Alex Weidmann Posted August 6 Posted August 6 Hi to all. I'm pleased to present my latest attempt at orchestrating a piano work. I've extended the piece, and added some of my own touches, including extra counterpoint lines. Haven't spent much time on it yet: so I'm sure I'll need to revise some things. Hope you enjoy! MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu Child Falling Asleep (Schumann orchestration) #10 > next PDF Child Falling Asleep (Schumann orchestration) #10 1 Quote
PeterthePapercomPoser Posted August 6 Posted August 6 Hey @Alex Weidmann! I really love this piece! And your orchestration is great! I usually like when composers try to end their music on a non-tonic chord. And one of my favorite moves too is to end on a subdominant, which you do here. But I think, the tonic is so well established here and repeated so much that it seems unnatural for it to end on the A minor chord. But I like the overall ending idea - not sure how much of it is your personal addition and how much is in the original. And the counter melodies I liked too! You also keep the groups of instruments playing together relatively small at any given time, giving the piece that chamber feeling that it needs in this case. Thanks for sharing - your orchestration skills are definitely improving! 1 Quote
Alex Weidmann Posted August 6 Author Posted August 6 (edited) Hey Peter, Thanks for the warm words! The original does actually have the subdominant ending (see attached). My new counterpoint is mostly in bars 45-51, in the oboe and clarinet. I did think I might add some glissandi in the harp, as the harpist doesn't have much to do here, and it might suit the mood of the piece. Hopefully I don't have any wrong notes like I did in the Debussy! Edited August 6 by Alex Weidmann 1 Quote
Churchcantor Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Schumann orchestration? Contrary to legend, Schumann was not a bad orchestrator. Workaday, like Brahms. Not a colorist like Mahler, Ravel, let's see...Rimsky -Korsakov? Just keep working, but only when you feel like it. That would be my advice, and it is what I do. Great exercise to orchestrate a Schumann piano piece, and piano music in general is hard to orchestrate. Quote
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