Dictionary Definition
orchestra
Noun
1 a musical organization consisting of a group of
instrumentalists including string players
2 seating on the main floor in a theater
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Etymology
< (orchēstra) < (orchoumai) "I dance"Noun
- A large group of musicians who play together on various instruments, usually including strings, woodwind, brass and percussion; the instruments played by such a group.
- The area in a theatre or concert hall where the musicians sit, immediately in front of and below the stage.
- A semicircular space in front of the stage used by the chorus in ancient Greek theatres.
Usage notes
- In the UK, "The orchestra are tuning up." is often used. In the US, one would almost always hear "The orchestra is tuning up."
Translations
large group of musicians who play together on
various instruments
the area in a theatre or concert hall where the
musicians sit
- Danish: orkestergrav
- Finnish: orkesterimonttu
- Russian: оркестровая яма
semicircular space in front of the stage used by
the chorus in ancient Greek theatres
- Danish: orchestra
- Finnish: orkestra, orkesteri
- Polish: orchestra
- ttbc Arabic:
- ttbc Chinese: 管弦乐团 (guǎnxiánlètuán)
- ttbc Croatian: orkestar
- ttbc Dutch: orkest
- ttbc French: orchestre
- ttbc German: Orchester
- ttbc Greek:
ορχήστρα
- Ancient Romanization: orchestra
- Modern Romanization: orchistra, orkhistra
- Ancient Romanization: orchestra
- ttbc Italian: orchestra
- ttbc Japanese: オーケストラ (ōkesutora)
- ttbc Korean: 오케스트라 (okeseuteura)
- ttbc Latin: orchestra
- ttbc Portuguese: orquestra
- ttbc Romanian: orchestră
- ttbc Serbian:
- ttbc Slovene: orkester
- ttbc Spanish: orquesta
- ttbc Swedish: orkester
Anagrams
Romanian
Noun
- the orchestra
Extensive Definition
An orchestra is an instrumental
ensemble, usually fairly large with string, brass, woodwind
sections, and possibly a percussion section as well. The term
orchestra derives from the name for the area in front of an
ancient Greek stage reserved for the Greek
chorus. The orchestra grew by accretion throughout the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, but changed very little in
composition during the course of the twentieth century.
A smaller orchestra (of about forty players or
fewer) is called a chamber orchestra.
A full size orchestra (about 100 players) may
sometimes be called a "symphony orchestra" or "philharmonic
orchestra"; these prefixes do not necessarily indicate any strict
difference in either the instrumental
constitution or role of the orchestra, but can be useful to
distinguish different ensembles based in the same city (for
instance, the London
Symphony Orchestra and the
London Philharmonic Orchestra). A symphony orchestra will
usually have over eighty musicians on its roster, in
some cases over a hundred, but the actual number of musicians
employed in a particular performance may vary according to the work
being played and the size of the venue. A leading chamber orchestra
might employ as many as fifty musicians; some are much smaller than
that.
Instrumentation
The typical symphony orchestra consists of four
proportionate groups of similar musical
instruments, generally appearing in the musical score in the
following order:
- Woodwinds: piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, English horn, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon (double bassoon)
- Brass: 2 to 8 horns, 2 to 5 trumpets, 2 trombones, 1 bass trombone and 0 to 2 tubas
- Percussion: timpani, snare drum, tenor drum, bass drum, cymbals, triangle, wood block, tambourine, marimba, vibraphone, xylophone, glockenspiel, gong (tam-tam), tubular bells, etc.
- Strings: harp(s), 16 to 30 violins, 8 to 12 violas, 8 to 12 violoncellos (cellos), and 5 to 8 double basses.
The Instruments marked in boldface are considered
the "core" symphonic instruments, required in all but the rarest
cases. Other instruments listed above are considered auxiliary
instruments and are less frequently required, but still referred to
as standard. Late 19th century symphonic works calling for all the
auxiliary instruments, as well as an augmented number of strings,
usually include the phrase "for large orchestra" in their full
titles.
