When you look at the stage, the violins will occupy the left portion of the orchestra. The violas are situated in the middle of the orchestra while the cello is in the right part of the orchestra. The basses are situated behind the celloes and can stretch to where the violas are, if there is a good many basses in the orchestra.
It depends on how the conductor wants to arrange the orchestra. In most orchestra, all lot of the times school orchestras, the cellos will be on the far right, if you're looking at the stage. Some professional orchestras will have them sit in the middle left or middle right. I've sat in all three. The Violins I usually sit in the far left.
The cello section sits to the right of the conductor and the audience.
Behind the Viola section to the conductors right.
In an orchestra, the conventional order (facing) is Violin left, Viola centre, Cello right. Most Classical Music is written for that balance.
In the front row, with the principal and 2nd chairs of the rest of the string sections (except the basses, who sit in back).
an organ is huge but not part of the orchestra is you want one in the orchestra then the piano
No it is played in an orchestra.
Violin cello and a piano Actually, a concerto can be for almost any solo instrument and orchestra. The commonest are those for piano & orchestra, violin & orchestra, and cello & orchestra.
Professional orchestras usually have 5-10 cellos in one section depending on the size of the orchestra and nature of the performance.
Most likely, Cello and Orchestra (or cello and piano). Please specify which concerto you mean and I can tell you.
an organ is huge but not part of the orchestra is you want one in the orchestra then the piano
an orchestra usually plays the overture. the usually sit in a lower part in front of the stage.
There was no orchestra pit. We're guessing that they were on the balcony above the stage.
"The orchestra sounded amazing, especially the cello section."
in a string orchestra the instruments are: Bass Violin Viola Cello.
all orchestras
No it is played in an orchestra.
String orchestra instrumentation is 1st violin, 2nd violin, viola, cello, bass. Violincello or "cello" is a member of the violin family, as are the others listed. Many prominent composers wrote works for string orchestra. One is Tchaikovsky's "Serenade for Strings." Besides- there's always room for cello :)
It really depends on what you're preference is, what you're playing, and where you're playing. If you prefer the electric cello, go ahead. If you like the regular wooden cello, it's fine. If you're playing rock, I suggest the electric cello. If you play more classy-jazzy style, go with the regular cello. If you are playing solo on stage, go with what you prefer. If you are in an orchestra, go with the original cello.
The string section.
cello
Violin cello and a piano Actually, a concerto can be for almost any solo instrument and orchestra. The commonest are those for piano & orchestra, violin & orchestra, and cello & orchestra.