Definition. Sad — playing with sorrow, melancholy, mournful character.
Mesto is Italian for ‘sad’. As a performance direction it indicates that the music should be played with sorrowful, melancholy character. The marking is related to lacrimoso (tearful), doloroso (in pain), and lamentoso (lamenting), all of which describe varieties of musical sadness.
The character is reflective and mournful, but not always in active grief. Mesto can suggest a quieter, more contemplative sadness — the ache of memory or loss rather than fresh pain. The marking is found throughout Romantic and post-Romantic music, often in slow movements and lyrical passages.
The technical demands are subtle. Tempo should be slow enough to allow weight to accumulate, but not so slow that the music dies. Tone should be warm but slightly veiled, suggesting sorrow without melodrama. Phrasing should sigh, with slight rubato around peaks and resolutions.
Italian, ‘sad’, from Latin maestus (‘sad, gloomy’).
Find the quality of resigned sorrow. Mesto is sad but not desperate; the music has accepted its grief. Tone should be warm but slightly clouded; phrasing should breathe with sighs.
Sad — playing with sorrow, melancholy, mournful character.
Italian, ‘sad’, from Latin maestus (‘sad, gloomy’).
Find the quality of resigned sorrow. Mesto is sad but not desperate; the music has accepted its grief. Tone should be warm but slightly clouded; phrasing should breathe with sighs.
Related terms include: Lacrimoso, Doloroso, Lamentoso, Patetico, Malinconico.
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