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Continuando

Continuando is a musical directive of Italian origin meaning “continuing” or “to go on.” In musical scores, it indicates that a performer should keep the preceding action or texture going, typically sustaining the current accompaniment or harmonic support without interruption. The term is primarily associated with the practice of basso continuo, where it signals the continuo players to maintain the ongoing bass line and harmonic realization after a transition or pause.

In performance, continuando can appear after a rest, a fermata, or a change in tempo or texture,

Relationship to continuo practice is central: continuando reflects the broader idea of a continuous harmonic foundation

Modern usage and editions vary. Some contemporary editors retain “continuando” to preserve historical semantics, while others

urging
musicians
to
preserve
the
continuity
of
sound
and
gesture.
It
may
apply
to
the
continuo
group
as
a
whole
or
to
a
specific
part
within
an
ensemble,
depending
on
the
source
and
the
desired
texture.
that
underpins
Baroque
music.
It
complements
other
Italian
directives
that
guide
texture,
rhythm,
and
phrasing
in
early
music
scores,
and
is
often
encountered
in
keyboard,
lute,
or
other
continuo
realizations.
translate
or
simplify
the
instruction
to
“continue”
or
to
explicitly
indicate
the
continued
participation
of
the
continuo.
As
a
historical
term,
it
provides
insight
into
performance
practice
of
Baroque
and
early
Classical
repertoire.