Definition. Mysteriously — playing with mysterious, eerie, atmospheric character.
Misterioso is Italian for ‘mysterious’. As a performance direction it instructs the performer to play with mysterious, atmospheric, slightly eerie character. The music should feel as if it were hiding something — full of suggestion, half-glimpsed shapes, unresolved tension.
The character is atmospheric and suspenseful. Misterioso passages typically feature soft dynamics, sustained tone, harmonic ambiguity, and a sense of suspended motion. The marking implies a particular tonal quality — the tone slightly veiled, as if seen through fog.
The direction is common in Romantic and post-Romantic music, especially in passages dealing with the supernatural, the unknown, or the introspective. Wagner uses it in his prelude to Lohengrin; Bartók in Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta; many film composers in suspense scoring.
Italian, ‘mysterious’, from Latin mysteriosus, from mysterium (‘mystery’).
Veil the tone. Soft dynamics, sustained phrasing, suspended motion. The music should feel as if something were hidden just beyond perception.
Mysteriously — playing with mysterious, eerie, atmospheric character.
Italian, ‘mysterious’, from Latin mysteriosus, from mysterium (‘mystery’).
Veil the tone. Soft dynamics, sustained phrasing, suspended motion. The music should feel as if something were hidden just beyond perception.
Related terms include: Sognando, Tranquillo, Sotto Voce.
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