@syonker said:
If you care to share any information on the detailed process, tool sets, recommended readings/tutorials, etc. please do!
Honestly, I can't imagine anything better than studying scores of the masters. None of us - certainly not me - is writing at the level of the truly landmark composers. When you go back and truly break down, say The Rite of Spring (or Appalachian Spring for that matter), there is just untouchably brilliant stuff to immerse yourself in there. You can study, and you can analyze, but it's my experience that you also have to just live with it 24/7 to let it truly internalize, in a way that your brain will ultimately understand how to add to your own music and control for your own creative needs. As much as I appreciate the compliments, I hear my own work and I see a galaxy-sized gulf between my work and the work I truly am inspired by. John Williams is the reason I became a composer, but I think even most of his work pales in comparison to the greats - people he loved too, like VW and Elgar and Shostakovich, et al. All this computer crap is just us trying to approximate the great orchestral palette with what we've got - we just don't have orchestras lying around. (Neither did they, really, but that's a separate discussion.) So rather than getting hung up in the samples and the articulations, I'm always focused first on what it is we have to say.
_Mike