Yes, very interesting! Very gracious. T think it would be great for all here if you´d post a link!
Thanks!
- Mathis
Thanks!
- Mathis
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@William said:
Julie
I agree it is a good idea to actually hear orchestration examples rather than just study them silently in a book.
I also agree about the balance and individual audibility of Rimsky-Korsakov's orchestration, but disagree with the idea that his music is too vertically oriented. Two examples that come to mind: March of the Nobles and Capriccio Espagnole. In both of those, even though the orchestation and voicings in a vertical sense are masterfully done, the immediate impression is one of pure melody with accompaniment - a very horizontal sound moving dynamically forward. Especially the Espagnole - it moves to a tremendously energetic climax. The opposite of stagnant vertical harmonic structures.
Just a minor disagreement though - always interesting to hear different opinions especially about Rimsky-Korsakov.
@William said:
That reminds me of what Varese said about Brahms vs. "great orchestrators." He said that in Brahms, no one comments on the brilliant orchestration because they are simply thinking about the music. On well-known orchestrators people always say "what a magnificent orchestration" as if it is something that sticks out, divorced from the music. With Brahms, it is perfectly integrated into the entire basic conception.
@jbm said:
...
Where do you and I find ourselves?
Lately, I face this question on an almost daily basis. I mean, we are writing for virtual orchestras, for God's sake! Both our language, and our medium are becoming complete abstractions.
I believe there is a certain power and beauty in this awkward position. The problem is, I have not yet figured out _where_ my music will find its "home"... Where is this music's true venue? That, I think, is the real question of our time. If its true home is the concert hall, then we are only play-acting, and hoping for what might prove to be an impossible future, in world in which many of our _cities_ can scarcely afford to even keep an orchestra...
If, on the other hand, our music's true home is a virtual one, then why should we remain confined by the parameters of orchestral technique, as we know it, at all? Why even acknowledge the constraints of "double winds", or "1st Violilns"? Why not sculpt the sound-stage, and the orchestral pallette along with it, to whatever the musical idea demands?
cheers.
J.