Definition. Twice as fast — the new tempo is exactly double the previous one.
Doppio movimento, literally ‘double movement’, instructs the performer that the new tempo is exactly twice the previous one. If the music was at 60 BPM, doppio movimento brings it to 120 BPM.
The marking is a precise form of metric modulation: rather than a gradual change (accelerando) or a relative one (più mosso), doppio movimento specifies an exact ratio. It is most useful at points of structural transition, where the composer wants the new section to feel mathematically related to the old one.
The inverse — doppio più lento, ‘twice as slow’ — also appears occasionally, halving the tempo. Both markings are common in 19th and 20th-century music, especially in works with multiple tempo plateaus.
Italian, ‘double movement’ — doppio (‘double’) + movimento (‘movement, motion’), from Latin duplus and movimentum.
Calculate the exact new tempo before rehearsing. Don’t guess. In ensemble work, conduct or count the new tempo for several bars before the marking arrives, so the change lands cleanly.
Twice as fast — the new tempo is exactly double the previous one.
Italian, ‘double movement’ — doppio (‘double’) + movimento (‘movement, motion’), from Latin duplus and movimentum.
Calculate the exact new tempo before rehearsing. Don’t guess. In ensemble work, conduct or count the new tempo for several bars before the marking arrives, so the change lands cleanly.
Related terms include: A Tempo, L'istesso Tempo, Più Mosso, Meno Mosso.
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