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pianissimo
[pee-uh-nis-uh-moh, pyah-nees-see-maw]
adjective
very soft.
adverb
very softly.
noun
plural
pianissimosa passage or movement played in this way.
pianissimo
/ ɪəˈɪɪˌəʊ /
adjective
pp.music (to be performed) very quietly
pianissimo
A musical direction meaning “to be performed very softly”; the opposite of fortissimo.
Word History and Origins
Origin of pianissimo1
Word History and Origins
Origin of pianissimo1
Example Sentences
I told them, ‘Is there a way we can find space for rubato, pianissimo, glissando — all of that — so we can really play in the music?’
Then in that first sort of chorus, where it’s quieter, more pianissimo, “I’m defying gravity. I think it’s time to defy gravity,” she’s not quite sure.
And Lim’s soft playing is particularly sensitive, as in the pleading quality he brings to a tiny pianissimo quintuplet in Op.
In “Senta’s Ballad,” she catapulted into high-lying phrases with strength and point and drew her voice into a slender thread for beautifully formed pianissimo high notes.
Schiff, as in his touch at a keyboard, relished the extremes of Schubert’s “Unfinished” Symphony — the opening truly pianissimo, the forzando notes truly explosive.
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