Definition. With pain — playing with sorrow, grief, and emotional anguish.
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.
Italian, ‘with pain’ — con + dolore (‘pain, sorrow’, from Latin dolor).
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.
With pain — playing with sorrow, grief, and emotional anguish.
Italian, ‘with pain’ — con + dolore (‘pain, sorrow’, from Latin dolor).
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.
Related terms include: Doloroso, Lacrimoso, Lamentoso, Mesto, Patetico.
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