Beethoven’s influence
The so-called "standard complement" of double winds and brass in the orchestra from the first half of the 19th century is generally attributed to the forces called for by Beethoven. The exceptions to this are his Fourth Symphony and Violin Concerto, which each specify a single flute.Expanded instrumentation
Apart from the core orchestral complement, various other instruments are called for occasionally. These include the saxophone, heckelphone, flugelhorn, cornet, harpsichord, and organ. Saxophones, for example, appear in a limited range of 19th and 20th century scores. While appearing only as featured solo instruments in some works, for example Ravel's orchestration of Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition, Rachmaninoff's Symphonic Dances, the saxophone is included in other works, such as Ravel's Bolero and Walton's Belshazzar's Feast, as a member of the orchestral ensemble. The euphonium is featured in a few late Romantic and 20th century works, usually playing parts marked "tenor tuba", including Holst's The Planets, and Richard Strauss's Ein Heldenleben. Cornets appear in Tchaikovsky's ballet Swan Lake, Debussy's La Mer, and several orchestral works by Hector Berlioz. Unless these instruments are played by members doubling on another instrument (for example, a trombone player changing to euphonium for a certain passage), orchestras will use freelance musicians to augment their regular rosters.Organization
Among the instrument groups and within each group of instruments, there is a generally accepted hierarchy. Every instrumental group (or section) has a principal who is generally responsible for leading the group and playing orchestral solos. The violins are divided into two groups, first violin and second violin, each with its principal. The principal first violin is called the concertmaster (or "leader" in the UK) and is considered the leader of not only the string section, but of the entire orchestra, subordinate only to the conductor.The principal trombone is considered the leader
of the low brass section, while the principal trumpet is generally
considered the leader of the entire brass section. Similarly, the
principal oboe is considered the leader of the woodwind section,
and is the player to whom all others tune. The horn,
while technically a brass instrument, often acts in the role of
both woodwind and brass. Most sections also have an assistant
principal (or co-principal or associate principal), or in the case
of the first violins, an assistant concertmaster, who often plays a
tutti part in addition to
replacing the principal in his or her absence.
A section string player plays unison with the rest of the
section, except in the case of divided (divisi) parts, where upper
and lower parts in the music are often assigned to "outside"
(nearer the audience) and "inside" seated players. Where a solo
part is called for in a string section, for example in the violins,
the section leader invariably plays that part. Tutti wind and brass
players generally play a unique but non-solo part. Section
percussionists play parts assigned to them by the principal
percussionist.
In modern times, the musicians are usually directed
by a conductor,
although early orchestras did not have one, using instead the
concertmaster or
the harpsichordist
playing the continuo
for this role. Some modern orchestras also do without conductors,
particularly smaller orchestras and those specialising in
historically accurate performances of baroque
music and earlier.
The most frequently performed repertoire for a symphony orchestra is Western
classical
music or opera.
However, orchestras are sometimes used in popular
music, and are used extensively in film
music.
History of the orchestra
Early history
In the 15th and 16th centuries in Italy the households of nobles had musicians to provide music for dancing and the court, however with the emergence of the theatre, particularly opera, in the early 17th century, music was increasingly written for groups of players in combination: which is the origin of orchestral playing. Opera originated in Italy, and Germany eagerly followed. Dresden, Munich and Hamburg successively built opera houses. At the end of the 17th century opera flourished in England under Henry Purcell, and in France under Lully, who with the collaboration of Molière also greatly raised the status of the entertainments known as ballets, interspersed with instrumental and vocal music.In the 17th century and early 18th century,
instrumental groups were taken from all of the available talent. A
composer such as Johann
Sebastian Bach had control over almost all of the musical
resources of a town, whereas Handel would hire
the best musicians available. This placed a premium on being able
to rewrite music for whichever singers or musicians were best
suited for a performance—Handel produced different
versions of the Messiah oratorio
almost every year.
As nobility began to build retreats away from
towns, they began to hire musicians to form permanent ensembles.
