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- čas přidán 16. 07. 2024
- Let's talk about orchestration books!
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0:00 Intro
1:43 Adler's The Study of Orchestration
5:00 Piston's Orchestration
8:10 Korsakov's Principles of Orchestration
11:02 Berlioz' & Strauss' Treatise on Instrumentation
11:49 Mancini's Sounds and Scores
13:07 Honorable Mentions
18:20 Some Final Thoughts
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Investigations Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
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#orchestration #books #instruments
For pure instrumentation info, Alfred Blatter’s “Instrumentation and Orchestration” is gold. The info on orchestration isn’t great, but the descriptions of the individual instrumental properties, characteristics, and capabilities is stellar.
For the jazz/contemporary side, Sammy Nestico’s “The Complete Arranger” is the gold standard, surpassing anything put out by Berklee Press.
An excellent academic book on jazz and popular arranging is “Jazz Composition and Arranging in the Digital Age” by Sussman and Abene.
You are a godsend. Been looking for more resources on orchestration in modern genres
My journey into arranging and orchestration began with "The Complete Arranger." An indispensable resource!
Yes, Orchestrating in the Digital Age is great! The technique for voicing brass vamps is insightful.
George McKay's "Creative Orchestration" is a handy little book. Talks about textures and breaking down each section into a certain role depending on the need of the song/piece.
Thanks this is what I wanted do you have any other suggestions?
@@hansamitamajee1930 study GRADNUSS AD PARNASSUM....best book 📚 to learn COUNTER POINT....
TEXTURES
COUNTERPOINT
WITH good SATB rules....
Start experimenting to the core....
U will get ur style for successive scores
As a teenager back in the 1970s, I discovered a book called "The Technique of Orchestration" by Kent Kennan on the shelf of my local public library. Over the next couple years, their copy probably spent more time on my bookshelf than theirs. It was used as the textbook for the orchestration class at my university back in the day. Originally published in 1953, I currently own the 5th edition (1996), and a 6th edition was released in 2002. Like your description of the Adler book (which I haven't read but will look into, based on your recommendation), most of the text is spent focusing on the individual instruments and sections, and relatively little space is devoted to writing for a full orchestra.
Yes! This was the first orchestration book that I studied and I found it very clear.
If you read French (a big if, I know), Koechlin's Treatise of orchestration (1940's) is a gold mine. It's roughly 1600 pages divided into 4 volumes: instrumentation and balance, writing for instrument groups, and the last two on actual orchestration, with examples galore. It's the most comprehensive books I've read on the subject (and I've read Adler), although the writing style is a bit outdated and not the easiest to read.
Henry Brant's is a must read for orchestration. However if you want to learn and comprehend orchestration from a book you can simply get Sevsay's "Cambridge Guide to Orchestration". For more on the Mancini style and beyond Sammy Nestico's "The Complete Arranger" is a fantastic companion.
I’d love to hear you talk about how to score study! 🙂
Anne, you are marvellous! Thank you for all your work!
@@andreyfw If you can, if you have an access to the internet (I know -it’s a wartime...) please find and subscribe to Orchestration Online CZcams channel, presented by an orchestrator-tutor Thomas Goss. He presently resides in New Zealand, and his video output is simply awesome for any orchestration student (and even pros can learn a thing or two). He also has a PDF book available for download. I hope it helps. BTW - I perform often with a violinist from Ukraine in our orchestra at Disney.
Worked with arranger and orchestrator Victor Vanacore who won a Grammy on a Ray Charles Album. Victor uses many of the techniques outlined in Mancini’s book. So that book is great for Pops and Big Band sounding music.
One of my favorite yt channels for composition for films and tv. Love your content. thanks for making this video on orchestration books.
