Rockin'1000
Rockin'1000 is a musical project founded in 2015 by Fabio Zaffagnini in Cesena, Italy, comprising a global community of over 100,000 amateur and professional musicians who collaborate on large-scale rock performances featuring approximately 1,000 instrumentalists and vocalists performing simultaneously.[1] The initiative originated from a crowdfunding effort to stage a mass rendition of Foo Fighters' "Learn to Fly" on July 26, 2015, in a public park in Cesena, aimed at enticing the band to perform locally after they canceled a scheduled European tour date due to Dave Grohl's injury; the resulting video amassed millions of views and prompted the Foo Fighters to headline a concert in the city the following year.[2][1] This success evolved into annual stadium spectacles, beginning with a sold-out two-hour concert in Cesena in 2016 that included a live album release, followed by international events such as performances at Stade de France in Paris and Commerzbank Arena in Frankfurt in 2019, and a debut in South America in São Paulo in 2022.[1] Key achievements include pioneering virtual global gigs, such as a 2020 medley involving over 2,500 remote participants that earned a Guinness World Record for the largest number of video contributions in a music video medley, as well as opening the Eurovision Song Contest in 2022 and releasing the project's first original track, "How We Roll," in 2023.[3][1] Rockin'1000 sustains engagement through weekly online jamming sessions and regional clubs, emphasizing collective musical creation without traditional band hierarchies, and has expanded to U.S. tours, including a scheduled debut at Caesars Superdome in New Orleans in January 2026.[4][5]History
Origins in Cesena (2015)
Rockin'1000 began as a fan-driven project in Cesena, Italy, spearheaded by local resident Fabio Zaffagnini, who aimed to lure the Foo Fighters to perform in the city after the band had not scheduled a show there despite local enthusiasm. In late 2014, Zaffagnini, a marine geologist with no prior experience in event organization, envisioned gathering 1,000 musicians to execute a synchronized cover of the Foo Fighters' 1999 single "Learn to Fly" as a bold, viral invitation directed at frontman Dave Grohl.[6] [7] To realize this, he initiated a crowdfunding effort in May 2014 via platforms like Produzioni dal Basso, ultimately raising approximately €40,000 (nearly $50,000) from over 1,000 backers to cover logistics, equipment, and video production costs.[8] Recruitment for participants occurred primarily through social media and local networks, targeting amateur and semi-professional musicians from Italy and beyond, including vocalists, guitarists, bassists, and drummers willing to bring their own instruments.[9] On July 26, 2015, exactly 1,000 musicians convened at Parco Ippodromo, a public park on the outskirts of Cesena, for rehearsals and the main performance under the summer evening sky.[10] [11] The ensemble, coordinated via colored shirts to denote sections (e.g., red for guitarists, blue for drummers), delivered a unified rendition of "Learn to Fly" lasting about four minutes, featuring a prominent banner message: "Dave Grohl—Learn to Fly in Cesena."[12] [2] This gathering represented the inaugural instance of 1,000 musicians performing simultaneously in a single, non-professional setup, emphasizing communal participation over polished production.[13] The project's logistical foundation relied on volunteer coordination, basic amplification shared among sections, and drone footage for visual capture, all managed by Zaffagnini and a small team of friends without institutional backing.[14] Challenges included synchronizing diverse skill levels and ensuring participation quotas, achieved through open calls that prioritized enthusiasm over expertise.[9] The event's raw, collective energy laid the groundwork for Rockin'1000's identity as a grassroots phenomenon, distinct from traditional concerts by democratizing rock performance on an unprecedented scale.[15]First Major Concert and Foo Fighters Invitation
The Rockin'1000 project originated as a response to the Foo Fighters' cancellation of their scheduled concert in Cesena, Italy, on November 7, 2015, following frontman Dave Grohl's leg fracture sustained during a performance at Glastonbury Festival on June 13, 2015.[12] Local fan Fabio Zaffagnini, a marine geologist with no prior event-organizing experience, conceived the idea of assembling 1,000 musicians to perform the band's song "Learn to Fly" as a viral plea to lure them back.[16] On July 26, 2015, approximately 1,000 participants—including vocalists, guitarists, drummers, and other instrumentalists—gathered at Parco Ippodromo Park, a field on the outskirts of Cesena, for the synchronized performance.[10] The event was coordinated through crowdfunding and open recruitment via social media, with participants rehearsing individually using distributed audio guides before converging for a single take filmed by drones and ground cameras.