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・ Honjō Station (Fukui)
・ Honjō Station (Fukuoka)
・ Honjō Station (Saitama)
・ Honjō, Akita
・ Honjō, Nagano
・ Honjō, Saitama
・ Honjō, Ōita
・ Honjō-shuku
・ Honjō-Waseda Station
・ Honk
・ Honk (band)
・ Honk (magazine)
・ Honk (website)
・ Honk Toot Suite
・ Honk Your Horn
HONK!
・ Honk!
・ Honk, the Moose
・ Honka
・ Honkadori
・ Honkajoki
・ Honkaku Mystery Award
・ Honkaku Mystery Best 10
・ Honkaku Mystery Writers Club of Japan
・ Honkala
・ Honkala Island
・ Honkanen
・ Honkarakenne
・ Honkawa Elementary School Peace Museum
・ Honkawa-cho Station


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HONK! : ウィキペディア英語版
HONK!

HONK!, also known as HONK! Fest, is a festival of activist street bands held annually on Columbus Day weekend in Somerville, Massachusetts. Each year since 2006, an all-volunteer organizing community invites more than 25 bands from around New England, North America, and the world to participate in this free three-day event that showcases acoustic and ambulatory bands playing free music in public spaces. Since its inception, it has inspired additional HONK! festivals in other locations.
==Description==
HONK!s so far have been staged in Somerville, Massachusetts; Seattle, Washington; Austin, Texas; Providence, Rhode Island and New York, New York. Although each festival is locally organized and there is no central HONK! authority, they share common features. Each HONK! invites twelve to over thirty bands, who play multiple sets in outdoor public spaces over the course of two or three days. These shows are free to attend. Some HONK!s also feature a parade. The festivals are volunteer-run and get support from local sponsors.
The bands invited to play at HONK! share common characteristics: they are ambulatory; they use instruments that can be simultaneously carried and played; and they utilize little or no electronic amplification. As a result, the bands are able to play while moving. There is no generally agreed-upon label for this type of band; labels in use include "activist street band," "radical marching band," and "community street band."
Although many of the bands that play at HONK! have the phrase "marching band" in their names, they bear only superficial resemblance to a traditional marching band. Traditional marching band characteristics derive from their military history: they tend to feature regimented, synchronized movement and matching uniforms, and play music that has been composed and arranged in advance, with the goal of presenting the band as a cohesive unit without any differentiation between individual members. Band members are typically drawn from and affiliated with some larger organization, such as a school.
A HONK!-style street band, on the other hand, more often tends to encourage the individuality of its members: it may have a theme to its garb rather than a uniform, with individual members free to implement that theme in a manner of their own choosing; similarly, its music may offer more chances for improvisation. Many HONK! bands incorporate traditional marching band instrumentation, sometimes augmented with other instruments or vocalists; others use instrumentation drawn from non-Western music traditions, such as those of a Brazilian samba school. A HONK! band may exist for a specific purpose—some perform primarily at activist events, for instance—but they are typically autonomous entities not affiliated with another organization.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「HONK!」の詳細全文を読む



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