Definition. With soul — playing with deep feeling and inner spirit.
Con anima is Italian for ‘with soul’. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with deep inner feeling — to bring soul, heart, animation to the line. The marking is closely related to espressivo but carries a particular flavor of emotional depth and inner life.
The character is impassioned but not necessarily loud or dramatic. A passage marked con anima may be quiet and tender, with the soul evident in the careful shaping of every phrase. The opposite would be a mechanical or external performance — playing the notes without inner connection.
The marking is found throughout the Romantic and post-Romantic repertoire. Tchaikovsky, Mahler, and Italian operatic composers all use con anima at moments where the emotional weight of the music demands the performer’s full inner engagement.
Italian, ‘with soul’ — con (‘with’) + anima (‘soul’, from Latin anima).
Connect emotionally before you connect physically. Feel the music inwardly, then let that feeling shape your tone, phrasing, and articulation. The audience can tell the difference.
With soul — playing with deep feeling and inner spirit.
Italian, ‘with soul’ — con (‘with’) + anima (‘soul’, from Latin anima).
Connect emotionally before you connect physically. Feel the music inwardly, then let that feeling shape your tone, phrasing, and articulation. The audience can tell the difference.
Related terms include: Espressivo, Appassionato, Cantabile, Con Amore.
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