Composers such as the young Joseph Haydn
would then have a fixed body of instrumentalists to work with. At
the same time, travelling virtuoso performers would write concerti
that showed off their skills, and they would travel from town to
town, arranging concerts along the way. The aristocratic orchestras
worked together over long periods, making it possible for ensemble
playing to improve with practice.
Mannheim School
This change, from civic music making where the composer had some degree of time or control, to smaller court music making and one-off performance, placed a premium on music that was easy to learn, often with little or no rehearsal. The results were changes in musical style and emphasis on new techniques. Mannheim had one of the most famous orchestras of that time, where notated dynamics and phrasing, previously quite rare, became standard (see Mannheim school). It also attended a change in musical style from the complex counterpoint of the baroque period, to an emphasis on clear melody, homophonic textures, short phrases, and frequent cadences: a style that would later be defined as classical.Throughout the late 18th century composers would
continue to have to assemble musicians for a performance, often
called an "Academy", which would, naturally, feature their own
compositions. In 1781, however, the
Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra was organized from the merchants
concert society, and it began a trend towards the formation of
civic orchestras that would accelerate into the 19th century. In
1815, Boston's Handel
and Haydn Society was founded, in 1842 the New
York Philharmonic and the Vienna
Philharmonic were formed, and in 1858, the Hallé
Orchestra was formed in Manchester. There had long been
standing bodies of musicians around operas, but not for concert
music: this situation changed in the early 19th century as part of
the increasing emphasis in the composition of symphonies and other purely
instrumental forms. This was encouraged by composer critics such as
E.T.A.
Hoffmann who declared that instrumental music was the "purest
form" of music. The creation of standing orchestras also resulted
in a professional framework where musicians could rehearse and
perform the same works repeatedly, leading to the concept of a
repertoire in
instrumental music.
Performance standards
In the 1830s, conductor François Antoine Habeneck, began rehearsing a selected group of musicians in order to perform the symphonies of Beethoven, which had not been heard of in their entirety in Paris. He developed techniques of rehearsing the strings separately, notating specifics of performance, and other techniques of cuing entrances that were spread across Europe. His rival and friend Hector Berlioz would adopt many of these innovations in his touring of Europe.Instrumental craftsmanship
The invention of the piston and rotary valve by Stolzel and Bluhmel, both Silesians, in 1815, was the first in a series of innovations, including the development of modern keywork for the flute by Theobald Boehm and the innovations of Adolphe Sax in the woodwinds. These advances would lead Hector Berlioz to write a landmark book on instrumentation, which was the first systematic treatise on the use of instrumental sound as an expressive element of music.The effect of the invention of valves for the
brass was felt almost immediately: instrument-makers throughout
Europe strove together to foster the use of these newly refined
instruments and continuing their perfection; and the orchestra was
before long enriched by a new family of valved instruments,
variously known as tubas,
or euphoniums and
bombardons, having a
chromatic scale and a full sonorous tone of great beauty and
immense volume, forming a magnificent bass. This also made possible
a more uniform playing of notes or intonation,
which would lead to a more and more "smooth" orchestral sound that
would peak in the 1950s with Eugene
Ormandy and The Philadelphia
Orchestra and the conducting of Herbert
von Karajan with The Berlin
Philharmonic.
During this transition period, which gradually
eased the performance of more demanding "natural" brass writing,
many composers (notably Wagner and Berlioz) still notated brass
parts for the older "natural" instruments. This practice made it
possible for players still using natural horns, for instance, to
perform from the same parts as those now playing valved
instruments. However, over time, use of the valved instruments
became standard, indeed universal, until the revival of older
instruments in the contemporary movement towards authentic
performance (sometimes known as "historically informed
performance").
At the time of the invention of the valved brass,
the pit
orchestra of most operetta composers seems to have been modest.
An example is Sullivan's
use of two flutes, one oboe, two clarinets, one bassoon, two horns,
two cornets (a piston), two trombones, drums and strings.
