Collaborations and productions included
Madonna,
Prince,
Belinda Carlisle,
Britney Spears,
Mel C,
Pink,
U2,
Katie Melua,
Ricky Martin,
Beth Orton,
Sarah McLachlan,
Queen,
The Joy Formidable,
Robbie Williams,
All Saints,
Kraftwerk,
Harry Enfield and
Sugababes. When working with
Beck, the two of them wrote a song for Pink, "
Feel Good Time," which Orbit then produced for the soundtrack for the 2003 film ''
Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle''. He produced the album
13 by Britpop group
Blur, in London and
Reykjavík, Iceland. Orbit had created remixes for Madonna previously such as those of "
Justify My Love" and "
Erotica" but did not meet her personally until 1997. That summer and autumn, they worked together and produced her multi-Grammy/award-winning seventh album
Ray of Light. The album took four months to record and it was the longest she ever spent recording an album. It was released on 22 February 1998. In 2000, Orbit continued working for Madonna on her album
Music, recorded at The Hit Factory in New York. At this time, he also co-wrote and performed with her on the song "
Beautiful Stranger". In 2011, he worked with a team of writers including Jean-Baptiste Kouame, Julie Frost and Klas Ahlund and brought their compositions and his production work to contribute to the twelfth studio album by Madonna,
MDNA, released on 23 March 2012, by
Interscope Records. He co-produced 6 tracks on the album, including "
Masterpiece" which won a
Golden Globe for Best Original Song in the Miramax film
W.E., at the 69th
Golden Globe Awards. After the release of the album, Orbit openly expressed in various media sources his dissatisfaction and disappointment with this Madonna project. In 2013, Orbit worked with
Britney Spears and
will.i.am on the album
Britney Jean, with fellow songwriters
Ana Diaz and Dan Traynor with whom he wrote and produced the track "Alien". He was one of the writers and one of the producers on the
Chris Brown song "
Don't Wake Me Up" which was recorded at Record Plant in LA and for which he received an ASCAP award in 2013. This was followed by a production of the Queen track "
There Must Be More to Life Than This", which featured archive vocals by
Freddie Mercury and
Michael Jackson. Orbit went on to produce another Queen song, "
Let Me in Your Heart Again". In 2015, his composition "The Name of the Wave" was used in the Oscar winning documentary
Amy directed by Asif Kapadia. In 2018, he worked on "After All", a song by English-Canadian
girl group All Saints from their fifth studio album,
Testament (2018). Written by group member
Shaznay Lewis along with Peter Hutchings and Orbit, whilst produced by the latter, it was released as the album's second single on 26 July 2018.
Classical work Inspired and encouraged by Rob Dickins, Orbit's first commercial release in the classical sphere was
Pieces in a Modern Style. It was originally released in May 1995 on Orbit's N-Gram Recordings label, and then again in 2000 by Warner Music in the UK and Europe, and on Maverick in the U.S. The album reached No 2 in the UK album charts. The first single release from the album was "Barber’s
Adagio for Strings", and a trance remix of the track by Dutch DJ
Ferry Corsten was hugely successful. The single reached number 4 in the national singles chart. In 2010 he teamed with Rico Conning and Laurie Mayer to make a follow-up album,
Pieces in a Modern Style 2, which was released as a two-disc set on the Decca label. The album featured German countertenor Andreas Scholl on an interpretation of Henry Purcell's "Dido’s Lament". In 2007, he took part in Alex Poots’ Manchester International Festival, and composed a symphonic work in nine movements, "Orchestral Suite" which was performed by the
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, augmented by additional harps, pianos and percussion, and with The Manchester Chorale, conducted by Alexander Shelley at
Bridgewater Hall. ==Live performance/media/DJ work==