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The Sixth HONK Festival Parade

Sunday, Oct 2, Noon – 2 pm

HONK! Parade to “Reclaim the Streets for Horns, Bikes and Feet” featuring HONK! bands and community groups, from Davis Square to Harvard Square’s Oktoberfest celebration. The parade leaves Davis Square at 12 noon, travels down Elm Street, then Beech Street onto Massachusetts Ave to Harvard Square.

The HONK! Festival is a revolutionary street spectacle of never-before-seen proportions that will converge for the sixth time in Davis Square, Somerville, MA, from Friday, September 30 (sundown) through Monday, October 3, 2011! The 2011 Schedule has been posted!

MAG Grant Smith will be marching with Emperor Norton’s Stationary Marching Band in the HONK! Parade.

Sun Oct 02, 2011

free

 

 

The parade leaves Davis Square at 12 noon,

travels down Elm Street,

then Beech Street

onto Massachusetts Ave to Harvard Square.

Artists   Grant Smith :: Jane Wang

Community Groups Participating in the 2011 Honk! Parade (31 groups):
Amnesty International (2 groups)
Boston Area Guild of Puppeteers
Boston Derby Dames
Bread and Puppet Theater
Cambridge Center for Adult Education
Cambridge Kids' Cooperative
City Life/Vida Urbana
Colombia Vive
Critical Mass (2 groups)
Endangered Species with Lipstick
Food Not Bombs
Future of Labor Organizing in Higher Education
Institute for Infinitely Small Things
Lindy Bomb Squad
Masonic Lodges (Amicable Lodge and Mount Olivet Lodge)
Mass Uniting
Maud Morgan Arts
Moving New England
Mystic Paper Beasts
Open Air Circus
Papercut Zine Library
Puppet Showplace
Radical Cheerleaders
Red Bandanna Brigage
Royal Frog Ballet
SCUL
Star Wheel
Veterans for Peace
Wheelright's One-Man Marching Band


Bands Participating in the 2011 Honk! Parade (29 bands):
AfroBrazil
Blem Sou Blem
The Brass Balagan
Brass Messengers
The Bread & Puppet Circus Band
Caka!ak Thunder
The Carnival Band
Chaotic Insurrection Ensemble
Detroit Party Marching Band
Dirty Water Brass Band
DJA-Rara
EE – Environmental Encroachment
Emperor Norton’s Stationary Marching Band
The Expandable Brass Band
Extraordinary Rendition Band
Factory Seconds
Forward! and The Milwaukee Molotov Marchers
Leftist Marching Band
Minor Mishap Marching Band
The Open Hand Orchestra
Hungry March Band
Rude Mechanical Orchestra
Second Line Social Aid & Pleasure Society Brass Band
Seed & Feed Marching Abominable
The Springville All Star Marching Band
Titanium Sporkestra
Tufts Pep Band
What Cheer? Brigade
Young Fellaz

Across the country and around the world, a new type of street band is emerging. Acoustic and mobile, borrowing repertoire and inspiration from a diverse set of folk music traditions – New Orleans second line brass bands, European Klezmer, Balkan and Romani music, Brazilian Afro Bloc and Frevo traditions, as well as the passion and spirit of Mardi Gras and Carnival– these “honkers” all share a commitment to several core principles. Metaphorically speaking, they honk their horns for the same reasons motorists honk theirs: to arouse fellow travelers, to warn of danger, to celebrate milestones, and to just plain have fun.

First and foremost, they honk their horns – or beat their drums, or wave their flags – to enliven and embolden their audience. Members vary widely in age, class, ethnicity and background, and although they often wear some kind of uniform, there is also always an emphasis on individuality and a “DIY” (do-it-yourself) sensibility to their instrumentation and attire. These bands play music that is by, for, and of “the people.” The distinction between performer and audience, just like the distinctions between different musical genres, is just one more arbitrary social boundary they aspire to overcome. Spectators often think “Hey, I could do that!” and, indeed, these bands often recruit new members right off the street.

Just as important, they honk their horns because it’s the best way they know to protest a world of violence and oppression. Many of these bands are less than a decade old, and many were born in reaction to the fatalism and indifference that has gripped the advanced industrialized democracies. In response, honkers have been providing a heartfelt musical antidote, a soundtrack for anti-war rallies, political mobilizations, pride parades and joyous reclamations of public space. Every one of these bands has a unique sense of humor to complement their sound, as they mock and discredit the roots of hatred and injustice through the whimsical act of making music together. The result is a spectacle that is radical and subversive without being militant or sanctimonious.

As often as they honk in protest, however, they also perform to celebrate the causes and institutions they support: multicultural festivals, peace conferences, social forums, artists collectives, community gardens, children’s workshops, neighborhood fundraisers, block parties, relief benefits and homeless shelters. In these cases, as in every case, the honkers’ ultimate goal is to have fun, to relish the art of making fun as a form of individual and collective transcendence, and to encourage others to see and do the same.

The HONK! Festival is a grassroots, non-profit event made possible by the financial and in-kind support of a thousand local residents and businesses. For the duration of the Festival, more than 350 musicians will be housed by generous neighbors and friends and many local restaurants will generously provide food for the performers and volunteers. Scores of community members have donated hours of labor to make HONK! possible. Most significantly, none of the bands will be earning any money for the festival, and most will have only some of their travel expenses covered. The bands are inspired to travel great distances, at great personal expense, to joyously celebrate our hard work to reclaim public space—the world over—for all people. The bands long to connect in honor of our struggles for justice. We hope you will come, to connect and celebrate with us, and further the cause of freedom, justice and collective emancipation.

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