composer

John Mallia was born in Stamford, CT in 1968. He spent his childhood there, as well as in Syracuse, NY. Since 1990, excluding temporary residencies in Bourges, France and Denton, TX, he has lived and worked in Boston, MA. He is currently on the Composition Faculty at the New England Conservatory of Music where he also directs the Electronic Music Studio.

John Mallia was born in Stamford, CT in 1968. He spent his childhood there, as well as in Syracuse, NY. Since 1990, excluding temporary residencies in Bourges, France and Denton, TX, he has lived and worked in Boston, MA. He is currently on the Composition Faculty at the New England Conservatory of Music where he also directs the Electronic Music Studio.

He has written for diverse instrumental, vocal, and electronic forces. Much of his recent work is electro-acoustic and has been performed internationally by organizations and artists such as L.A. Freewaves (California), Gaudeamus (The Netherlands), International Computer Music Association, Society for Electro-Acoustic Music in the United States, the Firebird Ensemble (Boston), flutist Sarah Brady, Zeppelin Festival of Sound Art (Barcelona, Spain), Festival Synthese (Bourges, France), Interensemble's Computer Arts Festival (Padova, Italy), Spark Festival (Minnesota), Society for New Music (New York), CyberArts, and Medi@terra's Travelling Mikromuseum (Greece, Bulgaria, Germany, Yugoslavia, Slovenia).

He has collaborated with visual artists and poets on several multimedia installations, and these works have been exhibited at the EyeDrum Art and Music Gallery in Atlanta, the Merrill Ellis Intermedia Theater at the University of North Texas' Center for Experimental Music and Intermedia (CEMI), the Boston Center for the Arts' Mill's Gallery, the Fuller Museum, the Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCIARC), Clark University, the environment "Transcriptions" was included in the 2006 International Society of Electronic Arts Zero0ne Festival in San Jose, CA where over 3,000 visitors interacted with the work.

In addition to his teaching at NEC, Mallia was recently a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Center for Experimental Music and Intermedia (CEMI) at the University of North Texas and has taught electro-acoustic music and sound art at Franklin Pierce College, Northeastern University, the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, College of the Holy Cross, Clark University, and Brandeis University.

Performances

Moonshine Room at Club Café | February 2, 2010
Moonshine Room at Club Café | May 19, 2009