You really have to hear what an orchestra does and sounds like. I am grateful for my time having working in LA in sessions along with my studies there as a brass player along with a LOT of listening growing up.
Totally agree. You were fortunate to have that experience (as did I with an ASCAP programme in LA). An interesting clue here was Hendrik talked about orchestral balance but was scoffed by Williams whom, being honest, is not memorable for me anyhow. If you don't have the listening skills in orchestral balance, you might as well throw your hat at it. I have heard very very few realistic mockups and those who succeed are usually excellent at MIDI programming which is a necessary skill too. I'm not convinced about the likes of Berklee either as a good (trained) musician will find a way. Tech is only a tool and that's it. It's not a discipline or an art. Listening is the secret sauce in my view.
@@citizenworld8094 yeah I have pals that teach there. It's an acquired taste. They say it's hard for some to teach there he says. I made the right choice and just went to Hollywood to be in the scene right away, which made more sense. In my day, it was all about pen an paper and hanging out. Doing rehearsal bands etc. and also just learning!. So grateful for that experience and also doing sessions then too! There are no guarantees if you go to any place that you get a gig at Bleeding Fingers either. There are other ways to go, but good that these folks got lucky and got the time there.
Thank you so much Berklee and Orchestral Tools. I am really looking forward to your new collaboration and your new channel, New adventures. Congratulations
Congrats on the new channel and collaboration with Berkley. Cool keynote-- HGW is great musically but also from a professional advice sort of way you can tell he's just been there. Sean McMahon is not just the head of Berkley but a wonderful composer who worked with Chris Young for years. We met on The Grudge many years ago and he went on to score The Grudge 3 under his own name. He also helped me out on a few projects of my own. Great guy!
Congratulations for the nee and such a wonderful thought to help learners of orchestral music. Loved this intro part- Thank you - cat wait for your next episode 👍
It's funny how technocratic Gregson puts the subject in place while the panel is intented to show it otherwise But at the end of the day,you don't like limitations,formal education doesn't save you,YT and the benefit of free information for all is what we are grateful for.
Mentorship is controversial. Everyone working on a project should be paid for their contribution. However, it is reasonable to be paid for the work a professional would accomplish in an hour, even if it takes you several hours to do the same thing...i.e. you are paid for the work not the time. The benefit of that kind of relationship is that you can learn to come up to speed, and their patience is rewarded within a trusted collaborator. If you can't find that kind of relationship, then I think it won't be a very successful mentorship.
You really have to hear what an orchestra does and sounds like. I am grateful for my time having working in LA in sessions along with my studies there as a brass player along with a LOT of listening growing up.
Totally agree. You were fortunate to have that experience (as did I with an ASCAP programme in LA). An interesting clue here was Hendrik talked about orchestral balance but was scoffed by Williams whom, being honest, is not memorable for me anyhow. If you don't have the listening skills in orchestral balance, you might as well throw your hat at it. I have heard very very few realistic mockups and those who succeed are usually excellent at MIDI programming which is a necessary skill too. I'm not convinced about the likes of Berklee either as a good (trained) musician will find a way. Tech is only a tool and that's it. It's not a discipline or an art. Listening is the secret sauce in my view.
@@citizenworld8094 yeah I have pals that teach there. It's an acquired taste. They say it's hard for some to teach there he says. I made the right choice and just went to Hollywood to be in the scene right away, which made more sense. In my day, it was all about pen an paper and hanging out. Doing rehearsal bands etc. and also just learning!. So grateful for that experience and also doing sessions then too! There are no guarantees if you go to any place that you get a gig at Bleeding Fingers either. There are other ways to go, but good that these folks got lucky and got the time there.
Thank you so much Berklee and Orchestral Tools. I am really looking forward to your new collaboration and your new channel, New adventures. Congratulations
Awesome, thank you!
Incredible. Damn this will be something really exciting and, as i guess incredible helpful. Thank You OT !
Thanks for tuning in! We hope you enjoy Virtual Orchestration.
Congrats on the new channel and collaboration with Berkley. Cool keynote-- HGW is great musically but also from a professional advice sort of way you can tell he's just been there. Sean McMahon is not just the head of Berkley but a wonderful composer who worked with Chris Young for years. We met on The Grudge many years ago and he went on to score The Grudge 3 under his own name. He also helped me out on a few projects of my own. Great guy!
Thank you very much! We were absolutely honoured to have the guests that we did 🙏
Great panel, great perspectives being shared. Hope the new channel becomes a success!
Much appreciated!
Congratulations for the nee and such a wonderful thought to help learners of orchestral music. Loved this intro part- Thank you - cat wait for your next episode 👍
Our pleasure!
Experience pays off. .It takes time.
The free youtube channel on better mockups is a great gift !
Thank you very much!
Incredible, VO it's amazing, thank you!
Glad you like it!
Exactly what I needed, I'm ready. Thanks!
Glad to hear it!
New stuff, new stuff!! Andrew delightfully hyped 😍😍😍
It's funny how technocratic Gregson puts the subject in place while the panel is intented to show it otherwise
But at the end of the day,you don't like limitations,formal education doesn't save you,YT and the benefit of free information for all
is what we are grateful for.
Il was really nice. Hope we'll have some more!
New episodes every Sunday on the Virtual Orchestration channel!
Looking forward to this
Metropolis Beklee
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Mentorship is controversial. Everyone working on a project should be paid for their contribution. However, it is reasonable to be paid for the work a professional would accomplish in an hour, even if it takes you several hours to do the same thing...i.e. you are paid for the work not the time. The benefit of that kind of relationship is that you can learn to come up to speed, and their patience is rewarded within a trusted collaborator. If you can't find that kind of relationship, then I think it won't be a very successful mentorship.
Thank you soo much for what u r doing..😔
Thank you for watching!
YES!
Great!
Awesome!
Glad you think so!
Very nice!
Thanks!
This looks interesting. I will be using the Spitfire Free Orchestra as that is all I can afford.
Fantastic! ❤🙏
HYPE
🙌👍🙏
😘
Yooo