Fantastic video! Thank you for being so down to earth and completely honest. It feels like I’m meeting you and you’re genuinely telling me about your experiences with each book. Which is SO helpful for a conservatory student like me. Thank you
Love your channel! I've learned so much from your videos. Orchestration has always been of interest to me, and you make it so easy to understand. Oh, and I love your makeup! 😉
I don't own it, but another supplemental book by one of big band's most respected orchestrators is "Arranged by Nelson Riddle", which includes many tips based on his years of conducting sessions for television and motion pictures. It's about 200 pages long and costs $35 new. Riddle is probably most famous for his orchestrations for Frank Sinatra. Dick Grove also has a very practical book on arranging for jazz band, which I believe has accompanying audio.
I always enjoy listening to the topics you choose to speak about. Your makeup is great.
I was at Eastman when Adler was there. He was an INCREDIBLE teacher! You nailed it!!
Adler's book is pretty much the go-to book for orchestration, I still have the 2nd edition and I use it all the time (I bought the book back in 1988).
I know several people who have studied with Adler and not a single one of them has a single bad thing to say about him.
Very interesting and balanced approach and good well equilibrated choosen books.. And indeed : the best thing is to have a variety of books because they all have their specificaties and accents and different point of views and different ways to explain a ton of things. Thank you for this video and all your other videos. I learned so much based on your YT video channel 👍👌
Dear Anne-Kathrin ☘️ Yes, Adler is used WORLDWIDE as you already pointed out in your video. Of course there are other spectacular orchestration books available as we all know as composers but Adler is widely preferred (especially for beginners and intermediate level students) because of two main reasons: 1. It has a workbook. 2. Priceless audio examples. Also, needless to say that it's a very meticulously organized book and the writer is Adler! Greetings from Türkiye 🇹🇷🙂
Another great resource of a video, but the part I’m most thankful for is at the end when you told me to go practice
I loved your comments about learning to read music near the end.
Absolutely fabulous! I mean simply so, because I hadn't seen such a review/comparison before now. Very helpful. Thanks
Your suggestions are a great starting point and even more if possible. I happened to be locked in a rehearsal room with the orchestra and a score that didn't work. At that point you are alone, with your pencil and what you have studied. These books are absolutely essential to know and study... Ciao from Italy ( because of my basic english I did this comment with Google Translator. I hope nothing sounds weird...)
Korsakov's book was the only available in the book store in where i live...but this was very helpful for my career as an orchestral composer! Nice to know other books of orchestration exist too! Will look into it!
Good video Anne. Very informative. I haven't read all the books you reviewed, but I full heartedly agree with your assessment of Korsakov's excellent book on the PRINCIPLES OF ORCHESTRATION. The text book we used at USC in the 1980s was Kent Kennan's THE TECHNIQUE OF ORCHESTRATION which I remember was useful as a constant easy-go-to reference for instrument ranges, transpositions, and combining certain instruments for specific colors and effects.
Thanks for another great one, Anne-Kathrin! I'm from neither Europe nor North America and can say the one we use the most where I'm from is the Rimsky-Korsakov ones - I even first learned 4-part harmony with his Harmony book as well.
I agree that Adler's book is overall the best, but I think what elevates it above everyone else's is the extra CDs you can get with it. I got a used copy of the 3rd edition ages ago, along with the CDs, and they are phenomenal because basically every little excerpt used as an example in the book is accompanied by a recording. Being able to listen to the examples just takes everything to another level.
Cheers!
Thank you! That Korsakov book is exactly what I needed.
I completely agree, I'm Loving Adler for details on organology and the study of scores as examples of how to balance the choirs of the orchestra, but of course practicing writing and even programing based on real recordings. Thank you for the list!
I'm from Brazil and I've been writing music and trying to compose for films, video games and such. I also have a band and play the bass - I'm also the songwriter for the band.
Thank you so much for these recommedations! I've been "teaching" myself on how to write complex music and OSTs and this video has come to great use! You got yourself a subscriber! :)
I'll watch your other videos!
Cheers!
