Definition. Pathetically — playing with pathos, deeply moving emotional character.
Patetico is Italian for ‘pathetic’ — but in its musical sense, the word retains its original Greek meaning of ‘pathos-bearing’ or ‘deeply moving’, without the modern English negative connotation. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with deeply moving, emotionally weighted character.
The character is emotionally charged. Patetico passages typically feature slow or moderate tempos, expressive phrasing, dynamic shaping with rubato, and tone of particular emotional warmth. The marking implies powerful emotional content — the music as elegy or expression of profound feeling.
Beethoven’s Sonata Pathétique (Op. 13) gives the term its most famous setting — though the title is in French (Pathétique) rather than Italian. Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 6 is the Pathétique — the entire work is essentially extended patetico character.
Italian/Greek, from Greek pathētikos (‘capable of feeling’), from pathos (‘suffering, feeling’).
Play with emotional weight. Phrasing should breathe with expression; rubato should add pathos; dynamics should respond to emotional contour. The music is heartfelt.
Pathetically — playing with pathos, deeply moving emotional character.
Italian/Greek, from Greek pathētikos (‘capable of feeling’), from pathos (‘suffering, feeling’).
Play with emotional weight. Phrasing should breathe with expression; rubato should add pathos; dynamics should respond to emotional contour. The music is heartfelt.
Related terms include: Espressivo, Lacrimoso, Doloroso, Appassionato.
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