If you say that someone orchestrates an event or situation, you mean that they carefully organize it in a way that will produce the result that they want. The colonel was able to orchestrate a rebellion from inside an army jail. a carefully orchestrated campaign. + orchestration or·ches·tra·tion his skilful orchestration of latent nationalist feeling
the act of arranging a piece of music for an orchestra and assigning parts to the different musical instruments an arrangement of events that attempts to achieve a maximum effect; "the skillful orchestration of his political campaign"
An orchestration is a piece of music that has been rewritten so that it can be played by an orchestra. Mahler's own imaginative orchestration was heard in the same concert. = arrangement. Art of choosing which instruments to use for a given piece of music. The sections of the orchestra historically were separate ensembles: the stringed instruments for indoors, the woodwind instruments for outdoors, the horns for hunting, and trumpets and drums for battle or royal ceremony. Once entirely dependent on what was available or customary, composers began to explore the musical potential of instrumental combinations with the advent of the modern orchestra in the mid-to late 18th century. The first great orchestration text was written by Hector Berlioz in 1844
The routinizing and documenting of work so that the desired results can be consistently achieved It is the elimination of discretion, or choice, from the operating level of a business, so that clients, customers, employees, suppliers, and vendors have a predictable, satisfying experience