Definition. Sweetly, gently — playing with soft, sweet, gracious character.
Soave is Italian for ‘sweet’ or ‘gentle’. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with sweet, gentle, gracious character — every note treated tenderly, every phrase shaped with warmth. The marking is closely related to dolce (sweetly) and amabile (lovably).
The character is sweet and refined. Soave passages typically feature soft dynamics, smooth phrasing, warm tone, and moderate tempos. The marking implies a particular quality of sweetness — refined, almost aristocratic in its gentleness.
The direction is found throughout 18th and 19th-century music, especially in lyrical slow movements and operatic ariosos. Mozart’s ‘Sull’aria’ duet from The Marriage of Figaro is famously soave — gentle, sweet, almost tender.
Italian, ‘sweet, gentle’, from Latin suavis (‘sweet’).
Play with refined sweetness. Soft dynamics, warm tone, smooth phrasing. The character is gentle and gracious.
Sweetly, gently — playing with soft, sweet, gracious character.
Italian, ‘sweet, gentle’, from Latin suavis (‘sweet’).
Play with refined sweetness. Soft dynamics, warm tone, smooth phrasing. The character is gentle and gracious.
Related terms include: Dolce, Amabile, Tranquillo, Delicato.
Practice with Songtive's free tools
Hear this term applied — explore chord charts, fingerings and the music engine.
Piano chordsGuitar chordsVirtual piano