Thanks for the reviews. I was hesitant about the first book. Thanks for showing some of the pages. I’m definitely getting that book. I’m glad it has demonstrations and not just walls of text talking without showing. That is the selling point for me and more.
Great video Anne-Kathrin and you are seriously rocking that eye liner that looks absolutely fab!
Thank you!
Hey, from Australia - love your channel. At the Sydney Con composition course, we had Piston, which I love and I still refer students to to this day. Also, I too like some of your other readers, love Arranged by Nelson Riddle as I've had to do more and more over the years. Thanks so much for the other suggestions - I also will be putting them on my reading list. Big hugs from "downunder".
Another great read is William Russo's Composing for the Jazz Orchestra...jazz obviously, but has great information still. Used often at Columbia College Chicago. =) Obviously not classical / film, but still great read!
Not only is this video very informative, but the engagement from our community has also been quite eye-opening. This is part of the reason why I love meeting and engaging with other creatives. Always something to learn. Cheers to all!!
you are the best youtuber! you are like the amadeus of our recent times (you rock). i will study sheet music harder now because of your content
I suggested this topic, I'm sure I was not the only one that made a comment about it but watching this makes me happy, thank you
I bought Adler's Study of Orchestration when you first mentioned in your channel. You cannot get better than studying whatever pupils learn on Academy level. I'm half-through it. Not as if I didn't hear what range seems to be fine with most instruments, but it gave my guesses stability. I used to feel what I was doing, now I know what I'm doing. I have clarity on when I used my orchestration well. As a side effect of reading this book I clearly can study now full symphony scores simply because I can see the doublings/voice leadings/pedal tones/chord fillings or texturing. Most of those 10-50 rows symphonies are quartet like ideas in very elegant fancy outfit and That gives me infinite amount of study on orchestration for the future. I'm looking forward to seeing what the other half of the book brings. But after 3-4 weeks of reading I'm already several level above from wherever I got stuck for over a decade before and I have the ability of self-studying anything I really like.
Great videos, Anne-Kathrin. Thanks.
What a relief your videos are. I used (& still have ) the 1st Edition (1982) of Adler, and am just beginning to study orchestration. I got the free edition of BBCSO and I'm so glad to hear a good word about Adler. My theory professor (5 semesters) was from Eastman as well. Thanks!
Glad my videos are helpful! As I mention in the video, be very careful with the first edition of Adler since it contains a lot of mistakes (that were fixed starting with the second edition).
That eye make up though 😍 Thanks so much for these wonderful, humorous and informative videos!
Thank you so much for the support!
For my 11th birthday, my father gave me “Orchestration” by Stephen Douglas Burton, which I have never since looked back from. Structured a bit like the Piston, it still is a bit more modern and encourages the reader to take a look at older and newer scores alike. He also gives more examples of special techniques on each instrument and extreme ranges. What I really like about it though is that it also has a chapter devoted to the voice as an instrument, which he treats in a far more comprehensive manner than Piston or Adler. It also has chapters devoted to various types of concert bands, string orchestras, jazz ensembles, and an appendix devoted to a variety of less commonly used instruments. It’s a real shame more people don’t use it. He also references Adler, Piston, Forsyth, Rimsky-Korsakov and Berlioz quite regularly. The edition I have is from 1980.
You're so cool, always getting directly to the centre of things.
Very nice overview of a big, difficult topic and books that might help. For me, the real issue was learning to write for full orchestra and getting the balances right. The 2nd volume of the books by Ebenezer Prout, published by Dover, was a real godsend as the whole book is about writing for large ensembles. It is the product of the Victorian Era, but for many of us, that style of orchestration is all we need. The other book I found very helpful was by French composer Charles Marie Widor. Again, his comments on writing for full orchestra were most helpful, and his explanation of the harp very clear.
Great vid. Been diving into some orchestration resources lately, I'm keen to give the Korsakov book another go as I remember really liking it, and will check out some of the others as well that I haven't read. Cheers!
