It is not just rockers who are objecting to the use of their songs by Donald J. Trump, the Republican presidential nominee. Now the family of the tenor Luciano Pavarotti, who died in 2007, is protesting the Trump campaign’s use of his recording of Puccini’s aria “Nessun Dorma.”

Pavarotti’s widow, Nicoletta Mantovani Pavarotti, and three daughters issued a statement this week calling on the campaign to stop using his music, saying that “the values of brotherhood and solidarity which Luciano Pavarotti expressed throughout the course of his artistic career are entirely incompatible with the worldview offered by the candidate Donald Trump.”

The Trump campaign has been using the rousing aria at its rallies. It is from the opera “Turandot” and became a popular phenomenon and a soccer anthem after it was sung at the first “Three Tenors” concert in Rome in conjunction with the 1990 World Cup. The aria ends with a soaring cry of “vincerò,” or “I will win.”

While Mr. Trump has called for a temporary ban on immigration to the United States by Muslims and proposed building a wall along the Mexican border and deporting the 11 million immigrants living illegally in the United States, Mr. Pavarotti worked during his career to help refugees and support human rights. He served as a United Nations Messenger of Peace, and when he died in 2007, the program said that he had raised significant amounts of money to help it “protect human rights and refugees around the world.”