Con Dolore

/kɒn dəˈlɔːreɪ/kon doh-LOH-reh
Expression & MoodItalian

Definition. With pain — playing with sorrow, grief, and emotional anguish.

Detailed Explanation

Con dolore is Italian for ‘with pain’. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with sorrow, grief, and emotional pain. The marking is darker than mesto (sad) or lacrimoso (tearful) — it implies active suffering, not passive sadness.

The character is anguished. Con dolore passages often feature sigh-like falling melodic lines, dissonant harmonic stress, slow or held tempos, and minor keys. The performer must convey real pain — not melodrama, but genuine sorrow shaped through every musical detail.

The marking appears throughout 19th and early 20th-century music, particularly in works dealing with loss, mourning, or tragic narrative. Verdi’s Requiem and operatic death scenes use it; Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder is essentially an extended exploration of con dolore.

Etymology

Italian, ‘with pain’ — con + dolore (‘pain, sorrow’, from Latin dolor).

In Practice

Don’t mistake con dolore for slow and quiet. The marking demands palpable emotional weight. Tone should be strained without being harsh; phrasing should sigh; rubato should add pathos.

Notable Examples

  • Verdi — Requiem  (extensive con dolore character)
  • Mahler — Kindertotenlieder  (con dolore throughout)

Related Terms

Opposite Of

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Con Dolore mean in music?

With pain — playing with sorrow, grief, and emotional anguish.

Where does the word Con Dolore come from?

Italian, ‘with pain’ — con + dolore (‘pain, sorrow’, from Latin dolor).

How is Con Dolore performed in practice?

Don’t mistake con dolore for slow and quiet. The marking demands palpable emotional weight. Tone should be strained without being harsh; phrasing should sigh; rubato should add pathos.

What musical terms are related to Con Dolore?

Related terms include: Doloroso, Lacrimoso, Lamentoso, Mesto, Patetico.

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