Anne-Kathrin, you did great, as always ! All books you mentioned here are a MUST for any serious musician for many reasons - historic, practical, theoretical etc. I absolutely agree : Adler's book is Essential (with all recorded examples of course). 'Textures and Timbres' by H.Brant is awesome too - lots of practical suggestions (he uses his method of identifying various timbres : "Oboe" Timbre, "Flute" Timbre, "Pizzicato" Timbre and so on with various instruments combinations). NO individual instruments study. That part is completely omited in this book (as you'll see during your Holiday break, ha, ha !). Two more books I would strongly recommend that you didn't mention : as an alternative to Adler's, try "The Cambridge Guide To Orchestration" by Ertugrul Sevsay (Professor of Music in Vienna). He starts with individual instruments (252 pages), but unlike Adler, he devotes almost 400 pages to actual orchestration !! Simply GREAT ! And the last (but not least) book that you didn't mention is "The guide to MIDI Orchestration" by Paul Gilreath - a "must have' by all MIDI orchestration students. The 4th edition is from 2010, so it's slightly outdated (by our standards of course), but for anybody wanting to delve into DAW orchestration and production it is simply essential. All information that is available, but scattered around all over the internet - it's condensed here. This is the book mostly useful for "band musicians" now starting with their DAW orchestral adventures. It covers all basics and much, much more...
Thanks so much for your fantastic videos
This is a great example of why I find your content so helpful. Over the past several years I’ve considered getting the Adler book more than a few times, but that price tag was too steep for a retired guy and I was reluctant to buy what I feared would be an out-of-date edition. But you’re the first composer I’ve seen who ever discussed the relative value of the different editions … and if the 3rd edition suits you well enough, I am sure it is fine for me as well. So I’ve got a used 3rd edition copy on order now, because of this video. My thanks to you for shedding some new light on another of the mysterious dark corners of this field. (By the way, I do already have the Rimsky-Korsakov book and enjoyed it, but did notice it was mostly about volume balancing and color combinations, as you have said here. So I expect Adler will be at least as helpful, and probably even more so.)
So glad this was helpful! And yes, Adler will contain a lot more information than the Korsakov book. Hope you'll enjoy it!
I share your fondness for the 'Essential Dictionary' series, especially the notation volume. As a percussionist I used it often to find how to notate a particular unorthodox technique. Thanks for the list!
Oh - you really ARE fond of slowly blinking colored lights, aren't you? ;-) Once more I was mesmerized.
Thanks Anne!
Loving the comedy start 👍🤣
Thank you for these helpful recommendations. Also like Jonathan E. Peters as an essential reference and overview to look up stuff qickly. Brahms' Third is a nice backdrop.
Please do a video on score studying Anne-Kathrin! I’d love to get your take on how to get the most out of a score! 🙏
Great video, thank you! I used both the Piston and the Adler at conservatory. I still love the Adler, though I completely agree that it falls short on orchestral "punchline". At school, we had a running joke about the Piston, that perhaps the Navajo translation would have been easier to read. To one of your last points, I heartily agree that score study, especially of those of the great composer-orchestrators, is a must. Don't tell anybody, but I even went to the trouble of copying out (by hand) quite a few scores by composers like Rimsky-Korsakov and Ravel. I've also done things like transcribe by ear orchestral cues from film soundtracks I love, and then annotate them with comments on why particular instrumentation, motif, or voice leading especially works.(Completely mad, I know.) I think that relying on my ears this way forced me to be honest about what in particular stood out for me in a passage (or what didn't). Anyway, I can honestly say that doing so has served me very well to this day. I think I've learned to be a little less obsessive since then. Cheers! 🙂
Sounds like a fantastic way to learn! I've done similar things with counterpoint and I've learned a lot of orchestration techniques by mocking them up in my DAW - nothing beats this kind of study!
