Definition. Delicately — playing with delicate, refined, gentle character.
Delicato is Italian for ‘delicate’. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with refined, careful, gentle character — every note treated with delicacy, every phrase shaped with restraint. The marking is closely related to leggiero (lightly) and con grazia (with grace).
The character is refined and careful. Delicato passages typically feature soft dynamics, gentle articulation, careful phrasing, and tone of particular finesse. The marking implies a certain technical precision — delicato playing requires control and care, not just softness.
The direction is common in lyrical slow movements, in salon-style works, and in moments of particular intimacy. Schumann, Chopin, and Mendelssohn all use delicato for passages of refined sensibility.
Italian, ‘delicate’, from Latin delicatus (‘delicate, dainty’).
Treat every detail with care. Soft attacks, gentle phrasing, refined dynamics. The character is precise and elegant, not weak or insipid.
Delicately — playing with delicate, refined, gentle character.
Italian, ‘delicate’, from Latin delicatus (‘delicate, dainty’).
Treat every detail with care. Soft attacks, gentle phrasing, refined dynamics. The character is precise and elegant, not weak or insipid.
Related terms include: Leggiero, Con Grazia, Dolce, Amabile.
Practice with Songtive's free tools
Hear this term applied — explore chord charts, fingerings and the music engine.
Piano chordsGuitar chordsVirtual piano