
SonarPro presents new free activities especially designed for accreditation holders' time to be as interesting and useful as possible, as well as to promote new ways of communication and doing business.
Reserve your place before the 15th of june.
SonarPro is organising Meet The Expert, meetings with experts from various business sectors in the cultural industries, so that SonarPro accreditation holders can ask questions, ask for advice or simply chat with them in 10-minute sessions. A total of 12 professionals will be present, representing sectors including management, commercial brands, communication, social networks and digital marketing.
SonarPro presents the Speed Networking service, another way for professionals to make contacts. These meetings are between 24 people from different sectors and activities, in 5-minute rotations, so that, they can all talk to each other and exchange experiences and information.
For the second year running, SonarPro presents the Digital Music 2.0/10 seminars, a series of panels in collaboration with the Business Development Service of the Catalan Institute of the Cultural Industries (ICIC).
The DM2.0/10 seminars will feature national and international speakers with extensive experience in the world of music in the 2.0 environment, which they will discuss using case studies.
Check the list of lectures and speakers here.


SonarPro and the Barcelona school of design Elisava are creating “Common Project”, a new creative experience in which SonarPro accreditation holders can participate with students at the Catalan centre.
The project takes as its starting point the work "4:33" by John Cage, the musical piece without any instruments that demonstrates the nonexistence of silence. In this case, the Elisava school will be performing a visual interpretation of the work, featuring students on the Advanced Degree course in Design and all SonarPro accreditation holders wishing to share the experience of jointly creating works combining creations in 2D, 3D and real images with sounds produced by the body.
This will all lead to a final work lasting 6,825 frames, equivalent to the 4 minutes and 33 seconds of Cage's work.



