Definition. From nothing — emerging from silence, the starting point of a crescendo.
Dal niente is Italian for ‘from nothing’. As a dynamic instruction it specifies that the music should emerge from silence — beginning below the threshold of audibility and growing into perceptible sound.
The marking is the inverse of al niente. Where al niente fades to nothing, dal niente emerges from nothing. It is typically combined with a crescendo or hairpin: cresc. dal niente means ‘crescendo from nothing’. The hairpin opens from a point, and the music materializes out of silence as it grows.
Dal niente is a powerful structural device. It allows composers to begin a section without an audible attack — the music seems to coalesce out of the air. On strings, the bow approaches the string without engaging until the desired moment; on piano, the key descends gradually until tone emerges; on winds, breath builds before pitch is set.
Italian, ‘from the nothing’ — dal (‘from the’) + niente (‘nothing’).
Begin below audibility. The first audible moment must come gradually, not as an attack. Listeners should not be able to identify the precise moment the sound began.
From nothing — emerging from silence, the starting point of a crescendo.
Italian, ‘from the nothing’ — dal (‘from the’) + niente (‘nothing’).
Begin below audibility. The first audible moment must come gradually, not as an attack. Listeners should not be able to identify the precise moment the sound began.
Related terms include: Niente, Al Niente, Crescendo.
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