Definition. Very slow — the superlative of lento, indicating a tempo slower than lento itself.
Lentissimo is the superlative form of lento, marking music as ‘extremely slow’. In tempo terms it overlaps with adagissimo and larghissimo, all indicating tempos at the slow extreme. Standard metronome charts do not always distinguish between them; the choice is largely about character and connotation.
The marking is found in 19th and 20th-century repertoire. Composers reach for lentissimo when they want slowness that is austere, perhaps almost frozen — neither stately (adagissimo) nor expansive (larghissimo), simply very slow.
As with all extreme-slow markings, the performer’s challenge is to keep the music alive at the cellular level. Every note must carry harmonic and emotional weight, or the line dies.
Italian, superlative of lento. The -issimo suffix amplifies to the extreme.
Subdivide internally. Treat every beat as a phrase. Listen ahead — hear where the next note will land before you play. Without that internal motion, lentissimo collapses into silence punctuated by sound.
Very slow — the superlative of lento, indicating a tempo slower than lento itself.
Italian, superlative of lento. The -issimo suffix amplifies to the extreme.
Subdivide internally. Treat every beat as a phrase. Listen ahead — hear where the next note will land before you play. Without that internal motion, lentissimo collapses into silence punctuated by sound.
Related terms include: Lento, Adagissimo, Larghissimo, Grave.
Practice with Songtive's free tools
Hear this term applied — explore chord charts, fingerings and the music engine.
Piano chordsGuitar chordsVirtual piano