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fugato
[ foo-gah-toh, fyoo- ]
noun
- a section of a composition that is in fugal style but does not constitute a real fugue.
fugato
/ fjʊˈɡɑːtəʊ /
adverb
- in the manner or style of a fugue
noun
- a movement, section, or piece in this style
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of fugato1
Example Sentences
There’s a fugato in the piece.
We finished the overture’s concluding fugato.
I have now been privy to several of these exuberant protocols; and of their music I have observed a great deal, and hope someday to learn the secrets of these consorts and write an account of the inexplicable tunings, the intricate complexities of rhythm, the simple fugato songs, as headlong catches, the rapt recitativo secco of their narration.
The first, jerkily syncopated variation, for instance, represents the Cambrian explosion 500 million years ago; the aquatic blur of the second stands for the Devonian Age of Fishes; the stormy fugato of the 10th variation announces the arrival of Homo sapiens.
The Fugato section of the challenging third movement was not perfectly coordinated, but it was fireworks enough for the crowd to demand an encore, the jazzy toccata from Friedrich Gulda’s “Play Piano Play.”
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