Definition. Passionately — with fervor and intense emotional engagement.
Appassionato is Italian for ‘impassioned’ or ‘with passion’. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with strong emotional commitment — fervor, intensity, passion. The marking demands more than cool expression; it requires the performer to invest emotionally in the music.
The character is dramatic, urgent, sometimes turbulent. Appassionato passages often combine forte or louder dynamics with rapid tempos, but the marking can also apply to slower lyrical passages where the passion is concentrated rather than expansive. Beethoven’s Appassionata sonata (Op. 57) is the great example — the entire work is essentially an extended exploration of passionate emotion.
The marking is closely related to but distinct from con fuoco (with fire), agitato (agitated), and espressivo. Appassionato implies sustained, deep emotional engagement; con fuoco implies flame-like intensity; agitato implies nervous unease; espressivo is more general.
Italian, ‘impassioned’, from passione (‘passion’), from Latin passio (‘suffering, feeling’).
Commit fully. Half-hearted appassionato sounds merely loud. The performer must invest emotionally in every note — physically engaged, fully present, willing to take expressive risks.
Passionately — with fervor and intense emotional engagement.
Italian, ‘impassioned’, from passione (‘passion’), from Latin passio (‘suffering, feeling’).
Commit fully. Half-hearted appassionato sounds merely loud. The performer must invest emotionally in every note — physically engaged, fully present, willing to take expressive risks.
Related terms include: Con Fuoco, Agitato, Espressivo, Energico, Furioso.
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