Jump to content

Fiorella Terenzi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Fterenzi (talk | contribs) at 14:31, 24 August 2010. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Dr. Fiorella Terenzi is an Italian astrophysicist, author and musician who is best known for taking recordings of radio waves from galaxies and turning them into music. She received her doctorate from the University of Milan but is currently based in the United States.

Described by Time Magazine as "a cross between Carl Sagan and Madonna", astrophysicist, author and recording artist Dr. Fiorella Terenzi has studied opera and composition at Conservatory G. Verdi, and taught mathematics and physics at Liceo Scientifico, Milan. In research at the Computer Audio Research Laboratory, University of California, San Diego, she developed techniques to convert radio waves from galaxies into sound - released by Island Records on her acclaimed CD "Music from the Galaxies".

Dr. Terenzi's global TV and press appearances include features on CNN, The Dennis Miller Show, Sci Fi Channel, NPR Talk of the Nation, Weekend Edition and Science Friday, Newsweek on Air, The Wall Street Journal, People, Time, Glamour, Associated Press, Details, Los Angeles Reader, Daily News and hundreds of feature stories internationally including the covers of Mondo 2000, New Frontier, Atari Explorer, Extropy, Composer USA, CDROM Today (U.K.) and Eye Magazine (Canada).

In lectures at UCSD, Stanford, MIT, the Smithsonian Institution, the American Museum of Natural History (NY), and in performances, live and on TV, in the US, Europe, and Japan, Dr. Terenzi has combined science and art to awaken people to the wonders of the universe. She has moderated hundreds of panels on science, technology, education and public outreach from Digital Hollywood to MacWorld and chaired the "Techno 2000" symposium at Pepperdine University. Dr. Terenzi's speaking engagements embrace such topics as "Globalization of Education", "Women in Space", "The Business of Space", "Values for a New Civilization", "Art, Intelligence & Artificial Intelligence" and the most popular "Heavenly Knowledge" and "Invisible Universe".

During her term as Director of New Media at the Miami Museum of Science and Space Transit Planetarium, Dr. Terenzi arranged and hosted events including "National Astronomy Day", produced Planetarium Shows including "Stars of the Seasons / Stars of the Sea", developed content for grants including a NASA grant to deliver earth/space science on-line for high schools, and spoke at events from the NSF funded "Girls in Science" program, to the Florida Planetarium Directors Association, to the international State of the World Forum in New York.

Dr. Terenzi is best known for her CD-ROM Invisible Universe, which blends astronomy and music into an entertaining and enlightening voyage through the stars. It won the SIGCAT Award for "Most Creative Application of Multimedia in Higher and Adult Education". music and poetry with astronomy lessons, and for a sexually charged 1998 book about science titled Heavenly Knowledge. She also released albums of her music. She is known as an Apple Computer AppleMaster, and has collaborated with the likes of Thomas Dolby, Timothy Leary, Herbie Hancock, and Ornette Coleman. She is currently teaching astronomy at Brevard Community College in Cocoa, FL.

Her Avon/HarperCollins book, "Heavenly Knowledge", explores astronomy as a metaphor for human relationships and humanity's place in the Universe. The book, covered on ABC Radio, NPR Talk of The Nation, BBC Radio, and The Sci-Fi Channel, has been translated into Italian ("Musica Dalle Stelle" released by Sperling-Kupfer and bundled with her music CD "Galactically Yours"), German ("Der Kosmos ist weiblich" released by Goldmann/Bertelsmann), Latvian and other languages.

Discography

Her songs are featured on the Billboard Top 20 Music Video "The Gate to the Mind's Eye" with Thomas Dolby, and on "Beyond Life", Mercury Records' dance/trance CD and video tribute to Dr. Timothy Leary. Her vocals are featured on Trance Planet 5 (Triloka), "From Here to Tranquillity" (Silent Records), and John Serrie's "Ixlandia" (Miramar). Samples of her track "Sidereal Breath" appear on Massive Attack's "Karmacoma". She has performed and recorded with artists from Herbie Hancock to Ornette Coleman.

Dr. Terenzi wrote the foreword for Paula Berinstein's recent book "Making Space Happen: Private Space Efforts and the People Behind Them" (Plexus Books) and has been featured in full chapter in Laura Woodmansee's "Women of Space: Cool Careers on the Final Frontier" (Apogee Books) and the music and techonolgy book "The Art of Digital Music" by Kelli Richards and David Battino. She also provided a technical review of the educational text book "The Physics of Every Day Phenomena" by Thomas Griffith (McGraw-Hill). She has taught astronomy and physics at Glendale College, Pierce College (Los Angeles), Pace University (New York), Borough of Manhattan Community College and Bronx Community College (City University of NY, New York) and is a full-time Professor of Astronomy and Physics at Brevard Community College, Cocoa, FL (www.brevardcc.edu).