"Quando me'n vo
'", also known as "Musetta's Waltz", is a soprano aria, a waltz in act two of Puccini's 1896 opera La bohème. It is sung by Musetta, in the presence of her bohemian friends, hoping to reclaim the attention of her occasional boyfriend Marcello.[1]This scene takes place at the . Shortly after Mimì, Rodolfo, and their friends have taken seats for a drink, Marcello's former girlfriend, Musetta, shows up with her current patron, the elderly Alcindoro. They quarrel for a bit, then the episode begins as Musetta initiates her move on Marcello. She grabs the spotlight, musically speaking, for a short self-promoting aria (Quando me'n vo'). It is a song directed at the people in the café as much as at the audience in the theater.[2]
Ed assaporo allor la bramosiasottil, che da gli occhi traspirae dai palesi vezzi intender saalle occulte beltà.Così l'effluvio del desìo tutta m'aggira,felice mi fa!
E tu che sai, che memori e ti struggida me tanto rifuggi?So ben:Le angoscie tue non le vuoi dir,ma ti senti morir!
And then I taste the slight yearningwhich transpires from their eyesand which is able to perceive from manifest charmsto most hidden beauties.So the scent of desire is all around me,it makes me happy!
And you, while knowing, reminding and longing,you shrink from me?I know it very well:you don't want to express your anguish,but you feel as if you're dying!
Popular renditions of the melody were produced during the 1950s, including an American Top 40 hit by Sammy Kaye ("You") and a version by Della Reese ("Don't You Know?"), which reached number two on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100.[3]
In addition, an arrangement of the song by pianist Dick Hyman and saxophonist Moe Koffman was used in the soundtrack to film Moonstruck.
In the Broadway musical Rent, which is inspired by La Bohème, the first verse of the song "Take Me or Leave Me" has lyrics based on those of "Quando me'n vo'".[4] [5]