Honk!
A Street Band Renaissance of Music and Activism
Herausgeber: Garofalo, Reebee; Snyder, Andrew; Allen, Erin T
Honk!
A Street Band Renaissance of Music and Activism
Herausgeber: Garofalo, Reebee; Snyder, Andrew; Allen, Erin T
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HONK! A Street Band Renaissance of Music and Activism describes the fast-growing and transnational phenomenon of street bands-particularly brass and percussion ensembles-and examines how this exciting phenomenon mobilizes communities to reimagine public spaces, protest injustice, and assert their activism.
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HONK! A Street Band Renaissance of Music and Activism describes the fast-growing and transnational phenomenon of street bands-particularly brass and percussion ensembles-and examines how this exciting phenomenon mobilizes communities to reimagine public spaces, protest injustice, and assert their activism.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 149mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 444g
- ISBN-13: 9780367030711
- ISBN-10: 0367030713
- Artikelnr.: 58438628
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 149mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 444g
- ISBN-13: 9780367030711
- ISBN-10: 0367030713
- Artikelnr.: 58438628
Reebee Garofalo is a scholar of popular music studies and Professor Emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Boston, and he plays snare with Somervillle's Second Line Brass Band. Erin T. Allen is an ethnomusicologist who plays trumpet with Chicago's Environmental Encroachment. Andrew Snyder is an ethnomusicologist who plays trumpet and co-founded San Francisco's Mission Delirium.
Part I: History and Scope / 1. The Many Roads to HONK! and the Power of
Brass and Percussion (Reebee Garofalo) / 2. Autonomous Street Carnival
Blocos and Reinventing Citizenship in Rio de Janeiro (Laurine Sézérat) / 3.
Jericho's Harvest: A Short History of Brass Bands as a Voice for Political
Opposition in Europe (Gregg Moore) / 4. Protest, Polyvalence, and
Indirection in Benin's Brass Band Music (Sarah Politz) / 5. Japanese
Perspective on HONK! Fest West: A Conversation with ¿kuma Wataru of
Jinta-la-Mvta (Marié Abe) / Part II: Repertoire, Pedagogy, and Performance
/ 6. Musical Eclecticism, Cultural Appropriation, and Whiteness in Mission
Delirium and HONK! (Andrew Snyder) / 7. Learning on Parade with the School
of HONK (Kevin Leppmann) / 8. From Page to Performance: Learning a Song in
an Italian Multi-Level Activist Brass Band (Mario Giuseppe Camporeale) /
Part III: Inclusion and Organization / 9. Leadership, Inclusion, and Group
Decision-Making in HONK! Bands (Meghan Elizabeth Kallman) / 10. Building
Connections While Maintaining the Band: The Challenging Politics of
Inclusion in Activist Work (Naomi Podber) / 11. Horns and Hers: The
Subversion of Gendered Instrumentation in the HONK! Movement (Becky
Liebman) / 12. Collective Effervescence and the Political Ethos of the
HONK! Movement (Geoffrey Lee) / Part IV: Festival Organization and Politics
/ 13. HONK! and the Politics of Performance in Public Space (John Bell) /
14. Why Do We Honk? How Do We Honk?: Politics, Antipolitics, and Activist
Street Bands (Rosza Daniel Lang/Levitsky with Michele Hardesty) / 15.
Pittonkatonk and Valuing Music as a Public Good (Richard Randall) / 16. The
Key of Rest: HONK!'s Hospitality Activism (Mike*Antares) / Part V: On the
Front Lines of Protest / 17. Infernal Noise: Sowing a Propaganda of Sound
(Jennifer Whitney) / 18. Listening for Lefebvre: Chant Support, Sonic
Disobedience, and the City as "Oeuvre" (Abigail Ellman) / 19. Syncopation
Against the Occupation: Handling High-Risk Situations as an Activist Street
Band in Israel-Palestine (Iris Arieli) / 20. Sounding Solidarity at the
Suffolk County ICE Immigration Detention Center (Erin T. Allen)
Brass and Percussion (Reebee Garofalo) / 2. Autonomous Street Carnival
Blocos and Reinventing Citizenship in Rio de Janeiro (Laurine Sézérat) / 3.
Jericho's Harvest: A Short History of Brass Bands as a Voice for Political
Opposition in Europe (Gregg Moore) / 4. Protest, Polyvalence, and
Indirection in Benin's Brass Band Music (Sarah Politz) / 5. Japanese
Perspective on HONK! Fest West: A Conversation with ¿kuma Wataru of
Jinta-la-Mvta (Marié Abe) / Part II: Repertoire, Pedagogy, and Performance
/ 6. Musical Eclecticism, Cultural Appropriation, and Whiteness in Mission
Delirium and HONK! (Andrew Snyder) / 7. Learning on Parade with the School
of HONK (Kevin Leppmann) / 8. From Page to Performance: Learning a Song in
an Italian Multi-Level Activist Brass Band (Mario Giuseppe Camporeale) /
Part III: Inclusion and Organization / 9. Leadership, Inclusion, and Group
Decision-Making in HONK! Bands (Meghan Elizabeth Kallman) / 10. Building
Connections While Maintaining the Band: The Challenging Politics of
Inclusion in Activist Work (Naomi Podber) / 11. Horns and Hers: The
Subversion of Gendered Instrumentation in the HONK! Movement (Becky
Liebman) / 12. Collective Effervescence and the Political Ethos of the
HONK! Movement (Geoffrey Lee) / Part IV: Festival Organization and Politics
/ 13. HONK! and the Politics of Performance in Public Space (John Bell) /
14. Why Do We Honk? How Do We Honk?: Politics, Antipolitics, and Activist
Street Bands (Rosza Daniel Lang/Levitsky with Michele Hardesty) / 15.