@@AnneKathrinDernComposer Amen! When I was a kid, I remember reading that Bach had learned composition by copying out Buxtehude-by candlelight, no doubt. I figured if that approach was good for him, it certainly couldn't hurt to try! ;-)
I transcribed orchestral cues from my favorite films by ear too, mostly on MuseScore but also Finale (I didn't know the DAW system yet), with their pretty terrible sounds. I did the opening of Out of Africa, Apollo 13's reentry, The Lighting of the Beacons from Lord of the Rings, Star Wars The Force Awakens trailer #2 and a few others, but I must admit that I didn't really LEARN anything by doing it. I only did it for pleasure, because I felt compelled to. However, when you know nothing about orchestration and simply transcribe music that comes to your ears, you just write the notes from the instruments you think you hear, but you don't even know they're doubled, much less which doubles which. You even discover to your astonishment there's a 3/4 bar right in the middle of a whole 4/4 score and you can't even imagine that it is due to picture sync. Now that I have learned a few things in that matter, it would certainly be different if I did it again. Nothing replaces the original score, though.
+1
Great video, thanks Anne! You mentioning the Mancini book reminded me of "The Complete Arranger" by Sammy Nestico. It's much more on the jazz/big band side more so than the traditional orchestration like Adler or Piston. But if someone is interested more in the jazzy, Mancini side, it could be a cool one to check out.
Great content, enjoyed your insights and thoughts on the books 📚! I like Pistons writing style, rereading the sentences makes me actually think about what the writer wants to get across over just reading it and trying to remember it in practice. His personal opinions add some flavor here and there, makes me chuckle as if he had an argument to win at the time with some of his peers :) A similar video on books on harmony study would be appreciated! Now I go practice!
simply amazing
Thank you for this - very helpful!
My Korsakov is my definitive read, but thank you for exploring other texts. I will be very keen to read your favorites.
Another very helpful video. Thanks!
Great!) Thank you for this video!!!)
Anne-Kathrin, the comprehensive but concise nature of your presentations are always a pleasure to listen to.
"...it's been a bit of a sausage fest over the centuries..." 😂😜That's one way of putting it Anne-Kathrin.
I look forward to hearing your thoughts about the music of Nadia and Lili Boulanger.
Thanks!
Your read on Piston definitely gave me a chuckle. All these years after being introduced to the Professor's books, I still cannot get behind his approach to conveying information.
😆 liebe immer wieder deine Intros 😂😂😂👍
Finde deine Einschätzung sehr gut. Habe selbst einen Teil dieser Bücher.
"Arranging for Strings" kannte ich nicht und hab's gleich bestellt.
Sollte ich es vor Dir gelesen haben, sag ich dir, wie ich es finde 😉
Saved to rewatch.
Thanks for sharing your perspective! If I could add another honorable mention, one of my favorites is “The History of Orchestration” by Adam Carse. An old book but it goes through the evolution of the orchestra from Monteverdi to Ravel. Gives a great insight into why composers wrote in a certain way for the instruments available in their time.
I love that Adam Carse book. It's a very well written, fascinating read. I recommend it to anyone who asks me about orchestration books.
I'd definitely check that out too. I think that could help on preparing classes on the subject.
Great suggestions! I'm a trombonist and was I a student in the 80s, I remember Piston's book well. I also remember writing orchestration exercises in longhand in pencil. Hopefully, computer programs make things easier now.
Hello Anne, here in Brazil Samuel Addler's book is used too, I believe in Latin America it is used as well.
I have to checkout Korsakov's Principles of orch! I've always wanted to buy it, and used maybe great option. Thanks Anne!
It happened to me exactly the same as you, Anne! Once I went through Adler's I read Rimsky-Korsakov's and it was the most useful for me. Especially for brass and winds. Funny to hear you the exact same story ;-)
I have the Piston & the Korsakov. Hate the former [for much the same reasoning as you], love the latter.
