V
Vandy12
Banned
This is a very subjective question, but there entire books on orchestration, so I am thinking of a good list of do's and don't's
and some basic beginning instruction would be great. Looking for something along these lines:
1. Listen to the melody and take pieces of the melody and use other instruments
to blend with melody at appropriate places.
2. Don't clutter a simple song with too much orchestration--like too many VST's, equalization, it can suck
the life out of the arrangement.
3. Look at the rhythms of the song and match them with the added instrumentation.
4. Try a practice piece and add a short melody snipped from four different instruments at various times.
5. Now take the same piece and use two instruments at a time in harmony or with newly created melodies to
blend as best you can and accent the main song.
6. Listen to how other songs have been orchestrated and how the added instruments interact
with the main song.
These are some of my total guesses on how to start to think about taking say for example a song written
with a guitar and vocals and figuring out which intruments to have in the studio to make a
completed song with multiple instruments. Deciding how many extras to use would be part of
the process.
Looking for a narrowed down list of general guidelines that will get the new orchestrater started.
No string quartets, symphonies, etc. Just how to orchestrate basic songs.
Thanks,
Vandy
and some basic beginning instruction would be great. Looking for something along these lines:
1. Listen to the melody and take pieces of the melody and use other instruments
to blend with melody at appropriate places.
2. Don't clutter a simple song with too much orchestration--like too many VST's, equalization, it can suck
the life out of the arrangement.
3. Look at the rhythms of the song and match them with the added instrumentation.
4. Try a practice piece and add a short melody snipped from four different instruments at various times.
5. Now take the same piece and use two instruments at a time in harmony or with newly created melodies to
blend as best you can and accent the main song.
6. Listen to how other songs have been orchestrated and how the added instruments interact
with the main song.
These are some of my total guesses on how to start to think about taking say for example a song written
with a guitar and vocals and figuring out which intruments to have in the studio to make a
completed song with multiple instruments. Deciding how many extras to use would be part of
the process.
Looking for a narrowed down list of general guidelines that will get the new orchestrater started.
No string quartets, symphonies, etc. Just how to orchestrate basic songs.
Thanks,
Vandy