Definition. Lively, brisk — a fast tempo with bright, animated character. Roughly 140–168 BPM.
Vivace literally means ‘lively’ in Italian, and that is the spirit of the marking: a quick, animated, sparkling character. In the standard tempo hierarchy vivace falls between allegro and presto, around 140–168 BPM, but the quality matters as much as the speed. A vivace passage is bright, light on its feet, full of forward energy.
Composers from the Baroque onward have used vivace for movements that need extra brightness — final movements of concertos, dance-derived sections, virtuoso showpieces. Mozart’s Eine kleine Nachtmusik opens with a famous Allegro vivace — the marking suggests not just speed but joy.
Vivace is often combined with other modifiers to fine-tune the affect: molto vivace (very lively), vivace ma non troppo (lively but not too much), vivace e brillante (lively and brilliant). The word appears alone, too, as a complete tempo direction.
Italian, ‘lively, vivacious’, from Latin vivax (‘long-lived, vigorous’), from vivere (‘to live’).
Aim for buoyancy, not just speed. Vivace should feel like the music is dancing — articulation crisp, phrasing breathing, dynamics responsive. A vivace that grinds out the notes has missed the mark.
Lively, brisk — a fast tempo with bright, animated character. Roughly 140–168 BPM.
Italian, ‘lively, vivacious’, from Latin vivax (‘long-lived, vigorous’), from vivere (‘to live’).
Aim for buoyancy, not just speed. Vivace should feel like the music is dancing — articulation crisp, phrasing breathing, dynamics responsive. A vivace that grinds out the notes has missed the mark.
Related terms include: Allegro, Presto, Vivacissimo, Brillante, Giocoso.
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