Definition. Religiously — playing with devotional, sacred, spiritually elevated character.
Religioso is Italian for ‘religiously’. As a performance direction it indicates that the music should be played with a devotional, sacred, spiritually elevated character. The marking implies seriousness, contemplation, and a certain austerity — the music should feel as if it were sacred ritual, not entertainment.
The character is elevated and serious. Religioso passages often feature slow tempos, sustained tone, restrained dynamics, and chordal textures suggestive of hymn or chant. Composers reach for the marking when they want the music to suggest prayer, contemplation, or sacred atmosphere — even if the work itself is secular.
The direction is found throughout Romantic and late-Romantic music. Liszt’s religious works (the Christus oratorio, the Via Crucis) use it extensively; Bruckner’s symphonic adagios carry the spirit of religioso even where the marking itself is absent.
Italian, ‘religious’, from Latin religiosus, from religio (‘religion, conscientiousness’).
Play as if in a cathedral. Slow, sustained, full of inner space. Avoid the dramatic gestures of secular music; the character is meditative and contained.
Religiously — playing with devotional, sacred, spiritually elevated character.
Italian, ‘religious’, from Latin religiosus, from religio (‘religion, conscientiousness’).
Play as if in a cathedral. Slow, sustained, full of inner space. Avoid the dramatic gestures of secular music; the character is meditative and contained.
Related terms include: Solenne, Sostenuto, Tranquillo, Patetico.
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