During this time of invention, winds and brass
were expanded, and had an increasingly easy time playing in tune
with each other: particularly the ability for composers to score
for large masses of wind and brass that previously had been
impractical. Works such as the Requiem
of Hector
Berlioz would have been impossible to perform just a few
decades earlier, with its demanding writing for twenty woodwinds,
as well as four gigantic brass ensembles each including around four
trumpets, four trombones, and two tubas.
Wagner’s influence
The next major expansion of symphonic practice came from Wagner's Bayreuth orchestra, founded to accompany his musical dramas. Wagner’s works for the stage were scored with unprecedented scope and complexity: indeed, his score to Das Rheingold calls for no fewer than six harps. Thus, Wagner envisioned an ever-more-demanding role for the conductor of the theater orchestra, as he elaborated in his influential work "On Conducting". This brought about a revolution in orchestral composition, and set the style for orchestral performance for the next eighty years. Wagner's theories re-examined the importance of tempo, dynamics, bowing of string instruments and the role of principals in the orchestra. Conductors who studied his methods would go on to be influential themselves.20th century orchestra
As the early 20th century dawned, symphony orchestras were larger, better funded, and better trained than ever before; consequently, composers could compose larger and more ambitious works. With the recording era beginning, the standard of performance reached a pinnacle. In recordings, small errors in a performance could be "fixed," but many older conductors and composers could remember a time when simply "getting through" the music as best as possible was the standard. Combined with the wider audience made possible by recording, this led to a renewed focus on particular conductors and on a high standard of orchestral execution. As sound was added to silent film, the virtuoso orchestra became a key component of the establishment of motion pictures as mass-market entertainment.Counter-revolution
In the 1920s and 1930s, economic as well as artistic considerations led to the formation of smaller concert societies, particularly those dedicated to the performance of music of the avant-garde, including Igor Stravinsky and Arnold Schoenberg. This tendency to start festival orchestras or dedicated groups would also be pursued in the creation of summer musical festivals, and orchestras for the performance of smaller works. Among the most influential of these was the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields under the baton of Sir Neville Marriner.With the advent of the early music movement,
orchestras where players worked on execution of works in styles
derived from the study of older treatises on playing became common.
These include the London
Classical Players under the direction of Sir Roger
Norrington and the Academy
of Ancient Music under Christopher
Hogwood, among others.
Recent trends
The late 20th century saw a crisis of funding and support for orchestras in Europe. The size and cost of a symphony orchestra, compared to the size of the base of supporters, became an issue that struck at the core of the institution. The drastic falling-off of revenues from recording, tied to no small extent to changes in the recording industry itself, began a period of change that has yet to reach its conclusion. Critics such as Norman Lebrecht were vocal in their diagnosis of the problem as the "jet set conductor" and the problems of orchestral repertory and management, while other music administrators such as Michael Tilson Thomas and Esa-Pekka Salonen argued that new music, new means of presenting it, and a renewed relationship with the community could revitalize the symphony orchestra.Conductorless orchestras
The post-revolutionary symphony orchestra Persimfans was formed in the USSR in 1922. The unusual aspect of the orchestra was that, believing that in the ideal Marxist state all people are equal, its members felt that there was no need to be led by the dictatorial baton of a conductor; instead they were led by a committee. Although it was a partial success, the principal difficulty with the concept was in changing tempo. The orchestra survived for ten years and had to be disbanded only when the individual talents began to rebel against the rigid control under which they were expected to play.Some ensembles, such as the Orpheus
Chamber Orchestra, based in New York
City, have had more success, although decisions are likely to
be deferred to some sense of leadership within the ensemble (for
example, the principal wind and string players).
Others have returned to the tradition of a
principal player, usually a violinist, being the artistic director
and running rehearsals (such as the
Australian Chamber Orchestra and the
New Century Chamber Orchestra).
Multiple conductors
The techniques of polystylism and polytempo music have
recently led a few composers to write music where multiple
orchestras perform simultaneously. These trends have brought about
the phenomenon of polyconductor music, wherein separate
sub-conductors conduct each group of musicians. Usually, one
principal conductor conducts the sub-conductors, thereby shaping
the overall performance. Some pieces are enormously complex in this
regard, such as Evgeni
Kostitsyn's Third Symphony, which calls for nine
conductors.
