Definition. Painfully, sorrowfully — playing with deep sadness and emotional pain.
Doloroso is Italian for ‘painful’ or ‘sorrowful’. As a performance direction it indicates that the music should be played with deep sadness, emotional pain, sorrowful character. The marking is closely related to mesto (sad), lacrimoso (tearful), and con dolore (with pain).
The character is sorrowful and weighted. Doloroso passages typically feature slow tempos, soft to moderate dynamics, slightly veiled tone, and phrasing that sighs. The marking implies more active sadness than mesto — closer to actual grief, though not quite the open weeping of lacrimoso.
The direction appears throughout Romantic and post-Romantic music, often in slow movements, funeral marches, and passages of mourning. Verdi’s Requiem, Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder, and many of Liszt’s late works use doloroso character.
Italian, ‘painful’, from Latin dolorosus, from dolor (‘pain’).
Convey real sorrow. Tone slightly strained; phrasing sigh-like; rubato around emotional peaks. Avoid melodrama, but do not hold back from genuine pathos.
Painfully, sorrowfully — playing with deep sadness and emotional pain.
Italian, ‘painful’, from Latin dolorosus, from dolor (‘pain’).
Convey real sorrow. Tone slightly strained; phrasing sigh-like; rubato around emotional peaks. Avoid melodrama, but do not hold back from genuine pathos.
Related terms include: Mesto, Lacrimoso, Lamentoso, Patetico, Con Dolore.
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