ABSTRACT

Orchestration: An Anthology of Writings is designed to be a primary or ancillary text for college-level music majors. Although there are several 'how to' textbooks aimed at this market, there is little available that traces the history of orchestration through the writings of composers themselves. By collecting writings from the ninenteenth century to today, Mathews illuminates how orchestration has grown and developed, as well as presenting a wide variety of theories that have been embraced by the leading practitioners in the field.

The collection then traces the history of orchestration, beginning with Beethoven's Orchestra (with writings by Berlioz, Wagner, Gounod, Mahler, and others), the 19th century (Mahler, Gevaert, Strauss) the fin de siecle (on the edge of musical modernism; writings by Berlioz, Jadassohn, Delius, and Rimsky Korsakov), early modern (Busoni, Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Grainger, and others), and high modern (Carter, Feldman, Reich, Brant). Many of these pieces have never been translated into English before; some only appeared in small journals or the popular press and have never appeared in a book; and none have ever been collected in one place.

The study of orchestration is a key part of all students of music theory and composition. Orchestration provides a much needed resource for these students, filling a gap in the literature.

part I|42 pages

The Early Nineteenth Century

chapter 1|13 pages

On the Symphony

Part II, Chapter III of School of Practical Composition

chapter 2|1 pages

Instruments Added to the Scores of Old Masters

Chapter XIII of À Travers Chants

chapter 4|3 pages

Instruments Added by Modern Composers

Wagner and Beethoven

chapter 6|2 pages

Beethoven's Instrumentation

From An Autobiography

part II|18 pages

The Late Nineteenth Century

chapter 7|6 pages

Statements on Orchestration

chapter 8|5 pages

First Lesson: Preliminary Instruction

From Cours méthodique d'orchestration

part III|49 pages

Interlude

chapter 10|10 pages

The Orchestra

From Treatise on Instrumentation

chapter 11|16 pages

Orchestra Tutti

From Chapter X of A Course of Instruction in Instrumentation

chapter 12|4 pages

The General Divisions and Classification of the Principal Instruments of the Orchestra

From Anatomie et phisiologie de l'orchestra

chapter 13|17 pages

Composition of the Orchestra

Chapter IV from Principals of Orchestration

part IV|33 pages

The Turn of the Twentieth Century

chapter 15|6 pages

The Orchestra: Diatonic and Atonal Music

From Vom Wesen des Musikalischen

chapter 17|6 pages

Instrumentation

chapter 18|8 pages

The Balance of Sonorities: Volume and Intensity

From Volume I, Chapter II of Traité de l'orchestration

chapter 19|3 pages

Instrumentation

From Conversations with Stravinsky

part V|23 pages

The Early Twentieth Century

chapter 20|2 pages

Klangfarbenmelodie

From Theory of Harmony [Harmonielehre]

chapter 23|2 pages

Anton Webern:

Klangfarbenmelodien

part VI|38 pages

Later Twentieth-Century Innovations

chapter 27|4 pages

Instrumental Character and the Problem of the Tutti

From Flawed Words and Stubborn Sounds

chapter 29|9 pages

Spatial Music and Orchestration

From “Spaced Out with Henry Brant”

chapter 30|4 pages

Remarks on Ochestration