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About Frank Macchia:
Born and raised in San Francisco, California, Frank started on the clarinet at the age of ten years old. Soon afterward he began studies on bassoon, saxophone and flute. By the age of fourteen he began studying composition, writing jazz and classical pieces for his high school band and orchestra and for jazz ensembles that rehearsed at the local union hall, including trumpeter Mike Vaxs Big Band.
In 1975-76 Frank wrote jazz/classical hybrid works that were performed by the San Francisco Symphony and local professional jazz musicians at the Summer Music Workshop Programs, and he composed and conducted an orchestral overture for his high school graduation ceremony.
In 1976 Frank attended Berklee College of Music, studying woodwinds with Joseph Viola, Joe Allard, Steve Grossman and composition/arranging with Herb Pomeroy, Phil Wilson, Greg Hopkins, Tony Texiera, and Ken Pullig. From 1976-80 he performed and composed for the top student ensembles as well as performing with his own ensembles. He also won Down Beat magazines DB award for original big band composition in 1979.
After graduating with a degree in traditional composition, Frank taught at Berklee at the tender age of 20, as well as performed throughout the New England area with his 8-piece fusion group, Booga-Booga. In 1981 Frank moved back to the San Francisco area where he continued working as a musician and composer/arranger over the next ten years, performing concerts with such artists as Ella Fitzgerald, Rita Moreno, Tony Bennett, Jack Jones, Clare Fischer, Chuck Mangione, and the Temptations, to name a few.
In 1991 Frank toured Germany performing in productions of West Side Story and 42nd Street, and when that tour was over, he found himself in Los Angeles, where he has remained ever since. Since 1992 he has worked as a composer/orchestrator on many films and television projects, including Superman Returns. From 1997-2001 he created a series of five original audio horror stories CDs with full underscore entitled Little Evil Things, which received critical acclaim. In 2003 he completed the jazz/world CD The Galapagos Suite, a six movement suite based on the animals of the Galapagos Islands, where he and his wife Tracy visited. His CD, Animals was released in Fall 2004, and the follow-up Mo Animals in Winter 2006, featuring Frank on multi-woodwinds and a roster of some of Los Angeles best musicians.
Review of The Galapagos Suite:
The strange and remote Galapagos Islands inspired Charles Darwin to do his best work and, apparently have done the same for jazz composure and multi-instrumentalist Frank Macchia. The Galapagos Suite is a six-track concept album derived from a sailing excursion Macchia undertook in 2001. Recorded with a team of session veterans, each track is named after a critter unique to the archipelago. Thus, marine iguanas, penguins, flamingos and, of course, giant tortoises, are among the luminaries described with the same anthropomorphic whimsy used by classical composers like Prokofiev and Satie, except in a contemporary jazz format. A composer for film and television, Macchia wisely avoids the trap of depicting the animals as exotic or ungainly (as sometimes happens in nature documentaries) and grants each with a lyrical grace. The result is a highly-listenable postcard, with winds, brass, keyboards and guitar riffing in a polished session comparable to Pat Metheny during his Latinesque period. This is not a new-age ramble, nor does it require a degree in biology although the liner notes describing the various fauna do help. This is a travelogue in the truest sense, tinged with gratitude for what was obviously an exhilarating voyage.
Mark Keating, Global Rhythm Magazine
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