I really do love the topic of orchestration. Probably because it can vary so much from composer to composer. And I know a lot of you out there, like me, happen to spend a lot of time working on orchestrating.
So what composers/musicians/artists are your favorite orchestrators? And what compositions just melt your brain with their orchestrations?
I'll start!
First off, my all time favorite orchestrator (and probably many other people's favorite): Claude Debussy. There is something extremely unique about the way he writes. Once you get past the theory he uses (whole tone scales, amazing attention to form, SO many extended chords, etc) the color that he gets with his orchestration often baffles me. But in a good way

I am also a huge fan of a lot the Russian composers. More specifically Shostakovich, Rimsky-Korsakov, and Tchaikovsky. Tchaikovsky's ballets have a very unique lushness to their orchestration. And then he really brings out the guns for his Symphonies (especially 4). Other pieces that are of my favorites are Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade and Shostakovich symphonies.
Igor Stravinsky and the other hand, gets his own category.

Other composers who are favorite orchestrators of mine include:
- James Macmillan (Modern Scottish composer for those you don't recognize the name)
- Ralph Vaughan Williams
- Richard Wagner
- Frank Bridge
- John Adams
- David Gillingham (modern wind symphony composer)
- Gustav Mahler (for his sheer power)
- The Beatles
And some of my other favorite orchestrations:
- James Macmillan - The Confession of Isobel Gowdie
- Vaughan Williams - Symphony No. 5
- Anything by Debussy

- Jennifer Higdon's Blue Cathedral
- Copland's 3rd Symphony (WAY cooler than fanfare for the common man, because its fanfare for the common man times 1000!!!!)
- Wagner's Tristan & Isolde
So enough from me. List your favorites and if you want an explanation on why you like them! Have fun!
cheers,
ea