Charles Ives
used two conductors, one to simulate a marching band coming through
his piece. Realizations for Symphonic Band includes one example
from Ives.
Other meanings of orchestra
In ancient Greece the orchestra was the space between the auditorium and the proscenium (or stage), in which were stationed the chorus and the instrumentalists. The Greek word for orchestra literally means "a dancing place".In some theaters, the orchestra is the area of
seats directly in front of the stage (called primafila or platea);
the term more properly applies to the place in a theatre, or
concert
hall reserved for the musicians.
See also
External links
- The Orchestra: A User's Manual - A fairly concise overview, including detailed video interviews with players of each instrument and various resources
orchestra in Arabic: أوركسترا
orchestra in Min Nan: Koán-hiân-ga̍k-thoân
orchestra in Bulgarian: Оркестър
orchestra in Catalan: Orquestra simfònica
orchestra in Czech: Orchestr
orchestra in Danish: Orkester
orchestra in German: Orchester
orchestra in Estonian: Orkester
orchestra in Modern Greek (1453-): Συμφωνική
ορχήστρα
orchestra in Spanish: Orquesta
orchestra in Esperanto: Orkestro
orchestra in Basque: Orkestra
orchestra in French: Orchestre
orchestra in Galician: Orquestra
orchestra in Korean: 관현악단
orchestra in Croatian: Orkestar
orchestra in Icelandic: Hljómsveit
orchestra in Italian: Orchestra
orchestra in Hebrew: תזמורת
orchestra in Latin: Orchestra
orchestra in Latvian: Orķestris
orchestra in Lithuanian: Simfoninis
orkestras
orchestra in Hungarian: Zenekar
orchestra in Malay (macrolanguage):
Orkestra
orchestra in Dutch: Orkest
orchestra in Japanese: オーケストラ
orchestra in Norwegian: Orkester
orchestra in Polish: Orkiestra
orchestra in Portuguese: Orquestra
orchestra in Quechua: Yatawaki
orchestra in Russian: Оркестр
orchestra in Simple English: Orchestra
orchestra in Slovak: Orchester
orchestra in Slovenian: Orkester
orchestra in Serbian: Оркестар
orchestra in Serbo-Croatian: Orkestar
orchestra in Finnish: Orkesteri
orchestra in Swedish: Orkester
orchestra in Thai: วงออร์เคสตรา
orchestra in Vietnamese: Dàn nhạc giao
hưởng
orchestra in Turkish: Orkestra
orchestra in Ukrainian: Оркестр
orchestra in Venetian: Muŝika archestrale
orchestra in Chinese: 管弦樂團
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
German band, L, Philharmonic, R, acting area, apron, apron stage, audience, auditorium, auditory, backstage, balcony, band, band shell, bandstand, big band, board, box, box seat, brass, brass band, brass choir,
brass quintet, brass section, brasses, bridge, callithumpian band,
chamber orchestra, combo,
concert band, congregation, coulisse, desks, dixieland band, dock, dress circle, dressing room,
ensemble, fauteuil, flies, fly floor, fly gallery,
forestage, gallery, gamelan orchestra,
greenroom, grid, gridiron, groundling, group, house, jazz band, jug band,
lightboard, loge, military band, nigger heaven,
orchestra circle, orchestra pit, paradise, parquet, parquet circle,
parterre, peanut
gallery, performing area, philharmonic, pit, proscenium, proscenium boxes,
proscenium stage, quartet, quintet, ragtime band,
rock-and-roll group, sextet, shell, skiffle band, spectator, stage, stage left, stage right,
stall, standing room,
steel band, street band, string band, string choir, string
orchestra, string quartet, strings, swing band, switchboard, symphony, symphony orchestra,
the boards, theater,
theatre stall, trio,
waits, wings, woodwind, woodwind choir,
woodwind quartet, woodwinds