Definition. With vigor — playing with vivacity, spirit, and brilliance.
Con brio is Italian for ‘with vigor’ or ‘with brilliance’. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with vivacity, spirit, and lively energy. The character is bright, animated, full of forward momentum.
The marking is most often combined with allegro (Allegro con brio) — a vigorous, brilliant fast movement. Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 famously opens Allegro con brio, and the marking is instantly recognizable in the music’s driving energy. Many of his most propulsive movements carry the same direction.
Con brio differs from con fuoco (with fire) in character. Con brio is bright and energetic, with a positive joyful quality. Con fuoco is fiercer, more passionate, sometimes darker. Con brio is sunshine; con fuoco is flame.
Italian, ‘with vigor, with brilliance’ — con + brio (‘vigor, spirit, brio’), from Italian/Old French bruire (‘to roar’).
Play with forward energy and joy. The character is positive and assertive — bright tone, articulated phrasing, propulsive rhythm. Avoid heaviness; con brio should feel light on its feet.
With vigor — playing with vivacity, spirit, and brilliance.
Italian, ‘with vigor, with brilliance’ — con + brio (‘vigor, spirit, brio’), from Italian/Old French bruire (‘to roar’).
Play with forward energy and joy. The character is positive and assertive — bright tone, articulated phrasing, propulsive rhythm. Avoid heaviness; con brio should feel light on its feet.
Related terms include: Brillante, Vivace, Allegrissimo, Energico.
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