[12] A large banner reading "Hey Dave, Cesena wants you back!" was displayed, explicitly inviting Grohl and the band to perform in the town.[17] The official video, uploaded to YouTube on July 30, 2015, amassed over 11.5 million views within days, propelling the invitation into global attention.[12] Dave Grohl responded on August 1, 2015, via a Foo Fighters social media video in Italian, acknowledging the performance and pledging, "Ciao Cesena! Verrò a Cesena!" (Hello Cesena! I'll come to Cesena!), confirming the band's intent to honor the request despite ongoing recovery challenges.[8] This culminated in the Foo Fighters' concert in Cesena on November 3, 2015, at Orogel Stadium, where Zaffagnini joined Grohl onstage, validating the event's success in reviving the canceled show.[17] The performance marked Rockin'1000's inaugural large-scale assembly, demonstrating grassroots coordination's potential to influence major artists through collective action rather than traditional promotion.[10]Evolution into Annual Events (2016–2019)
Following the 2015 flash mob performance, Rockin'1000 organized its inaugural full-length concert, titled "That's Live," on July 24, 2016, at Orogel Stadium-Dino Manuzzi in Cesena, featuring exactly 1,000 musicians performing a two-hour set of rock covers.[1][18] The event drew an audience of approximately 14,000 spectators, including Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and Emilia-Romagna Region President Stefano Bonaccini, and was recorded for a live album release later that year.[19][20] This concert established the format for subsequent annual iterations, shifting from a singular tribute to a sustained platform for large-scale collaborative performances, with expanded recruitment drawing musicians from Italy and abroad.[1] In 2017, Rockin'1000 held another "That's Live" concert on July 7 in Cesena, scaling up to 1,200 participants across guitars, bass, drums, vocals, and other instruments, while also launching a three-day rock festival at Summer Camp Val Veny in the Italian Alps, incorporating jam sessions and performances by the core thousand musicians.[21][1] These events solidified the annual cadence, emphasizing community building through rehearsals and themed programming, with the Cesena show maintaining the stadium spectacle tradition amid growing participant applications exceeding 10,000 globally.[1] By 2018, the annual event evolved to a new venue, the Artemio Franchi Stadium in Florence on July 21, attracting over 1,500 musicians and featuring a guest appearance by Courtney Love, who joined for select songs, marking the first high-profile international collaboration.[1][22] This relocation tested logistical scalability, incorporating advanced audio systems and reserved seating for overflow participants, while the group also headlined an EU Council Presidency concert in Austria, signaling broader European outreach.[1][23] The 2019 season represented peak expansion, with "That's Live" concerts in multiple international stadiums, including Stade de France in Paris on June 29 before 50,000 attendees, Commerzbank Arena in Frankfurt on July 7, and a special performance at Milan’s Linate Airport featuring guests like Manuel Agnelli and Subsonica.[1][24][25] These events drew from a global pool of over 100,000 registered musicians, with rehearsals coordinated via video submissions and on-site synchronization, transitioning the initiative from localized annual gatherings to a touring phenomenon while retaining the core ethos of amateur-professional unity.[1]Adaptations During the COVID-19 Pandemic (2020–2021)
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic's restrictions on large gatherings in Italy and globally, Rockin'1000 shifted from its traditional in-person stadium concerts to a virtual format in 2020. The organization launched the Rockin'1000 Global Gig, recruiting musicians worldwide to participate remotely via video submissions synchronized in post-production. This event featured over 2,500 performers playing rock classics, premiering on October 30, 2020, on the main stage screen at Global Village in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, in celebration of the venue's reopening.[26][3] The Global Gig earned a Guinness World Record for the largest virtual band performance, demonstrating the group's adaptability through digital coordination tools and remote recording, which allowed participation from amateur and professional musicians across multiple countries without physical assembly. Earlier attempts at live events, such as a planned appearance at Home Festival in Venice's lagoon area in July 2020, were scaled back or integrated into smaller, localized formats amid Italy's summer easing of lockdowns, but full-scale gatherings remained infeasible due to health protocols limiting crowd sizes and requiring social distancing.[3][27] By 2021, as restrictions began to lift in parts of Europe, Rockin'1000 organized smaller live "party" events to rebuild momentum, including the Rimini Party on August 4, 2021, which emphasized reunion and energy after prolonged separation but avoided the full 1,000-musician scale to comply with ongoing pandemic measures like capacity limits and testing requirements. These adaptations preserved community engagement through hybrid elements, such as pre-recorded segments and app-based rehearsals, while prioritizing participant safety; full stadium productions resumed only in 2022 after nearly three years of disruption.[28][29]Post-Pandemic Growth and Milestones (2022–Present)
