I hate to keep sounding like Scott Smalley's PR person, but he spent a fair amount of time on this subject in his film orchestration seminar. In fact the Rimsky-Korsakov formula came up, and Scott's opinion was that - for contemporary film music at least - it doesn't necessarily apply.
He takes great pride in the fact that the balance - the "mix" - is accomplished through his orchestrations. (Pretty much what William says.) We went through numerous examples of doublings that instead of adding "weight" actually soften a part; how the louder instruments (trumpets especially), can have incredible power playing a unison line, then immediately soften by splitting into harmony as another section needs to be prominent. He even said something like (and I'm paraphrasing here), "All the faders on the mixer in my MIDI studio are pushed to 11. I don't really mix there...I do it through the balance in the orchestrations."
Going beyond the basics of creating dynamics, we listened to examples of parts that were written to be powerful, but got covered in the actual performance through poor orchestraion. Then we explored how they could stand out more by re-voicing them in various ways. Scott even takes time to sequence some of the alternatives so we could hear the difference.
It takes a good understanding of the mechanics of each instrument as well. For example, it's harder to play high parts quietly. And on most instruments, difficult to play lower parts loudly. So which range of the instrument you're writing for has a big impact. It's something you can't cover with a fader move in a live performance. (Scott joked that he can always tell an inexperience orchestrator when he sees an outrageously high note...marked pianissimo.)
It helped me a lot, and I'm already utilizing some of the techniques. I feel like I'm at the tip of the iceberg! (We've dug back into our Adler since returning from New York. And instead of automatically loading the keyswitched patches, I find myself looking for VSL instruments with the most dynamic layers.) In the past I've done so much of my orchestration on more of an intuitive basis...which turns out okay most of the time. But it TAKES a lot of time. Thinking of these ideas and concepts are already getting me where I want to be a lot quicker.
Maybe I'll get really good at them someday. [:D]
Fred Story
He takes great pride in the fact that the balance - the "mix" - is accomplished through his orchestrations. (Pretty much what William says.) We went through numerous examples of doublings that instead of adding "weight" actually soften a part; how the louder instruments (trumpets especially), can have incredible power playing a unison line, then immediately soften by splitting into harmony as another section needs to be prominent. He even said something like (and I'm paraphrasing here), "All the faders on the mixer in my MIDI studio are pushed to 11. I don't really mix there...I do it through the balance in the orchestrations."
Going beyond the basics of creating dynamics, we listened to examples of parts that were written to be powerful, but got covered in the actual performance through poor orchestraion. Then we explored how they could stand out more by re-voicing them in various ways. Scott even takes time to sequence some of the alternatives so we could hear the difference.
It takes a good understanding of the mechanics of each instrument as well. For example, it's harder to play high parts quietly. And on most instruments, difficult to play lower parts loudly. So which range of the instrument you're writing for has a big impact. It's something you can't cover with a fader move in a live performance. (Scott joked that he can always tell an inexperience orchestrator when he sees an outrageously high note...marked pianissimo.)
It helped me a lot, and I'm already utilizing some of the techniques. I feel like I'm at the tip of the iceberg! (We've dug back into our Adler since returning from New York. And instead of automatically loading the keyswitched patches, I find myself looking for VSL instruments with the most dynamic layers.) In the past I've done so much of my orchestration on more of an intuitive basis...which turns out okay most of the time. But it TAKES a lot of time. Thinking of these ideas and concepts are already getting me where I want to be a lot quicker.
Maybe I'll get really good at them someday. [:D]
Fred Story