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aria

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aria

Melodic solo song of reflective character, often with a contrasting middle section. It is used to express a moment of importance in the action of an opera or oratorio. Already to be found in Jacopo Peri's Euridice (1600) and Claudio Monteverdi's Orfeo (1607), it reached its more elaborate form in the work of Alessandro Scarlatti and George Frideric Handel, becoming a set piece for virtuoso opera singers. An example is Handel's ‘Where'er you walk’ from the secular oratorio Semele (1744) to words by William Congreve. In instrumental music, an aria may be the title of a songlike piece, or a theme suitable for variations.

By the early 18th century an aria was a song in three sections, of which the third repeated the first, while the second introduced variety of subject matter, key, and mood. This is known more exactly as the ‘da capo aria’.

After Handel's death (1759) and Mozart's youth (1760s) less rigid forms developed, sometimes based on sonata form (Mozart), and later shaped by the dramatic action of an opera (Beethoven,Weber) or oratorio (Mendelssohn).

Aria

One of the eastern provinces of the ancient Persian Empire, forming a part of Ariana. It was bounded north by Margiana and Bactriana, east by the Paropamisadae, south by Carmania, and west by Parthia. It was the site of the modern Seistan and the southern part of Khorasan.



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She was growing interested in her occupation of picking out the aria, when there was a second rap at the door.
Zarathustra born on lake Urmi; left his home in his thirtieth year, went into the province of Aria, and, during ten years of solitude in the mountains, composed the Zend-Avesta.
 
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