Following the virtual and scaled-back adaptations during the COVID-19 pandemic, Rockin'1000 resumed full-scale stadium concerts in 2022, expanding beyond Italy to establish a pattern of international touring that continued through subsequent years.[30] The group's community of amateur and professional musicians grew significantly, reaching nearly 100,000 active members from over 50 countries by 2025, enabling recruitment for events in new regions.[31] In 2022, Rockin'1000 held performances at Stade de France in Saint-Denis, France, on May 14, and Allianz Parque in São Paulo, Brazil, on October 1, marking its debut in South America with a two-hour set of rock classics performed by 1,000 musicians.[32][33] These events drew large crowds and featured collaborations, such as with French artist -M- in Paris, underscoring logistical advancements in coordinating international participants.[34] The expansion accelerated in 2023 with a concert at Estadio Riyadh Air Metropolitano (formerly Cívitas) in Madrid, Spain, on June 3, the group's first in that country.[32][35] Later that year, on July 29, Rockin'1000 organized a charity event at Orogel Stadium Dino Manuzzi in Cesena, Italy, under the banner "Rockin'1000 For Romagna" to support flood-affected areas, performing covers including a historic rendition of Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" by 1,000 musicians.[36][37] In 2024, the group debuted in Portugal with a concert at Estádio Municipal de Leiria on September 14, further broadening its European footprint.[32][38] This was followed by announcements for 2025 marking the project's 10th anniversary, including a week-long celebration in Cesena from July 22 to 27, featuring expanded performances by 1,700 musicians across two stadium shows on July 26 and 27 at Orogel Stadium Dino Manuzzi, alongside over 70 city-wide events expected to attract more than 50,000 attendees.[31][39] The milestone included collaborations such as with Italian band Negramaro and highlighted the project's evolution into a sustained global phenomenon.[40] Looking ahead, Rockin'1000 announced its first North American event for January 31, 2026, at Caesars Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, representing entry into the U.S. market after a decade of primarily European and South American focus.[5] This progression reflects sustained organizational growth, with enhanced recruitment processes supporting larger ensembles and diverse repertoires across continents.[30]Organization and Operations
Founding and Leadership
Rockin'1000 was founded by Fabio Zaffagnini, a marine geologist based in Cesena, Italy, who conceived the project in late 2014 as a response to the Foo Fighters' cancellation of a scheduled concert in the area.[15][19] With no prior experience in event organization, Zaffagnini rallied volunteers, entertainment industry contacts, and crowdfunding to assemble 1,000 musicians for a synchronized performance of the Foo Fighters' "Learn to Fly" on July 26, 2015, in a field outside Cesena, aiming to invite the band via a viral video.[7][1] The effort succeeded when the video amassed over 30 million YouTube views, prompting the Foo Fighters to perform in Cesena on November 3, 2015, transforming the one-off initiative into an ongoing musical organization financed through crowdfunding, sponsorships, and ticket sales.[41][41] Zaffagnini has remained the central figure as CEO, Creative Director, and Founder, overseeing the project's evolution from a local tribute into global stadium events featuring thousands of participants.[1][41] Leadership is supported by a compact core team of 2-10 professionals handling operations, with key roles including General Manager Claudia Spadoni, who manages day-to-day administration; Chief of Strategic Development Michele Telaro; and Chief Marketing Officer Ambrogio Ferrario, responsible for promotion and partnerships.[1] Additional executives encompass CTO Tommaso Speroni for technical infrastructure and Press & PR Manager Mariagrazia Canu for media relations, enabling coordination of amateur and professional musicians worldwide while maintaining the non-profit ethos of collective performance.[1] This structure emphasizes Zaffagnini's vision of scalable, community-driven rock spectacles, with strategic decisions centralized under his direction to adapt to logistical demands across events.[41][1]Participant Recruitment and Selection
