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26 Οκτ 2018 · I would be confused if I saw “sp” in a score, and I would not interpret that marking as “subito piano.” So be careful! Absolutely. I have probably read 100,000 pieces of music in my life and I have never, ever seen a dynamic marking “sp”. The universal markings for an immediate change in dynamic are. subito p sub p (sub) p
27 Νοε 2021 · As for working, all pianos are treated as "subito" in that they take effect immediately unless they are at the end of a hairpin or follow a dim. (or cresc.).
The difference in practice between fp and sfzp is how fast you get to piano (besides the articulation, which you got right) - a fp gets to piano slightly slower than sfzp (in my experience). Also, the subito piano isn’t a decay - it’s not a decrescendo - it’s subito (suddenly) soft (piano).
25 Νοε 2022 · In music, subito piano is an instruction meaning “sudden soft”. It is an Italian musical term that appears frequently in scores from the Baroque period onwards. A subito piano marking instructs the musician to play the following note or notes more quietly than the preceding ones.
28 Σεπ 2015 · Familiar, for instance, is Johannes Brahms’s penchant for the indication poco forte, which he also abbreviated as pf. This is on no account to be read as “piano – (subito) forte”, which one could erroneously conclude in analogy to the marking fp, meaning “forte – (subito) piano”.
Sometimes a conductor will do it if you just see a sudden piano marking, some won't. Note that sf and sfz both mean sforzando. sf does not mean subito forte. Always write sub f or 'sub p' instead. Reference: Elaine Gould's Behind Bars book.
Subito can be used in conjunction with other dynamic markings, such as 'subito piano' (suddenly soft) or 'subito forte' (suddenly loud), to instruct musicians on how to change their playing intensity.