I also have a little paperback volume "Orchestral technique" by Gordon Jacob. It is only 106 pages or so, but it packs stuff in. And it is practice-based: every section ends with lists of piano music to be orchestrated by the student for the forces just discussed - bearing in mind that as he says in his intro "it cannot be too strongly insisted upon that when *composing* for orchestra the music must be conceived orchestrally". My copy cost £1.60 new in the mid-1970s... Amazon has it new for £68.00, which I would say is daylight robbery, but it has 2nd-hand versions from £11.69.
Lav sounds good and oooh la la the makeup!
Great presentation!!! Henry Brant's book is GREAT! Definitely a must have for composers. Another one is The Guide to Midi Orchestration by Paul Gilreath. However, score study is THE BEST guide for orchestration.
Well now I can wait even less to check out Brant's book!
thanks for the recommendation, maybe do composition techniques books next as I am trying to find some good ones atm
I have the pocket version of the Orchestation Dictionary is so beautiful, I love it so much! The smartphone may make it obsolete, but it's such a beautiful tiny object/book!
I never took orchestration when I was in university, and I've always wished my education was a bit more traditional and I learned that. I did have Piston's book on harmony but didn't make that much use of it. The program I was in was generally more concerned with avant-garde, experimental, and academic music, which I liked, but not very practical for creating other kinds of music.
You can get a CD of the Adler tracks
You look incredible. And thanks for your hard work best wishes UK England 👍🙏
Hi A-K, I totally agree with what you are saying I own the study of orchestration 3rd edition and also the workbook and also the CD collection. Mimi Rabson book Arranging for Strings with audio- excellent.
Also check out The “Norton Scores “ with available audio is Gr8.
We use Norton Scores in Australia as a Score reading book as it highlights the main listening section of the orchestra. This is all Classical / Orchestral music. There are two volumes.
I also own Orchestration by Cecil Forsyth. This is an excellent book for one fact only……. How String Instruments work. eg how to write string friendly chords for strings. This starts on about page 324 onwards. Tonic, Dominant 7, Dim 7, Aug 5th, Maj. & m9th.
I only bought this book to have a greater understanding of string writing & these pages are a real gem. This section in his book kinda has a comparison to guitar “bar chord” chord frames but for strings. ( the same fingering for moving in semitones up the finger board)
The Complete Arranger by Sammy Nestico comes with audio CD.
This Book focuses on ( Big Band) and concert band more than full orchestra. This is a great book for the introduction to the above ensembles.
In Chapter 10 Sammy talks/writes about Tone Colours. Sammy also has a list of the music vocabulary under headings tempo markings, tempo changes, Dynamics, Directional signs, and descriptive terms such as Assai, Rubato, Sempre, Subito etc. He also has another heading titled General Terms.
Contemporary Counterpoint Theory and Application. Berklee Press. by Beth Denisch. ( Hurah female writer) Book with online audio.
Excellent info for beginners/ intermediate in plain english & simple language.
Two more Berklee Press books that are excellent are. Arranging For Large Jazz Ensemble (big band) by Dick Lowell & Ken Pullig.
Modern Jazz Voicings by Ted Pease & Ken Pullig.
Written in plain english and easy to understand.
CHANGES OVER TIME The evolution of Jazz Arranging. By Fred Sturm. Book with audio.
I love this book because it shows how the same tune can be arranged differently.
“Hollywood Harmony” by Frank Lehman.
This one is for A-K that’s you.
I purchased the iBooks sample copy.
Chapters such as, Musical Wonder and the Sound Of Cinema.
A bit pricey but after reading the sample I think it looks VG.
And finally “Omni Music Scores” see their website as there are really Gr8 movie scores listed.
Hope this helps.
Best Peter
I have most of your recommendations other than the Berlioz (which I'm sure I've seen but is no longer on my shelf). I should read more of the Adler, which I acquired relatively recently, but my go-to is almost always Kent Kennon's "Techniques of Orchestration" book, mostly to check ranges when I am unsure of the extremes of unfamiliar instruments. I use the other books when I face specific questions on esoteric instrument techniques. Except for the Adler and Mancini books, most of mine were purchased more than fifty years ago, when prices were more reasonable.
