Definition of Reorchestrated

1. Verb. (past of reorchestrate) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Reorchestrated

1. reorchestrate [v] - See also: reorchestrate

Lexicographical Neighbors of Reorchestrated

reoperating
reoperation
reoperations
reopped
reopping
reoppose
reopposed
reopposes
reopposing
reops
reoptimize
reoptimized
reoptimizes
reoptimizing
reorchestrate
reorchestrated (current term)
reorchestrates
reorchestrating
reorchestration
reorchestrations
reordain
reordained
reordaining
reordains
reorder
reorderability
reorderable
reordered
reorderer
reorderers

Literary usage of Reorchestrated

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Famous Composers and Their Works by Philip Hale, Louis Charles Elson (1900)
"... 1884, and then, revised and reorchestrated, at a Lamoureux concert, January 29, 1888; "Solitude dans les bois," performed without success at the Eden, ..."

2. Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians by Theodore Baker (1919)
"It was revised and entirely reorchestrated by Rim- sky-Korsakov in 1896, and in this form it has found its way into the répertoire of the principal opera ..."

3. The New International Encyclopædia edited by Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby (1903)
"In fact, many of his works were reorchestrated by Mozart, and to-day Handel's works are almost exclusively heard with the instrumental rearrangement of ..."

4. Music After the Great War, and Other Studies by Carl Van Vechten (1915)
"... Rimsky-Korsakow reorchestrated Boris—a needless task, perhaps a desecration; he also wrote a good deal of the orchestration of La ..."

5. Richard Strauss, the Man and His Works by Henry Theophilus Finck (1917)
"It was sketched and scored in 1886, but subsequently remodeled, reorchestrated, and otherwise retouched. In those days Strauss was not yet sufficiently ..."

6. The History of Music: A Handbook and Guide for Students by Waldo Selden Pratt (1907)
"But his harmony was feeble and his . instrumentation thin, though.not inapt, so that several of his works were later reorchestrated by other composers. ..."

7. The American History and Encyclopedia of Music by Janet M. Green, Josephine Thrall (1908)
"His patience and critical taste in composition are indicated by the fact that the symphony had to be reorchestrated five times before he would allow it to ..."

8. American History and Encyclopedia of Music edited by William Lines Hubbard (1910)
"His patience and critical taste in composition are indicated by the fact that the symphony had to be reorchestrated five times before he would allow it to ..."

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