@DG said:
The big snag in delivering stems is that the orchestration can be destroyed if mixed inappropriately. With some big name composers who don't really use the orchestra except as an expensive sample library this wouldn't be a problem. However with detailed orchestration from someone who really knows how to use the orchestra, stems are not ideal at all. The thought of letting a dubbing mixer loose on an orchestral piece with the complexity of a composer like Korngold makes me shudder with horror.....!
D
I hear you, and of course scores which are recorded orchestrally with no overdubs don't really have stems. LOTR was 5.1 orch/5.0 choir/5.0 vox and extras. But in creating the soundworld of a film you have to remember that the music is only one element, and that the orchestrational balance sounds very different depending on what else is playing. If you play a cue with low basses in when the characters are sat still in a quiet room, the balance would be very different from if they were sat on a rumbling train.
Obviously in an ideal world the composer and music mixer would account for this, but in practice the rest of the sound, foleys, backgrounds etc are finished as late as the music, so the composer and music mixer never actually hear everything in context until the dub.
And fwiw, the majority of great dubbing mixers are much less musically philistine than you may or may not be implying [[;)]]
michael