Definition. Flowering — an elaborate ornamental flourish, especially in operatic vocal writing.
Fioritura is Italian for ‘flowering’ — an elaborate ornamental flourish or melismatic decoration. The plural is fioriture. The term refers to florid, decorative passagework, typically in vocal music, where the singer adds elaborate ornamentation to the principal melodic line.
The practice is most associated with bel canto opera (Bellini, Donizetti, Rossini), where singers traditionally added fioriture to da capo arias and other passages — improvising flourishes, scale passages, trills, and arpeggios that demonstrated vocal virtuosity. In modern practice, these ornaments are usually composed and notated rather than improvised.
Fioritura also occurs in instrumental music — Chopin’s ornamental flourishes in his nocturnes are essentially instrumental fioriture. The marking implies decorative, virtuosic passagework that elaborates the principal melodic line without changing its essential identity.
Italian, ‘flowering’, from fiore (‘flower’), from Latin flos.
Execute fioriture cleanly and lightly. They are decorative; they should ornament the line, not weigh it down. Maintain rhythmic clarity even at high speed.
Flowering — an elaborate ornamental flourish, especially in operatic vocal writing.
Italian, ‘flowering’, from fiore (‘flower’), from Latin flos.
Execute fioriture cleanly and lightly. They are decorative; they should ornament the line, not weigh it down. Maintain rhythmic clarity even at high speed.
Related terms include: Coloratura, Roulade, Trill, Appoggiatura.
Practice with Songtive's free tools
Hear this term applied — explore chord charts, fingerings and the music engine.
Piano chordsGuitar chordsVirtual piano