Definition. In place — instruction to return to normal-octave reading after an *ottava* or *ottava bassa* marking.
Loco, Italian for ‘in place’ or ‘at the location’, is a performance direction that cancels a previous ottava (8va) or ottava bassa (8vb) marking. The performer returns to reading the notes at their normal written pitch — neither up nor down an octave.
The direction is essential when an octave displacement passage transitions back to normal. Without an explicit loco, the dashed line of the previous 8va or 8vb marking eventually ends, but loco provides clearer notation.
In practice, the dashed line of the 8va/8vb marking usually marks both the start and end of the octave-displaced section. ‘Loco’ is sometimes added at the end for extra clarity, but the dashed line alone is normally sufficient.
Italian, ‘in place’, from Latin loco (‘in the place’), ablative of locus.
When you see loco, return to reading the notes at their actual written pitch — no octave transposition. The previous 8va or 8vb marking is cancelled.
In place — instruction to return to normal-octave reading after an ottava or ottava bassa marking.
Italian, ‘in place’, from Latin loco (‘in the place’), ablative of locus.
When you see loco, return to reading the notes at their actual written pitch — no octave transposition. The previous 8va or 8vb marking is cancelled.
Related terms include: Ottava, Ottava Bassa.
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