Definition. Pompously — playing with grand, stately, ceremonial character.
Pomposo is Italian for ‘pompous’. As a performance direction it indicates that the music should be played with grand, stately, ceremonial character — full of pomp, splendor, and dignified weight. Unlike English ‘pompous’ (which has negative connotations), the Italian musical sense is purely positive: ceremonial grandeur, not self-importance.
The character is processional and weighty. Pomposo passages typically feature steady or slow tempos, full dynamics, weighted articulation, and tone of particular fullness. The marking implies a sense of ceremony — coronations, processions, grand entrances.
Elgar’s ‘Pomp and Circumstance’ marches are essentially extended studies in pomposo character. Walton’s ceremonial works (the Coronation March Crown Imperial, the Henry V film score) carry the spirit. The mark is also common in Baroque ceremonial music — Handel and Purcell write pomposo themes for royal occasions.
Italian, ‘pompous, ceremonial’, from Latin pompa (‘procession, parade’).
Play with full ceremonial weight. Steady tempo, full dynamics, weighted touch. The character is grand — but always in service of the music, never self-aggrandizing.
Pompously — playing with grand, stately, ceremonial character.
Italian, ‘pompous, ceremonial’, from Latin pompa (‘procession, parade’).
Play with full ceremonial weight. Steady tempo, full dynamics, weighted touch. The character is grand — but always in service of the music, never self-aggrandizing.
Related terms include: Maestoso, Pesante, Grandioso, Nobile.
Practice with Songtive's free tools
Hear this term applied — explore chord charts, fingerings and the music engine.
Piano chordsGuitar chordsVirtual piano