Definition. Rushing headlong — accelerating with abandon, almost recklessly fast.
Precipitando, Italian for ‘rushing’ or ‘plunging’, instructs the performer to accelerate dramatically, with a sense of headlong urgency. It is more extreme than accelerando or stringendo — the music does not merely speed up; it plunges forward.
The marking is rare and reserved for moments of extraordinary intensity. Liszt uses it in some of his more virtuoso showpieces; Romantic Italian opera reaches for it in climactic ensemble scenes; modern composers occasionally borrow it for cadenza-like flourishes.
The character implied is dangerous, almost out of control. A precipitando passage should feel like the music has lost its footing and is tumbling forward — yet the performer must remain in command, because at this speed any loss of control becomes audible chaos.
Italian, gerund of precipitare (‘to plunge, hurl, rush’), from Latin praecipitare, praeceps (‘headlong’).
Push the tempo aggressively, but maintain technical clarity. The wildness is in the feel, not the execution. Practice the passage at multiple incremental tempos to find the maximum sustainable speed.
Rushing headlong — accelerating with abandon, almost recklessly fast.
Italian, gerund of precipitare (‘to plunge, hurl, rush’), from Latin praecipitare, praeceps (‘headlong’).
Push the tempo aggressively, but maintain technical clarity. The wildness is in the feel, not the execution. Practice the passage at multiple incremental tempos to find the maximum sustainable speed.
Related terms include: Accelerando, Stringendo, Affrettando, Scatenato, Presto.
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