Definition. Losing oneself — the music gradually fades away, often slowing as well, as if the sound is dissolving.
Perdendosi is one of the most evocative slow-fade markings in the Italian musical lexicon. The literal meaning is ‘losing oneself’ — and that is precisely the impression the music should give. The texture thins, the volume drops, the tempo eases, and the listener cannot quite locate the moment when the music slipped away.
It overlaps with morendo and calando but is often even more attenuated. Composers reserve perdendosi for moments of profound stillness or emotional withdrawal: the close of a meditative slow movement, the dissolving end of a song, or a passage in which a character ‘drifts off’ — literally or metaphorically.
Beethoven, Schumann, and Schubert use perdendosi in intimate piano works. Verdi uses it for whispered orchestral textures in late operas. The marking is rarely used in fast or loud contexts; its emotional grammar requires a slow, soft canvas to begin with.
Italian reflexive present participle of perdersi (‘to lose oneself’), from Latin perdere (‘to lose’).
Perdendosi should sound like reverie. Avoid shaping each note individually — let the line dissolve as a continuous gesture. On piano, gradually release pedal weight; on strings, taper bow weight and arm tension simultaneously.
Losing oneself — the music gradually fades away, often slowing as well, as if the sound is dissolving.
Italian reflexive present participle of perdersi (‘to lose oneself’), from Latin perdere (‘to lose’).
Perdendosi should sound like reverie. Avoid shaping each note individually — let the line dissolve as a continuous gesture. On piano, gradually release pedal weight; on strings, taper bow weight and arm tension simultaneously.
Perdendosi is commonly abbreviated as perd..
Related terms include: Morendo, Calando, Smorzando, Niente.
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