Back in the days, I started with the Principles of Orchestration, but I was lacking a lot of exemples to listen to (exclusively from his own repertoire). This was far before CZcams and al.
Now I'm into Adler that's way more accessible, probably the #1 recommendation as you picked it.
When you buy it new, you have a limited-time access to all the audio excerpts mentionned in the book. The French edition, oddly enough, adds a section about choral arrangement, and IIRC modern instruments. But no audio portal.
I have the Mancini too and totally agree with you ; I use it to pick some licks and orchestration tips when I want to write old style. It's a great addition to other books but not the one to begin with.
I also have "Jazz Composition and arranging in the digital age" by Sussman & Abene. I didn't start it yet but it's definitely not for beginners.
But as anything in the (educational) world, it's not one-size-fits-all. You have to try, see what fits best to you at the moment and go on.
Thanks for dedicating a video to this topic.
(and yes, your new microphone works well).
I bought Sounds and Scores a long time ago and it helped me a lot. All the examples in the book came with audio on a number of singles. In fact the song Dreamsville was cut up in different sections, but the whole song was there.
Yep! Used Adler in pursuit of my Masters degree in FL recently. I wish orchestration (the class) lasted FOUR semesters!
I had just found out about The Study of Orchestration this year and it was on my need to buy wishlist. But when I saw your Q&A series I saw that you had it so I bought it. You inspire me very much and I'm learning so much from you. Thank you for sharing your knowledge in all music and I hope you're successful in attaining your goals.
So glad to hear that!
I just picked up a gently (hopefully) used copy of The Study of Orchestration. Based on this video I did some more digging and it is SO widely loved/respected I decided to pick it up. I saved a bundle by the way...not much difference between the 3rd and 4th edition so I just bought the 3rd. I wish I had started at 4 but instead, I'm starting at 48...bummer. But hey, I think you are right Anne, time and patience. I'm working my way through the basics of music theory, sight reading/singing, and other topics using a few different resources. Know that your message of "don't just listen to my (or someone else's) CZcams videos and think that get's you somewhere" is well taken in the spirit intended...and at least for myself...there is slow but steady action. And hey, while I'm doing all that...I also really enjoy watching your videos 🙂 BTW...the new mic sounds great 🙂
So happy to hear all this! It takes so much time to acquire all these skills - one day at a time will get you there, I have no doubt! 😀
Not an orchestration book, but one I keep next to my orchestration books when arranging is Gardner Read's . As the name implies, it's a book on music notation that was very useful formatting a score either on paper or using Finale. A further -- and perhaps stranger -- book I used when Orchestrating (particularly since I was also working with on electronic music, is Allen Strange's. He shows how Sound synthesis is really the same process as orchestration: the mixing of instruments as the direct comparison with the mixing of wave forms: thinking about timbre in a deeper way. I think I'm going to pick up your recommended . 'Textures' is weird word in the academic music world since it refers to the mixing of voice, rather than the mixing of sound sources into timbre (which is much more intuitive to most musicians, who continually use the term 'texture' to demote timbre (or perhaps more bizarre is how guitarists use the term 'tone' to denote timbre because of their familiarity with the so-called 'tone' control (with the function of attenuating treble frequencies).
I just discovered your channel! Personally, the Walter Piston's book has been quite useful to me, I suppose it is written differently because I read it in Spanish. I'm from Mexico, greetings. Good information. Suscribed.