Rockin'1000 employs an open, ongoing recruitment model for musicians, accessible via its official website, where applicants register and submit a video audition demonstrating their instrument or vocal performance.[4][42] Live video submissions are preferred for authenticity. Membership is free and does not require professional training, enabling participation from amateurs and hobbyists of varying skill levels.[4][43] Videos are evaluated by event coordinators, sometimes termed "gurus," to assess basic competence in playing assigned parts within a large ensemble.[44] Selection prioritizes filling approximately 1,000 spots per event, incorporating returning participants from prior concerts alongside new recruits to maintain continuity while expanding the pool.[45] Due to capacity limits, not all applicants are chosen; criteria emphasize enthusiasm for collective rock performance over virtuoso ability, fostering a diverse, global assembly.[43][46] For specific concerts, recruitment includes deadlines for submissions; the 2026 New Orleans event, for instance, requires video auditions by December 16, 2025, followed by confirmations for accepted performers.[45] This process ensures logistical feasibility while aligning with the group's volunteer-driven, passion-oriented ethos.[47]Rehearsal and Coordination Processes
Musicians selected for Rockin'1000 events undergo an initial preparation phase involving individual practice with provided resources, including video tutorials, sheet music for vocals, setlists, and original song arrangements distributed via the organization's app or instructions to groups by instrument type such as drums, bass, guitars, keyboards, and vocals.[47][48] This pre-event learning ensures participants arrive familiar with the repertoire, which typically features rock covers and occasionally crowdsourced originals from global submissions, as in the case of receiving 900 arrangements from 30 countries for a 2023 composition.[49] On-site rehearsals begin one to two days before the performance, starting with section-specific sessions in stadiums or venues to refine parts—drummers synchronizing rhythms, bassists aligning grooves, and guitarists using headphones for isolated monitoring and cueing during mixing preparation.[50][51][52] These divided practices, organized by event coordinators, address the logistical demands of coordinating over 1,000 performers, mitigating initial chaos through structured schedules and dedicated spaces, with supporters accessing reserved rooms for additional refinement.[14][53][47] Full ensemble integration follows sectional work, progressing to complete run-throughs that emphasize timing and volume balance across the group, often captured in behind-the-scenes footage from events like Frankfurt in 2019 and Leiria in 2024.[54][55] This phased coordination relies on project management principles, dividing participants into instrument cohorts for efficient oversight and enabling the ensemble to achieve synchronized execution despite varying skill levels among amateur and professional contributors.[47]Logistical Challenges and Solutions
Organizing events for Rockin'1000 involves synchronizing over 1,000 musicians, many of whom have never performed together, presenting significant coordination difficulties including diverse skill levels, language barriers across nationalities, and limited on-site rehearsal time of approximately 2.5 days prior to shows.[47] These challenges are compounded by external factors such as weather disruptions, as seen in heavy rain during the 2019 Madrid event that threatened outdoor equipment, and high logistical costs for participant travel, accommodations, meals, and instruments, estimated at €1,000 per musician in some cases.[47] Sound engineering for such a large ensemble requires managing complex audio mixes to avoid muddiness, with sections like drums, guitars, and vocals needing precise balancing.[56] To address coordination, musicians are selected through auditions and divided into instrument-specific groups (e.g., vocalists, guitarists, drummers) assigned tailored preparation materials including setlists, sheet music, and rehearsal schedules distributed via apps, websites, WhatsApp groups, and YouTube tutorials for remote practice before events.[47] On-site, a hierarchical structure led by CEO Fabio Zaffagnini employs "gurus"—experienced leaders like vocal coach Augusta Trebeschi or drummer Lele Borghi—to oversee sectional rehearsals, ensuring synchronization through intensive sessions, such as six hours dedicated to complex segments like the operatic part of "Bohemian Rhapsody."[47][1] Technical solutions include in-ear monitoring systems for musicians to receive individualized mixes, reducing stage volume and enabling clear cues during performances.[52] Audio is handled via submixes per section, processed on dedicated consoles before final integration, a method adapted for large-scale live sound.[56] Risk mitigation involves contingency planning for weather and technical failures, alongside virtual adaptations like the 2020 Global Gig, which engaged 2,500 participants remotely to bypass pandemic-related gathering restrictions.[1] Funding challenges are met through sponsorships and ticket sales, with events planned over a year in advance to secure venues and resources, as demonstrated in the inaugural 2015 Cesena production.[57]Events and Performances
