Aria Aria

Aria - Definition and Overview

Related Words: Canto, Cantus, Coloratura, Hymn, Lay, Lied, Line, Measure, Melody, Note, Recitative
This article is about aria, a type of music. For the Australian Record Industry Association, see that article.

An aria (Italian for air; plural: arie or arias in common usage) in music was originally any expressive melody, usually, but not always, performed by a singer. It is now used almost exclusively to describe a self contained piece for one voice usually with orchestral accompaniment. Perhaps the most common context for arias is opera; there are also many arias that form movements of oratorios and cantatas. Composers also wrote "concert arias", not part of any larger work, such as "Ah Perfido" by Beethoven and a number of concert arias by Mozart.

In the 17th century, the aria was written in ternary form (ABA); these arias were known as da capo arias. The aria later "invaded" the opera repertoire with its many sub-species (Aria cantabile, Aria agitata, Aria di bravura, and so on). By the mid-19th century, many operas became a sequence of arias, reducing the space left for recitative, while other operas (for instance those by Wagner) were entirely through-composed, with no section being readily identifiable as a self-contained aria.

Guitars

Link

Aria Guitars (http://www.ariausa.com)

Example Usage of Aria

RobinTaylorRoth: @RetiredTeacherD "Gianni Schicchi" has one glorious Aria, that everyone knows: "O mio babbino caro." Tell Nancy she should learn that one!
180silvia: 今日は一日中Ariaの音楽集?が静かに流れてます~夕方の今の時間帯に合いますね~落ち着くというか(^^)
ItsD_DizzleYall: @AriaParadiso hi, Aria. How r u?
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