Definition. Tender — German equivalent of dolce, indicating tender, delicate playing.
Zart is German for ‘tender’ or ‘delicate’. As a performance direction in German-language scores it is essentially the equivalent of Italian dolce — instructing the performer to play tenderly, gently, with delicate character.
The marking is found throughout German Romantic and post-Romantic music. Schumann uses it constantly in piano works; Mahler in symphonic and lieder writing; Brahms in chamber music. Zart passages should sound intimate and warm, with careful phrasing and gentle articulation.
The word appears alone (‘zart’) or in combinations: sehr zart (‘very tender’), zart und ausdrucksvoll (‘tender and expressive’). Each variation shades the basic instruction toward a particular flavor of tenderness.
German, ‘tender, delicate, soft’.
Play with tender care. Soft attacks, warm tone, careful phrasing. The character is intimate and gentle — never harsh or assertive.
Tender — German equivalent of dolce, indicating tender, delicate playing.
German, ‘tender, delicate, soft’.
Play with tender care. Soft attacks, warm tone, careful phrasing. The character is intimate and gentle — never harsh or assertive.
Related terms include: Dolce, Delicato.
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