Pittonkatonk and Valuing Music as a Public Good (Richard Randall) / 16. The
Key of Rest: HONK!'s Hospitality Activism (Mike*Antares) / Part V: On the
Front Lines of Protest / 17. Infernal Noise: Sowing a Propaganda of Sound
(Jennifer Whitney) / 18. Listening for Lefebvre: Chant Support, Sonic
Disobedience, and the City as "Oeuvre" (Abigail Ellman) / 19. Syncopation
Against the Occupation: Handling High-Risk Situations as an Activist Street
Band in Israel-Palestine (Iris Arieli) / 20. Sounding Solidarity at the
Suffolk County ICE Immigration Detention Center (Erin T. Allen)
Part I: History and Scope / 1. The Many Roads to HONK! and the Power of
Brass and Percussion (Reebee Garofalo) / 2. Autonomous Street Carnival
Blocos and Reinventing Citizenship in Rio de Janeiro (Laurine Sézérat) / 3.
Jericho's Harvest: A Short History of Brass Bands as a Voice for Political
Opposition in Europe (Gregg Moore) / 4. Protest, Polyvalence, and
Indirection in Benin's Brass Band Music (Sarah Politz) / 5. Japanese
Perspective on HONK! Fest West: A Conversation with ¿kuma Wataru of
Jinta-la-Mvta (Marié Abe) / Part II: Repertoire, Pedagogy, and Performance
/ 6. Musical Eclecticism, Cultural Appropriation, and Whiteness in Mission
Delirium and HONK! (Andrew Snyder) / 7. Learning on Parade with the School
of HONK (Kevin Leppmann) / 8. From Page to Performance: Learning a Song in
an Italian Multi-Level Activist Brass Band (Mario Giuseppe Camporeale) /
Part III: Inclusion and Organization / 9. Leadership, Inclusion, and Group
Decision-Making in HONK! Bands (Meghan Elizabeth Kallman) / 10. Building
Connections While Maintaining the Band: The Challenging Politics of
Inclusion in Activist Work (Naomi Podber) / 11. Horns and Hers: The
Subversion of Gendered Instrumentation in the HONK! Movement (Becky
Liebman) / 12. Collective Effervescence and the Political Ethos of the
HONK! Movement (Geoffrey Lee) / Part IV: Festival Organization and Politics
/ 13. HONK! and the Politics of Performance in Public Space (John Bell) /
14. Why Do We Honk? How Do We Honk?: Politics, Antipolitics, and Activist
Street Bands (Rosza Daniel Lang/Levitsky with Michele Hardesty) / 15.
Pittonkatonk and Valuing Music as a Public Good (Richard Randall) / 16. The
Key of Rest: HONK!'s Hospitality Activism (Mike*Antares) / Part V: On the
Front Lines of Protest / 17. Infernal Noise: Sowing a Propaganda of Sound
(Jennifer Whitney) / 18. Listening for Lefebvre: Chant Support, Sonic
Disobedience, and the City as "Oeuvre" (Abigail Ellman) / 19. Syncopation
Against the Occupation: Handling High-Risk Situations as an Activist Street
Band in Israel-Palestine (Iris Arieli) / 20. Sounding Solidarity at the
Suffolk County ICE Immigration Detention Center (Erin T. Allen)
Brass and Percussion (Reebee Garofalo) / 2. Autonomous Street Carnival
Blocos and Reinventing Citizenship in Rio de Janeiro (Laurine Sézérat) / 3.
Jericho's Harvest: A Short History of Brass Bands as a Voice for Political
Opposition in Europe (Gregg Moore) / 4. Protest, Polyvalence, and
Indirection in Benin's Brass Band Music (Sarah Politz) / 5. Japanese
Perspective on HONK! Fest West: A Conversation with ¿kuma Wataru of
Jinta-la-Mvta (Marié Abe) / Part II: Repertoire, Pedagogy, and Performance
/ 6. Musical Eclecticism, Cultural Appropriation, and Whiteness in Mission
Delirium and HONK! (Andrew Snyder) / 7. Learning on Parade with the School
of HONK (Kevin Leppmann) / 8. From Page to Performance: Learning a Song in
an Italian Multi-Level Activist Brass Band (Mario Giuseppe Camporeale) /
Part III: Inclusion and Organization / 9. Leadership, Inclusion, and Group
Decision-Making in HONK! Bands (Meghan Elizabeth Kallman) / 10. Building
Connections While Maintaining the Band: The Challenging Politics of
Inclusion in Activist Work (Naomi Podber) / 11. Horns and Hers: The
Subversion of Gendered Instrumentation in the HONK! Movement (Becky
Liebman) / 12. Collective Effervescence and the Political Ethos of the
HONK! Movement (Geoffrey Lee) / Part IV: Festival Organization and Politics
/ 13. HONK! and the Politics of Performance in Public Space (John Bell) /
14. Why Do We Honk? How Do We Honk?: Politics, Antipolitics, and Activist
Street Bands (Rosza Daniel Lang/Levitsky with Michele Hardesty) / 15.
Pittonkatonk and Valuing Music as a Public Good (Richard Randall) / 16. The
Key of Rest: HONK!'s Hospitality Activism (Mike*Antares) / Part V: On the
Front Lines of Protest / 17. Infernal Noise: Sowing a Propaganda of Sound
(Jennifer Whitney) / 18. Listening for Lefebvre: Chant Support, Sonic
Disobedience, and the City as "Oeuvre" (Abigail Ellman) / 19. Syncopation
Against the Occupation: Handling High-Risk Situations as an Activist Street
Band in Israel-Palestine (Iris Arieli) / 20. Sounding Solidarity at the
Suffolk County ICE Immigration Detention Center (Erin T. Allen)