Stringendo

/strɪnˈdʒɛndoʊ/strin-JEN-doh
Tempo MarkingsItalian
Also written as: string.

Definition. Pressing forward, getting faster — typically with growing intensity, not just tempo.

Detailed Explanation

Stringendo, abbreviated string., asks the performer to press the music forward. It is closely related to accelerando but carries a different connotation: where accelerando is a controlled mathematical increase, stringendo is dramatic — a tightening, an urgency. Composers reach for it when they want the listener to feel the music straining ahead of itself.

The word literally means ‘pressing’ or ‘tightening’ in Italian, and that is the texture you should hear: each beat slightly more taut than the last. Stringendo is common in operatic finales, scherzos, and any passage approaching a climactic event.

Unlike accelerando, stringendo often implies a crescendo as well — louder and faster. Verdi, Puccini, and Mascagni use it constantly. In the solo piano repertoire, Liszt and Schumann apply it to bridge passages that lead into a final reprise. The marking usually ends at a thematic event such as a high note, a chord, or the return of the principal theme.

Etymology

Italian, gerund of stringere (‘to press, tighten, squeeze’), from Latin stringere. The musical sense developed alongside accelerando in 19th-century operatic writing.

In Practice

Stringendo is a feeling, not a metric. Don’t merely raise the metronome mark — let the bow draw faster, the breath shorten, the harmonic motion press. The audience should feel pulled forward, slightly off-balance, until the resolution lands.

Notable Examples

  • Verdi — Otello  (stringendo into Act III finale)
  • Liszt — Sonata in B minor  (stringendo before the development climax)

Related Terms

Opposite Of

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Stringendo mean in music?

Pressing forward, getting faster — typically with growing intensity, not just tempo.

Where does the word Stringendo come from?

Italian, gerund of stringere (‘to press, tighten, squeeze’), from Latin stringere. The musical sense developed alongside accelerando in 19th-century operatic writing.

How is Stringendo performed in practice?

Stringendo is a feeling, not a metric. Don’t merely raise the metronome mark — let the bow draw faster, the breath shorten, the harmonic motion press. The audience should feel pulled forward, slightly off-balance, until the resolution lands.

What are common abbreviations for Stringendo?

Stringendo is commonly abbreviated as string..

What musical terms are related to Stringendo?

Related terms include: Accelerando, Incalzando, Affrettando, Precipitando.

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