through reorchestration of the same material and the Germans would develop the material itself. Very inciteful.

    Evan champions Prokofiev here often.

    Dave