Definition. Capriciously — playing with whimsical, fanciful, freely shifting character.
Capriccioso is Italian for ‘capricious’. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with whimsical, fanciful, freely shifting character — the music should feel unpredictable, full of sudden changes of mood, tempo, and dynamics. The marking implies a certain freedom and spontaneity.
The character is whimsical and spontaneous. Capriccioso passages typically feature sudden changes — abrupt dynamic shifts, unexpected tempo modulations, surprising articulations. The performer should embrace the unpredictability rather than smoothing it out.
The direction is most associated with the capriccio — a piece whose form and content are deliberately whimsical, freely structured, sometimes virtuosic. Paganini’s Caprices, Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsodies, and many Romantic character pieces carry the capriccioso spirit.
Italian, ‘capricious’, from capriccio (‘whim, sudden change’), originally a sudden movement of a goat (capra) — a folk-etymological joke.
Embrace surprise. Don’t smooth out abrupt changes; play them as they come. The music should feel spontaneous, even improvised.
Capriciously — playing with whimsical, fanciful, freely shifting character.
Italian, ‘capricious’, from capriccio (‘whim, sudden change’), originally a sudden movement of a goat (capra) — a folk-etymological joke.
Embrace surprise. Don’t smooth out abrupt changes; play them as they come. The music should feel spontaneous, even improvised.
Related terms include: Scherzando, Rubato, Vivace.
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