Pesante is Italian for heavy.
Quasi is an Italian musical term meaning: As if, resembling
Lively, fast.
The Italian musical term morendo indicates a decrease in volume or tempo, but often affects both; to make the sound slowly die away.
"Heavy joy" is a literal English equivalent of the Italian phrase allegro pesante. The masculine singular adjective and feminine/masculine singular adjective/present participle most famously references a style of emphasizing and extending the loud joy of a musical passage by slowing the movement to 60 to 100 beats per minute. The pronunciation will be "al-LEY-gro pey-SAN-tey" in Italian.
piu means "more" ( Compare the Latin word plus) piu forte means "more loud" , that is "louder".
'''Pesante''' is a musical term, meaning "heavy and ponderous." It is often used in [[Latin]] languages, such as [[Spanish language|Spanish]] or [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]], with the word ''pesado'' meaning ''heavy'' in both of these languages. The French equivalent is ''lourd''. In performance, "pesante" is often interpreted as a tempo term. It usually is applied as an immediate pulling back of a previous tempo. While this is not the textbook application of this term, it has gained widespread use among performing musicians. Pesante tempo is usually in between 60 and 100 as it is supposed to create a heavy 'dragging feeling.
Wil Pesante's birth name is Wilfredo Pesante III.
Nic Pesante is 5' 10".
longated
Quasi is an Italian musical term meaning: As if, resembling
End.
AS fast as possible
Lively, fast.
molto pesante is used to indicate you must play very heavilydirect translation is very (molto) heavy (pesante)
Pesante in Italian means "heavy" in English.
In the Spanish style
It's Italian for quick.