Definition. Lamentingly — playing with mournful, lamenting, grieving character.
Lamentoso is Italian for ‘lamenting’. As a performance direction it indicates that the music should be played as a lament — mournful, grieving, sorrowful. The marking is closely related to lacrimoso (tearful), mesto (sad), and doloroso (in pain).
The character is mournful and reflective. Lamentoso passages typically feature slow tempos, soft to moderate dynamics, and melodic lines built around descending sigh figures or expressive intervals. The marking implies a sense of musical mourning — the music as eulogy or threnody.
The direction is found throughout Romantic and post-Romantic music, especially in works dealing with loss or tragedy. Mahler, Tchaikovsky, and many Italian opera composers use lamentoso for passages of explicit mourning.
Italian, ‘lamenting’, from lamento (‘lament’), from Latin lamentum (‘lamentation’).
Convey mourning. Slow phrasing, sigh-like melodic shaping, tone slightly strained. The music should feel as if it were grieving.
Lamentingly — playing with mournful, lamenting, grieving character.
Italian, ‘lamenting’, from lamento (‘lament’), from Latin lamentum (‘lamentation’).
Convey mourning. Slow phrasing, sigh-like melodic shaping, tone slightly strained. The music should feel as if it were grieving.
Related terms include: Lacrimoso, Mesto, Doloroso, Patetico.
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