Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "A capriccio [a kkaˈprittʃo] (Italian: \"following one's fancy\") is a tempo marking indicating a free and capricious approach to the tempo (and possibly the style) of the piece. This marking will usually modify another, such as lento a capriccio, often used in the Hungarian Rhapsodies of Franz Liszt. Perhaps the most famous piece to use the term is Ludwig van Beethoven's Rondò a capriccio (Op. 129), his so-called Rage Over a Lost Penny."@en }
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- A_capriccio abstract "A capriccio [a kkaˈprittʃo] (Italian: \"following one's fancy\") is a tempo marking indicating a free and capricious approach to the tempo (and possibly the style) of the piece. This marking will usually modify another, such as lento a capriccio, often used in the Hungarian Rhapsodies of Franz Liszt. Perhaps the most famous piece to use the term is Ludwig van Beethoven's Rondò a capriccio (Op. 129), his so-called Rage Over a Lost Penny.".
- A_capriccio comment "A capriccio [a kkaˈprittʃo] (Italian: \"following one's fancy\") is a tempo marking indicating a free and capricious approach to the tempo (and possibly the style) of the piece. This marking will usually modify another, such as lento a capriccio, often used in the Hungarian Rhapsodies of Franz Liszt. Perhaps the most famous piece to use the term is Ludwig van Beethoven's Rondò a capriccio (Op. 129), his so-called Rage Over a Lost Penny.".