One thing I failed to mention is the ultimate goal of relating to the orchestra as a single instrument so to speak. Just as we relate say to a single synthesizer keyboard. If I'm aware of all the "sounds" on a keyboard (anything from extremely electronics sounds, to Rhodes, to whatever) then I have a good handle on how things are going to sound without having to play them (by virtue of familiararity.) I don't have to play a Fender Rhodes patch to know how it's going to sound. I also don't need to play a french horn part to know how it will sound.
It seems to me that ideally - writing for the orchestra should be notes going straight on the page in the actual instrument at conception and then fine tuning using various principles.
For example:
If I hear an aggressive rapid passage in an upper register I'm not just hearing notes but the instrument that will play it, like strings. I may after the fact decide to "strengthen" this passage with a flute (which is an application of an orchestration principle following an original creative idea.) The creative idea was NOT an orchestration question. It was a compositional idea that happened to include all aspects of the sound - aggressive string sound.
Even when composers "sketch" in 4 parts on piano score they don't do it in a vacum. They know already what they're writing and hearing. The orchestration that follows then becomes an enhancement to what was already pretty clear in their mind.
Does this sound right gentlemen?
DC
It seems to me that ideally - writing for the orchestra should be notes going straight on the page in the actual instrument at conception and then fine tuning using various principles.
For example:
If I hear an aggressive rapid passage in an upper register I'm not just hearing notes but the instrument that will play it, like strings. I may after the fact decide to "strengthen" this passage with a flute (which is an application of an orchestration principle following an original creative idea.) The creative idea was NOT an orchestration question. It was a compositional idea that happened to include all aspects of the sound - aggressive string sound.
Even when composers "sketch" in 4 parts on piano score they don't do it in a vacum. They know already what they're writing and hearing. The orchestration that follows then becomes an enhancement to what was already pretty clear in their mind.
Does this sound right gentlemen?
DC