Monacchi is the creator and builder of the "Sonosphere", a technological amphitheater for deep listening ecosystems and music placed inside Palazzo Mosca, home of the Pesaro Civic Museums, where you can attend video and audio screenings of "Fragments of Extinction" by David Monacchi, and "Raphael in Sonosphere" by Simone Sorini and David Monacchi.
Fragments of Extinction
Over the past 25 years (since 1990), composer David Monacchi has conducted field recordings throughout Europe, Africa, Southeast Asia, North and South America.[2] During a 2002 pilot project in the BrazilianAmazon conducted in collaboration with Greenpeace, Monacchi collected his first high-definition ‘sound portraits’ of an intact tropical ecosystem.[2] With these unique recordings, he composed the eco-acoustic opera Fragments of a Sonic World in Extinction, which toured theatres and contemporary music venues across Europe and the United States.[5]
Fragments of Extinction is currently being developed with the multiple aims of: collecting three-dimensional 24-hour cycles of acoustic biodiversity from the most important rainforest hotspots at the equator; analyzing and studying the field data from an ecological and aesthetic point of view;[1] and disseminating the results in research, educational and art contexts by means of the "Eco-acousticTheatre," a flexible, periphonic theatre space, designed, engineered, and patented by Monacchi.[5]
Honors include the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs ‘Erato Farnesina’ fellowship for the World Soundscape Project at SFU (Canada, 1998),[12] and international prizes at the Russolo-Pratella Competition (Italy, 1996), the Locarno Film Festival (Switzerland, 1996), and the Multiple Sound Festival (Netherlands, 1993).[13] His music was also twice recognized at the Bourges International Grand Prix of Electroacoustic Music (France, 2007 and 2008), and at the Premio Giovannini for Innovation (Italy, 2013).[4][7][14]
Monacchi is based in Italy, travels for field research, and gives concerts and lectures mostly in Europe and North America.[5]
Selected discography
Eco-Acoustic Compositions (2008). EMF Media (New York, NY)
Prima Amazonia (2007). Wild Sanctuary (San Francisco, CA)
After the Untuned Sky (2007), with Corrado Fantoni. Coclearia (Milan, Italy)
Paesaggi di Libero Ascolto: Retrospettiva di composizioni Elettroacustiche 1990 – 1995 (2005). Ants Records (Rome, Italy)
Canto Sospeso (2005), with Ilaria Severo. Domani Musica (Rome, Italy)
Paesaggi Sonori / Soundscapes (2005). Università degli studi di Macerata (Macerata, Italy)
SPACE - the Soundscape Projection Ambisonic Control Engine, an experimental facility designed by David Monacchi and Eugenio Giordani, within the electronic laboratories for experimental music (LEMS) at the Conservatory G. Rossini
Notes from Africa, an article by the composer about his 2008 work conducting field recordings in the Dzanga Sangha Dense Forest Reserve in the southern Central African Republic (photographically illustrated, with audio samples)
Selected excerpts from hundreds of hours of field recordings conducted by Monacchi in the primary equatorial rainforests of the Amazon, Africa, and Borneo
^ abcdeMonacchi, David (2013). Fragments of Extinction: An Eco-Acoustic Project on Primary Rainforest Biodiversity (in English and Italian). Urbino (PU) - Italy: Edizioni ME. ISBN978-88-904688-8-9.
^Monacchi, David. "Notes from Africa". Ear to the Earth. Retrieved 31 August 2015.
^"Elenco docenti" (in Italian). Pesaro, Italy: Conservatorio Statale di Musica "G. Rossini" - Pesaro. Archived from the original on 12 September 2015. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
^"The World Soundscape Project". The World Soundscape Project (WSP) at Simon Fraser University. Retrieved 17 September 2015.