By Oliver Condy

Published: Wednesday, 24 January 2024 at 15:58 PM


Sometimes there’s a slight grey area between chamber and orchestral music. After all, isn’t there such a thing as a chamber orchestra? Rather than muddy the waters further though, we’re going to go back to basics and explain the difference between chamber and orchestral music.

What’s the difference between chamber and orchestral music?

On a very simple level, the differences between chamber music and orchestral music come down to the number of players featured in a composition. Generally speaking, chamber music starts from two players and takes in trios, quartets, quintets, sextets, septets, nonets and more along its way.

The term chamber derives from the French word ‘chambre’ for room. Chamber music is designed to be performed in smaller spaces, as opposed to a concert hall. Before concert halls started to appear in the 19th century, music was written to be played in three places: the church, the theatre and the courts of the royalty and aristocracy. It’s the last of these that chamber music was originally designed for. Take Haydn’s string quartets for the Esterházy family or Lully’s flute sonatas for Louis XIV at the court of Versailles for instance. Today, chamber music broadly refers to any music played with one instrument to each part – and on a small-ish scale.

What’s a chamber orchestra?

Don’t let the term ‘chamber orchestra’ confuse you, however. A chamber orchestra can be small enough to play chamber music, but often they’re large enough to play orchestral music. The dividing lines are very thin.

Now when it comes to orchestral music, an ‘orchestra’ simply means any collection of instruments. To be more specific, it really refers to a body of players that perform larger-scale music. These works might be symphonies, concertos (as the accompanying ensemble) or large tone-poems. This is music where instrumental parts, particularly strings, are played by more than one player.