Andante- a steady walking pace, to be precise. Adagietto means a little faster than adagio. Larghetto is slow, but not as slow as Largo. note: mezzo piano means moderately soft
Tempo is the speed of the rhythm of a song.
Tempo means the fastness or slowness of the music.
it means the speed fast or slow ...
the speed of the beat
allegretto
Andante is a musical term used to mean "at a moderately slow pace", usually approximated to "walking pace".
walking tempo
moderato e grazioso
A moderately slow tempo - "andante" is translated as "at a walking pace." If you think of tempos as being "slow," "moderate" or "fast," andante is on the cusp between slow and moderate. If you're using a metronome (or can access one online in order to here the tempo), set it between 73 and 77 BPM (beats per minute).
Labradford
Allegretto grazioso means fairly fast and gracefully.
Andante is a musical term used to mean "at a moderately slow pace", usually approximated to "walking pace".
Allegretto is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "moderately fast tempo." It may be measured at 112 to 124 beats per minute. The pronunciation will be "AL-ley-GRET-to" in Italian.
A moderately slow tempo
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.
walking tempo
moderato e grazioso
Ritardando is a musical term meaning to gradually slow down in tempo.
A moderately slow tempo - "andante" is translated as "at a walking pace." If you think of tempos as being "slow," "moderate" or "fast," andante is on the cusp between slow and moderate. If you're using a metronome (or can access one online in order to here the tempo), set it between 73 and 77 BPM (beats per minute).
Moderato is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "a moderate tempo." The masculine singular word in question serves as an adjective which also may be translated in non-musical contexts as "balanced," "measured," and "middle-of-the-road." Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "MO-dey-RA-to" in Italian.
Tempo.
Nomi di tempo musicale is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "music tempo names." The prepositional phrase translates literally as "names of musical tempo" in Italian. The pronunciation will be "NO-mee dee TEM-po MOO-zee-KA-ley" in Italian.