See this review how you want, I am just trying to help you:
I seriously have no idea where to start; you seem to not be aware of what is actually possible while creating music, and I think it is already time that somebody clears you up on this.
In all of your tracks there are so many important elements missing, or generally there are instruments/synths/whatever missing in general. There is no introduction to the intro, the intro itself feels empty with just the choir and no FX or additional details whatsoever. There are no transitional elements from section to section and everything feels really cluncky. The only section that I kinda liked was the Chorus/B Section (2:46), because there were more elements that tried to support each other, but each element was fighting for superior volume and that was just a total mess. To put it simply: There is SO MUCH stuff that can be improved.
But what are these important Elements? Well, you are trying to produce Orchestral Dubstep, so...
- You need a sub bass. Without a sub bass, there is no bass. Mostly the sub is simply a sinus/sine wave sitting below the bass element itself. The sub bass will give the actual bass to the bass, if you know what I mean.
- You need a sidechain for your drums. What a sidechain does is that it reduces the volume of, mostly, every single instrument and synth, when a drum hits. You need this because the drums need space to punch through the mix. Simply look up "How to sidechain your drums" on Youtube and you will find plenty of methods, all with their pros and cons.
- You need effects (FX) on ALL of your sections! FX is everything that makes your track feel more alive, for example: certain foley, like sounds of wind or a sample of someone breaking glass, or sounds of birds chirping or samples of footsteps, etc. these are what make a track a track and without them the track would feel empty and hollow
- You need transitional FX. Uplifters, Downlifters, Risers, White Noise that fades in or that fades out (you can also use foleys as transitional FX too!). These will make sure that the listener can follow through the sections, because without them it is like hitting a solid brick wall while running.
- You need audio FX. For example: The Choir could use some reverb, because it feels really dry in that state, you could beef up the Basses with some OTT, you can equalize every single instrument with an EQ to make sure that everyone has space for other elements to fill this space in the frequency spectrum, you can add a Delay to your Arps to make them sound more alive, etc.
Audio FX are in my opinion the second most important thing in music production!
The most important thing in music production for me is to tell a story through your track, but it seems that you kinda got it already. Simply research a topic or use any sort of experience you had in your life as a basis for your composition and arrangement.
Right now I don't want to go into everything technical you might need to know, because I think it is better to test the thing that I have listed up first, and then we can dive deeper into this.
I hope that I could help you with this, and I am sorry if I came out as rude, I didn't want to be, but I felt like I had to do something .