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orchestrator

[ UK /ˈɔːkɪstɹˌe‍ɪtɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. an arranger who writes for orchestras

How To Use orchestrator In A Sentence

  • Steer too close to the traditional and you cease to be an architect and become, instead, an orchestrator of Disneyesque fantasies of exotica. Designs for NYC's Park51 Islamic center show a literally enlightened building
  • Tate Brady, who was not only one of Tulsa's founding fathers and major landowners, but also a prominent Klansman and orchestrator of the Tulsa Race Riot. Adrian Margaret Brune: Tulsa's Ghosts of Leadership Past
  • He was a superb melodist and a brilliant orchestrator, with fine feeling for the human voice, and his works rise consistently above the operetta norm.
  • A a global company can use the analysis orchestrator to update information on assets -- people, technology and facility -- from all of its organizational units in different SOAs.
  • He is probably best known as the orchestrator and organizer of Pink Floyd's "Atom Heart Mother (suite)" in 1970, European Tribune
  • Renukanth Subramaniam, 33, was revealed today as the founder and a major "orchestrator" of the secret ­DarkMarket website, where elite fraudsters bought and sold personal data, after it was infiltrated by the FBI and the US Secret Service. Personal finance and money news, analysis and comment | guardian.co.uk
  • This model is based on an intelligent scheduler / orchestrator to schedule ready-to-run tasks (based on a dependency graph) across a clusters of dumb workers.
  • I jokingly refer to the 'orchestrator' as the tea party block captain. Washington Post: Breaking News, World, US, DC News & Analysis
  • It is now fashionable to bundle these superb tunesmiths and master orchestrators together and ignore them.
  • But it is a big task to install him as orchestrator with so little hands-on experience.
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