Definition. Sweet, gentle — a direction to play with a soft, lyrical, tender character.
Dolce is one of the most common expressive directions in Italian musical vocabulary. It instructs the performer to play sweetly, gently, with a tender and lyrical character. The marking does not directly indicate volume or tempo, though dolce passages typically tend toward softer dynamics and slower or moderate tempos.
The character of dolce is intimate, warm, and unhurried. Phrases breathe naturally; tone is round and open, never forced or sharp; articulation is connected and flowing. Dolce passages appear throughout the Romantic repertoire — Chopin nocturnes, Schumann lieder, Brahms slow movements — wherever the composer wants the music to sing tenderly.
The word combines beautifully with other directions: dolce e cantabile (sweet and singing), dolce ed espressivo (sweet and expressive), molto dolce (very sweet). Each combination shades the basic instruction toward a particular flavor of tenderness.
Italian, ‘sweet, gentle’, from Latin dulcis (‘sweet’).
Soften everything — touch, attack, tone color. The sound should feel rounded, never edged. Phrasing should breathe naturally as if the music were a private confidence.
Sweet, gentle — a direction to play with a soft, lyrical, tender character.
Italian, ‘sweet, gentle’, from Latin dulcis (‘sweet’).
Soften everything — touch, attack, tone color. The sound should feel rounded, never edged. Phrasing should breathe naturally as if the music were a private confidence.
Related terms include: Dolcissimo, Espressivo, Cantabile, Tranquillo.
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