i'm rather curios. i find myself waking up and having some ideas in my head.. all well orchestrated and i can really hear the whole thing in my head, i write em down but then i can't find my way going on.
so... how do you write a symphony?

Moderator: kcleung
There isn't an answer really, but some things are idiomatic to certain instruments, and thus a piece written for harpsichord could never (properly) work as an orchestral piece.how do you know what ideas to choose for it ?
Very well said. However slow movements are frequently in ABA or ABABA form.Sean Salamon wrote:First, I want to say I think that, if 500 people were to write a symphony each, there would be 500 different methods used--- everybody would write a symphony differently. There is no one way.
Personally, I would follow the common symphonic form at least loosely, that is, in movements:
1st) Opening moderate to fast tempo, sonata form
2nd) Slow movement, no set form
3rd) Quick scherzo and trio
4th) Closing allegro, rondo or sonata form
Of course, there's no need to make it obvious that, say, the first movement is in sonata form, like Beethoven did. I personally dislike rondo form, so I might make the fourth movement a theme and variations instead. I also rather like the idea of a fugue finale, or perhaps a passacaglia and chaconne.
The point is that I may not use the generally accepted musical forms, but I will use some form. To me, a symphony should not be a rhapsody.
Then, I would try to compose the symphony movement by movement, composing the various themes first and then fleshing the movement out by orchestration and joing the themes together. I would try to keep a balance of preparation and spontaneity-- that is, I would compose the themes first, but I wouldn't quite know where I would go with them until I actually did.
That's generally the extent I can explain a process like this, because (one) I have never actually done it before, and (two) it is hard for me to explain the actual process of composing a melody and things like that.
Which they do 90% of the time anyway.ThaSchwab wrote:cellos and basses doubling each other is perfect
Éros and Psyché.Yagan Kiely wrote:I want to find a story for tone poem...