Key Concerts and Locations
The inaugural Rockin'1000 concert occurred on July 26, 2015, in a field outside Cesena, Italy, featuring 1,000 musicians performing Foo Fighters' "Learn to Fly" as a viral invitation for the band to play in the town after a prior cancellation.[1] This event marked the project's origin and drew over 1 million YouTube views within days, prompting Foo Fighters to perform in Cesena later that year on November 3.[2] Subsequent key performances expanded to stadium-scale events. On July 21, 2018, Rockin'1000 staged "That's Live" at Stadio Artemio Franchi in Florence, Italy, with 1,500 musicians and special guest Courtney Love, who joined for Hole's "Celebrity Skin" among rock covers.[58][59] Later in 2018, the group headlined an official concert for Austria's Presidency of the EU Council, emphasizing large-scale collaborative rock performances.[1] International milestones followed in 2019, including a June 29 show at Stade de France in Paris, France, attended by 50,000 spectators, and a performance at Commerzbank-Arena in Frankfurt, Germany.[1] A unique logistical feat occurred at Milan Linate Airport in Italy that year, incorporating 1,000 musicians with guests Manuel Agnelli, Rodrigo D'Erasmo, and Subsonica.[1] Post-2020 adaptations highlighted growth: the May 14, 2022, return to Stade de France featured French artist M. as guest, while the October 1 São Paulo debut at Allianz Parque in Brazil drew over 30,000 attendees with local acts Os Mutantes and Supla, marking the project's first South American event.[1][60] In 2023, the Spanish premiere took place on June 3 at Estadio Cívitas Metropolitano (now Wanda Metropolitano) in Madrid, followed by a show at Stadio dei Marmi in Rome, Italy.[1][60] These venues underscore Rockin'1000's shift from local fields to global arenas, accommodating up to 1,000 participants per event across Europe and beyond.[1]Repertoire and Setlists
Rockin'1000's repertoire is composed entirely of cover versions of iconic rock and alternative rock songs, selected for their high-energy, anthemic structures that lend themselves to large-scale ensemble execution.[61] The project originated with a singular focus on Foo Fighters' "Learn to Fly" in July 2015, performed by approximately 1,000 musicians in Cesena, Italy, as a viral invitation for the band to play locally.[2] This performance marked the inception of their signature style, emphasizing synchronized playback of amplified guitars, drums, and vocals to replicate stadium-rock intensity.[62] Subsequent events expanded the repertoire to encompass a broader canon of rock staples from the 1970s through the 2000s, prioritizing tracks with simple, repetitive riffs and choruses conducive to crowd participation.[62] Foo Fighters tracks remain prominent, with "Learn to Fly" performed 15 times across documented concerts, alongside "All My Life" and "My Hero" each appearing twice.[61] The selection draws from grunge, hard rock, and punk influences, including Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" (11 performances), Metallica's "Enter Sandman" (7 performances), and Rage Against the Machine's "Killing in the Name" (9 performances).[62] Setlists are tailored to each event's venue, audience, and thematic focus, typically comprising 10 to 15 songs lasting 60 to 90 minutes, often opened by aggressive anthems and closed with Foo Fighters material to evoke the project's origins.[63] Medleys, such as a seven-song fusion of Led Zeppelin tracks including "Purple Haze," "Kashmir," and "Whole Lotta Love" (performed 7 times), add variety while streamlining longer sets.[62] Thematic adaptations include tributes, like Linkin Park's "Numb" in 2018 honoring Chester Bennington, or regional nods such as Italian rock elements in Cesena shows.[64] The following table lists the 10 most frequently performed songs based on available concert data:| Song | Original Artist | Number of Performances |
|---|---|---|
| Learn to Fly | Foo Fighters | 15 |
| Seven Nation Army | The White Stripes | 12 |
| Smells Like Teen Spirit | Nirvana | 11 |
| Killing in the Name | Rage Against the Machine | 9 |
| Jumpin' Jack Flash | The Rolling Stones | 8 |
| Won't Get Fooled Again | The Who | 8 |
| Enter Sandman | Metallica | 7 |
| Purple Haze / Foxy Lady / Kashmir / Moby Dick / Heartbreaker / Communication Breakdown / Whole Lotta Love (medley) | Various (primarily Jimi Hendrix and Led Zeppelin) | 7 |
| Knights of Cydonia | Muse | 6 |
| Where Is My Mind? | Pixies | 6 |