Definition. Melancholically — playing with melancholy, gentle sadness, wistfulness.
Malinconico is Italian for ‘melancholy’. As a performance direction it indicates that the music should be played with melancholy character — a quiet, wistful sadness, less acute than mesto or lacrimoso, more reflective than active grief.
The character is wistful and contemplative. Malinconico passages typically feature slow tempos, gentle dynamics, slightly veiled tone, and rubato that suggests sighing rather than weeping. The marking is found throughout 19th and 20th-century music, especially in lyrical slow movements.
The distinction from mesto (sad) is subtle. Mesto can be deeply sorrowful; malinconico is more reflective, almost contented in its sadness. The mood is the autumn afternoon rather than the funeral march.
Italian, ‘melancholy’, from Late Latin melancholicus, from Greek melanchole (‘black bile’ — the supposed humoral cause of melancholy).
Find the wistful note. Tone should be warm but slightly veiled; phrasing should sigh quietly rather than weep openly. The mood is reflective, not desperate.
Melancholically — playing with melancholy, gentle sadness, wistfulness.
Italian, ‘melancholy’, from Late Latin melancholicus, from Greek melanchole (‘black bile’ — the supposed humoral cause of melancholy).
Find the wistful note. Tone should be warm but slightly veiled; phrasing should sigh quietly rather than weep openly. The mood is reflective, not desperate.
Related terms include: Mesto, Lacrimoso, Lamentoso, Patetico.
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