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J**Y
Great Resource for Contemporary Composers
This was a great book full of information. I cited it in my Master's thesis and still refer to it
A**A
Helpful specific techniques
I am a hobbyist game composer and this book gave a lot of clear, specific advice on things I can do to make my purely digital productions sound more realistic. It also covered a lot of gaps in my knowledge as someone whose only musical education was a sixth grade band class.Why the missing star: it's bad enough when a $10 ebook was obviously OCR'd from the paper book with no subsequent copyediting. It's downright insulting when it's a $40 book. Not only are there many typos but even numbers were scanned wrong - there's a blatant example (to anyone familiar with midi) like three or four page turns into the book!
J**Y
Great and detailed book!
The information in the book is NOT under any circumstance “outdated”.The people in other reviews complaining that the technological (software and hardware) examples in the book are outdated lack experience with midi orchestration. While some of the specific software is outdated, the parameters stay basically the same. This is also true for hardware. These people are lazy and want every little thing spoon fed to them. Just shop around for the latest and best tech within your price range! Plus, a lot of the software is updated on a regular basis or is replaced by the same people with newer versions.On the complaints of the tech being too expensive... welcome to the world of professional music production. You can without a doubt make beautiful music with cheap equipment, just do not expect to have any thing close to commercial quality mixes.
B**Y
Acoustic and MIDI Orchestration
My husband LOVES this book on Acoustic and MIDI Orchestration! He is a Professor in the Music Department at Belmont & this book so blessed him! Thank you so much & be totally blessed on this lovely Spring day in May!
T**A
Very useful advice interlaced with too much talk about obsolete hardware and expensive software
The book starts with an introduction to basic MIDI and acoustic orchestration, in that order. I will assume that Andrea Perjrolo was responsible for the MIDI portions of the book, while Richard DeRosa handled the acoustic side. The book is set up as a textbook for use in a classroom, hence the high price tag for a new copy, but is still quite accessible for an aspiring home studio musician/composer/arranger/songwriter/producer.However, the MIDI intro is hopelessly outdated. Considering the fact that the second edition is only one year old, this is quite disappointing. For example, the reader is advised to procure MIDI interface hardware, which very few modern instruments and no computers at all will directly accept. About the only relevant part is the extensive discussion concerning the codes and messages one can utilize, to control various features in the process of creating MIDI instruments. However, with an almost infinite supply of samples available online, only a few people will be interested and dedicated enough to pursue making their own from scratch.Richard DeRosa’s orchestration introduction covers the basics in a concise and interesting manner, allowing the reader to quickly grasp how the acoustic intruments interact with one another to form interesting sounds.The remainder of the book is divided up according to the various orchestral sections, allowing the reader to go directly to whichever part is of interest at that moment. The main emphasis is on setting up such instruments within a MIDI environment, and how to control them. There is also discussion about how each section of instruments affect themselves and the other sections, including discussions on frequency ranges and reverb placement parameters that need to be manipulated for best sound reproduction, depending on the need within a musical piece.The hardware and software tools used as examples in the books are fairly expensive, so most people who are on a tight budget will find themselves unable to indulge in such. This reader’s rough estimate of setting one’s self up with most of the tools used in the book would require an initial outlay of at least $3500 US, with the buying of an Apple MacIntosh being the biggest cost. Much of the software used in the book is pricey, starting at about $150 and increasing rapidly from there. There are many serviceable software tools available that are far cheaper (some are free!), and can be obtained by looking around online. Be careful though, because some of the “free” tools are actually demo versions of the actual, pricey ones. Such will tend to have many features disabled unless you pay for the license key to open the entire package.The authors seem blissfully unaware of the large outlay of money for the hardware and software required to even accomplish their first exercise. It is incredible to see such out-of-touch bourgeois thinking, as if everybody has a university at their beck and call to cover the costs of necessary equipment for one class.Exercise 1.2 (setting up the configuration in Figure 1.2) is almost impossible to realize, since most of the connecting equipment needed would be very difficult to obtain. Better would have been a network incorporating a USB hub with compatible cables connecting the peripherals to the computer.The MIDI pieces of hardware mentioned in Figure 1.2 have become obsolete and are no longer manufactured. The lack of an in-depth discussion here about how USB has superseded MIDI interfaces is puzzling, considering how important a role the former now plays in connecting controllers and/or live instruments to the computer hosting the DAW software. Perhaps even a few words about Windows versus OS/X would be useful here.Exercises in later chapters demand that the reader record various instruments or even voices, then manipulate them within their DAW or various MIDI software tools. As is pointed out in the book, this can very quickly become very expensive. This reader’s question is, once again, who is going to supply the capital outlay to do this? Better would be some discussion on how to do such recordings inexpensively, perhaps even under less than ideal conditions.The adjunct “website” that was promised as an online treasure trove is bare-bones at best, with only a few scores (already in an appendix in the book) and a handful of audio samples provided. All of the rest of the advertised texts and such are nowhere to be found. This reader would have liked to have had PDFs of the charts for the frequency ranges of the various orchestral instruments, along with recommended reverb settings, available to download. The book is a bit too thick to easily scan, not to mention doing so would most likely violate its copyright.The obsolete hardware information, along with its sparse online supporting presence and a few other minor details, reduced what would have been a four star rating to three. This reader would recommend buying a used copy of the book, as the retail price for a new one is too high. Even though the book is into its second edition, it is still at least five years behind the technology curve and needs to be immediately more thoroughly revised.
E**N
Four Stars
Very usefull .
D**S
May not be useful for users of notation software
Good If you have no previous experience or knowledge of midi. If you do all your composing on a keyboard it will be helpful. If you're looking for a bridge from creating virtual scores in notation software and making them useful for real instruments, this book won't help.
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