Allegretto grazioso means fairly fast and gracefully.
In Music: It is a tempo that is slightly slower than Allegro but faster than Andante.
Moderately quick and playful. Allegretto = moderately quick. Scherzando = Playfully
Depends on the context you mean it in...In music it is the a type of tempo meaning quick, lively or, literally, "cheerful"
Molto = very
Ritmico = rhythmic(Source: 8notes.com)
a moderately quick tempo.
A smooth rythmn
In music, it means to accelerate the tempo much. Opposite of molto ritard.
Well, when I think of when I see molto. in my music, it's normally like molto rit. or molto dec. It means a big decrescendo, or a big ritard.I'd say the opposite of this could be poco a poco which means little by little. Ex: rit. poco a poco or dec. poco a poco.
Ritardando is a musical term meaning to gradually slow down in tempo.
A: Largo
'Molto allegro' is one possible answer. There are others.
Musical notation usually (but not always) uses Italian. quite = molto (meaning very) quiet = tranquillo (meaning peaceful), tacet (meaning silent)
The musical term that means to slow tempo is ritardando. If you'd like to slow the tempo very quickly you'd call it a molto ritardando.
Rhythmic
"Molto rall" is a musical term that instructs the performer to slow down significantly. "Molto" means "very" in Italian, while "rall" is short for "rallentando," which means to gradually decrease the tempo.
Molto is an Italian word meaning "very". On a musical score, it might be put before another musical term like subito, making molto subito, which would mean "very slow".
Mercedes Molto's birth name is Mercedes Molto Contreras.
Molto rumoroso, molto forte, ad alta voce (referred to music, voice), molto sgargiante, molto vistoso (referred to clothes and colours),
Mercedes Molto is 167 cm.
molto pesante is used to indicate you must play very heavilydirect translation is very (molto) heavy (pesante)
Very singable, or songlike. It is an Italian musical term found either at the beginning of a piece or later, indicating a specific phrase, telling you how a piece should be performed.
Molto in Italian means "very" in English.
Molto espressivo is Italian for very expressive.