Gloria in D Major, RV 589 (lyrics) | Antonio Vivaldi

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Original video: https://youtu.be/4GwdSF32PaQ?si=wE_jVtPZDfHG7TX1

I: Gloria - 00:00
II: Et in terra pax hominibus - 2:20
III: Laudamus te - 7:26
IV: Gratias agimus tibi - 9:52
V: Propter magnam gloriam tuam (Fugue) - 10:25
VI: Domine deus, rex caelestis - 11:27
VII: Domine fili unigenite, jesu christe - 15:45
VIII: Domine deus, agnus dei, filius patris - 17:53
IX: Qui tollis peccata mundi - 22:50
X: Qui sedes ad dexteram patris, miserere nobis - 23:53
XI: Quoniam tu solus sanctus - 26:21
XII: Cum sancto spiritu (Fugue) - 27:06

Antonio Vivaldi’s Gloria in D Major, RV 589, is a radiant setting of the Latin hymn Gloria in excelsis Deo that stands among the composer’s most popular sacred works. The piece is organized as a sequence of twelve distinct movements that alternate between full choral declarations and intimate solo arias, producing a compact dramatic arc that lasts roughly half an hour in performance. The scoring calls for a four-part choir, three female soloists, and an orchestra that in typical modern performances includes strings, oboes, trumpets, timpani, and continuo, producing a brilliantly colorful sound world well suited to the D major key and the text’s exultant character.
Antonio Vivaldi was born in Venice on March 4, 1678 and died in Vienna on July 28, 1741. Ordained as a priest and nicknamed il Prete Rosso because of his red hair, Vivaldi spent much of his career in Venetian musical institutions, most famously as a teacher and composer at the Ospedale della Pietà, a foundling home and conservatory where talented girls received exceptional musical training. Vivaldi’s prodigious output included more than 500 concertos, numerous operas, and important vocal and sacred works; his compositional style combined energetic rhythmic drive, clear formal design, and an emphasis on vocal and instrumental virtuosity that influenced later generations of composers.
RV 589 was probably composed in the second decade of the eighteenth century, around 1715, during Vivaldi’s long association with the Pietà or in the immediate years following that appointment. Scholars recognize at least three Gloria settings by Vivaldi, of which RV 588 and RV 589 survive; RV 589 is the better-known and more widely performed of the two surviving settings. The work likely exploited the exceptionally gifted young musicians at the Pietà, and all of the solo vocal parts in RV 589 are written for female voices, reflecting the institution’s use of women performers for both solo and choral lines.
The work’s twelve movements provide a kaleidoscope of moods that match the varied sentiments of the Gloria text. It opens with a jubilant chorus that exploits bright trumpet and oboe timbres and crisp string writing, followed by a contrastingly contemplative “Et in terra pax” set in a darker key and slower tempo; solo arias alternate with choral numbers to create dramatic contrast and textural variety. Vivaldi’s writing ranges from homophonic, declamatory choruses to operatic arias that demand virtuosity from the soloists, and the concluding “Cum Sancto Spiritu” brings the work to a triumphant double-fugal close that synthesizes the piece’s contrapuntal and rhetorical thrusts.
The Gloria text is a central hymn of the Roman Catholic Mass and a confessed statement of praise that follows the Kyrie in the ordinary of the liturgy. Vivaldi’s setting treats the text not as mere ritual recitation but as a dramatic sequence of devotional states: celestial exultation, petitionary humility, doxological affirmation, and final rejoicing. The alternating solo and choral formats echo liturgical practices while also reflecting the Baroque tendency to dramatize sacred texts through operatic rhetoric and affective contrast. The work functions equally well as liturgical music and as concert repertoire, a flexibility rooted in Baroque practice where sacred compositions often circulated in both settings.
RV 589 fell into obscurity after Vivaldi’s death and was rediscovered only centuries later; modern editions and performances in the twentieth century restored it to the central canon of Baroque sacred music. Since its rediscovery the Gloria has appeared on numerous commercial recordings and in many concert programs and film soundtracks, securing its reputation as Vivaldi’s most famous sacred composition. Music historians note RV 589’s balance of operatic solo writing and robust choral writing as a defining reason for its enduring popularity and frequent programming in both liturgical and secular concert contexts.