Definition. Very fast — one of the quickest standard tempo markings, typically 168–200 beats per minute.
Presto is the standard Italian marking for ‘very fast’. In the tempo hierarchy it sits above allegro and below prestissimo. Conventional metronome ranges put presto at roughly 168–200 BPM, though composers and performers regularly exceed these bounds.
The term is centuries old. Presto movements appear throughout the Baroque (Vivaldi’s concertos, Handel’s overtures), reach a kind of apotheosis in Classical-era finales (Haydn, Mozart), and are absolutely central to Romantic virtuosity (Liszt, Paganini, Saint-Saëns). The presto finale is essentially a structural archetype: a brilliant, breathless conclusion.
Although presto is often associated with virtuoso display, it is not synonymous with mere speed. A good presto retains clarity, articulation, and rhythmic shape. The challenge for the performer is to play fast without playing frantically: every note must still be in the music, not merely on the page.
Italian, ‘ready, prompt, quick’, from Late Latin praestus (‘ready at hand’).
Practice presto passages slowly, then incrementally. The tempo cannot be faked — every note must be in the fingers before it can be in the performance. In ensemble, set internal subdivisions to keep the pulse stable.
Very fast — one of the quickest standard tempo markings, typically 168–200 beats per minute.
Italian, ‘ready, prompt, quick’, from Late Latin praestus (‘ready at hand’).
Practice presto passages slowly, then incrementally. The tempo cannot be faked — every note must be in the fingers before it can be in the performance. In ensemble, set internal subdivisions to keep the pulse stable.
Related terms include: Prestissimo, Vivace, Allegrissimo, Rapido.
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