Your presentation was excellent and very well thought out. Thank you! I was hoping you would mention Andrew Stiller's Handbook of Instrumentation. It is NOT an orchestration book, which are books that basically say "great composers have put these instruments together and this is why it works well." Stiller's book should be on the bookshelf (or on the computer because it's available as a CD-ROM PDF edition) of every composer and arranger because it discusses the technical details of every instrument in the orchestra (even more obscure doubles), covering things such as various ranges (professional, amateur), playing techniques, special effects techniques, technical limitations. It even covers electronic instruments although that section is very out-dated because it was written many years ago. It is the perfect reference for people who don't play or have much experience with those who do play the various instruments they might want to write for. It goes along with the orchestration books very nicely. Thank you for making this overview of orchestration books for us -- I've read through (or at least skimmed) all the ones you've mentioned and find that while they offer some guidance much of the success of the excerpts they cite from the orchestral literature succeed mainly because of the great skill of the composers and that often trying the same combinations and suggestions don't work very well for lesser composers/arrangers.
I heard the best method of orchestration study is to reduce sections of an existing orchestral score down to a piano version where you highlight which instruments are playing which notes. In doing so you notice more the choice of register ie high or low, the doubling of instruments and the function of certain orchestral sections how they contrast ie brass and percussion providing rhythm while winds and strings playing melody and counterpoint etc.
Great video as always. I'm trying to save some money and create a routine which will allow me to compose more and be able to join your your bootcamp
this is gold, once I read them I'll come back here and put here my opinions 😁
You've got the right attitude! Whenever someone asks me which orchestration book they should read my answer is, "All of them." I actually collect them. One that didn't get mentioned here is Kent Kennan's "The Technique of Orchestration". It's my personal favorite. It's unique in that the whole book is built around orchestrating a single Bach chorale, first for each section and then for the full orchestra. It also has very helpful stuff about translating piano writing into effective and idiomatic orchestral settings.
i like (for Jazz Arrangements) The Complete Arranger by Sammy Nestico very much.
Yes, we use the Adler book in Chile
Danke ,fuer die guten Buchtips.
Sehr gerne!
Piston’s orchestration book is good because he makes the techniques-such as string finger position-clearer compared to work like Adler. Also, at the end if I remember correctly, he discusses orchestration by type of writing-homophonic, contrapuntal, etc.
Would be great to do a similar video about composition books - what in your experience helped you the most along the way
In the USA here, 20 years ago in college I bought Adler 2nd Edition, and I still use it to this day. I bought R-K's "Principles" about 5 years later.
Anne looks fantastic.
I have read most of these books -- excellent reviews, Anne-Kathrin! Unfortunately, I have the first edition of Samuel Adler's book, but I got it with the workbook and the box of CD's. It's a treat. Rimsky Korsakov's book is very nice, Mimi Rabson's book "Arranging for Strings" is very incomplete. I bought the book, but I returned it.
Another useful book is "Acoustic and MIDI Orchestration for the Contemporary Composer" by Andrea Pejrolo and Richard DeRosa. It is the only book I know of, that covers both orchestrating for a live orchestra and for MIDI orchestrations.
looking at these books like wow it must be so cool to read books on orchestration for college. Wish I studied music in college
I can confirm that a major university is using the Samuel Adler book for music production classes
All these orchestration books can be rather hefty, but if you're after a smaller volume that you can easily carry around as a reference if you're composing on the road or whatever, I like Gordon Jacob's book "Orchestral Technique". It mainly concentrates on orchestrating keyboard pieces. This may seem like an odd thing but in terms of workflow, a lot of composers will probably be writing a piano sketch first and then orchestrating that afterward, so the approach has value for those that work that way. The book does have some good orchestration insights, despite being somewhat outdated in terms of info on instrumental capabilities. I just like that I can carry this one around while the others get stuck at home due to being too heavy!
Thank you for sharing this, and all of the outstanding content in your other videos! Out of the books you reviewed, are there some you (or others) would recommend for arranging for concert band (winds and percussions)? The balance concerns are very different than for full orchestra (obviously!), and while the instrumentation info on its own is useful, I'd like to read on some color combinations, voicing techniques, etc.