Definition. Amorously — playing with loving, affectionate, tender character.
Amoroso is Italian for ‘amorous’. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with loving, affectionate, tender character — every phrase shaped with the warmth of love. The marking is closely related to con amore (with love), teneramente (tenderly), and dolce (sweetly).
The character is loving and warm. Amoroso passages typically feature soft to moderate dynamics, smooth phrasing, warm tone, and rubato that suggests caressing motion. The marking is most common in lyrical slow movements and in vocal music, especially love songs and operatic love duets.
The direction is found throughout 18th and 19th-century music. Mozart’s love duets, Donizetti’s romantic ariosos, and Schumann’s amorous lieder all carry the amoroso spirit. The mark calls for a particular kind of musical love — tender, attentive, expressive.
Italian, ‘amorous’, from amore (‘love’).
Play with the tenderness of love. Phrasing should caress; tone should be warm and round; dynamics should respond to emotional contour. The music is making love.
Amorously — playing with loving, affectionate, tender character.
Italian, ‘amorous’, from amore (‘love’).
Play with the tenderness of love. Phrasing should caress; tone should be warm and round; dynamics should respond to emotional contour. The music is making love.
Related terms include: Con Amore, Teneramente, Dolce, Amabile.
Practice with Songtive's free tools
Hear this term applied — explore chord charts, fingerings and the music engine.
Piano chordsGuitar chordsVirtual piano