Orchestration Masterclass, Part 3: Lines and Doublings

Every aspect of composing for the orchestra whether you are working with real players or sampled orchestra libraries.

4.45 (46 reviews)
Udemy
platform
English
language
Music Techniques
category
instructor
Orchestration Masterclass, Part 3: Lines and Doublings
876
students
4.5 hours
content
Feb 2023
last update
$69.99
regular price

What you will learn

Compose music for the orchestra

The unique properties of every instrument in the orchestra

How writing for the orchestra works, including scores, parts, shared parts, and more.

Making your synthesized orchestrations sounds great!

How to write music for brass.

How to write music for voice and choir

Why take this course?

This course is certified 5-stars by the International Association of Online Music Educators and Institutions.

100% Answer Rate! Every single question posted to this class is answered within 24 hours by the instructor.

Are you a music maker, performer, composer, or aspiring songwriter looking to up your game? This is the place to start.

It's time to learn orchestration to give your music the power and the passion that it deserves.

Orchestration is the study of each instrument in the orchestra, how they work, how to write for them, and how each instrument collides with the others to make new sounds. Think of it like painting: The orchestra is your palette of colors. But you don't want to just mix them all together. You need to understand some principles of mixing those colors together before you put your brush on canvas.

In this series of classes we are going to work on three things: 

  • Instrumentation: Knowing how all of the instruments in the orchestra work, and how to write for them in an idiomatic way.

  • Composition: Using the orchestra to write powerful music. Learning how to blend the different sounds of the orchestra to make a new, unique, sound.

  • Synthestration: Using common production software (Ableton Live, FL Studio, Logic Pro, Pro Tools, Cubase, etc.) to create a realistic orchestra sound using sample libraries.

In this class, "Part 3: Lines and Doubling" we are going to focus on building out our orchestration using "doublings" and other techniques to make a rich, full, sound. We are going to focus on each instrument's "envelope" to help us discover how to blend instruments to create the colors that we want out of our orchestra.

If you don't know me, I've published a lot of classes here. Those classes have been really successful (top sellers, in fact!), and this has been one of the most requested classes that my students (over 1,000,000 of them) have asked for. I'm really excited to finally be able to bring this to you.


Here is a list of some of the topics we will cover:

  • Setting up Orchestra Sample Libraries

  • Using Professional music notation software

  • Foreground, middle ground, and background orchestration

  • Orchestration for color

  • Doubling

  • The 6 methods of doubling in a line

  • Doubling for a thin and clean sound

  • Doubling for warmth

  • Doubling techniques for a powerful organ-like sound

  • ADSR Envelopes in the orchestra

  • Doubling for harmonic density

  • Looking at the masters: Bach, B Minor Mass

  • Looking at the masters: Tschaikovsky, Symphony No. 6

  • Looking at the masters: Moussorgsky (Ravel), Pictures at an Exhibition

  • And Much, Much, More!


My Promise to You:

I am a full-time Music composer and Educator. If you have any questions please post them in the class or send me a direct message. I will respond within 24 hours. And if you find this class isn't for you, I am more than happy for you to take advantage of the 30-day money-back guarantee. No questions asked.


What makes me qualified to teach you?

In addition to being a composer and educator,  I also have a Ph.D. in music, I am a university music professor, and have a long list of awards for teaching.

But more importantly: I use this stuff every day. I write music professionally, I am an active guitarist, and I stay on top of all the latest production techniques, workflows, and styles. As you will see in this class, I just love this stuff. And I love teaching it.

Let's get started! 

See you in lesson 1.

All best,

Jason (but call me Jay...)

Screenshots

Orchestration Masterclass, Part 3: Lines and Doublings - Screenshot_01Orchestration Masterclass, Part 3: Lines and Doublings - Screenshot_02Orchestration Masterclass, Part 3: Lines and Doublings - Screenshot_03Orchestration Masterclass, Part 3: Lines and Doublings - Screenshot_04

Reviews

Ulrich
September 30, 2023
Bisher ganz gut, aber er lässt sich viel zu viel Zeit, sodass man zum Teil fast dabei einschläft. This whole course could have been accomplished in 50% of the time. He is constantly almost falling asleep and forgetting to play to audio samples he spends minutes talking about.
Jeff
April 20, 2023
This is a technical course, and I'd say if you want/need to understand how to take a piano reduction and expand it into a full orchestration piece it is a valuable addition to your knowledge base. You have to work the examples if you want to learn because this is fairly complex stuff. Well worth the time and effort.
Peter
April 27, 2022
Fascinating material - really cool how this course is laid out, and we get to hear examples for each idea.

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udemy ID
4/21/2022
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4/22/2022
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