Music Glossary: arrangement
A one-page plan of sections, keys, tempos, hooks, and cues that guides writing, rehearsal, and production. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Alternating phrases across sections/instruments to create conversation and forward motion. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Secondary melodic lines woven around the lead. Aim for complementary rhythm and register separation. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Selective unison or octave doubling to reinforce hooks or thicken textures without muddying the mix. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Classic chord spreads created by dropping the 2nd or 3rd highest note an octave for smoother voice-leading. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
High-level control of level, filter, and density across sections to shape the emotional arc. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Hook LayeringStacking complementary motifs (lead, countermelody, rhythm hook) so the chorus lands hard and sticks. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Combining sustained pads with rhythmic pulses/arps to fill space while maintaining momentum. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Register PlanningChoosing pitch ranges for each part to avoid clutter, preserve clarity, and support the lead melody. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Subtle chord substitutions and passing chords that enhance color without losing the song’s core identity. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Writing for instrument families (brass, winds, strings) with idiomatic ranges, articulations, and blend in mind. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Planned build and release of layers through a song to shape energy and spotlight key moments. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Short musical gestures (rises, drops, drum fills) that stitch sections together and signal changes. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
Close stacks notes tightly; open spreads tones across octaves. Use open for width/clarity, close for focus/warmth. more
More in the
Arrangement and Orchestration
category...
|