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Parade of vehicles playing electronic dance music From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A technoparade (taken from the German word "Technoparade") is a parade of vehicles equipped with strong loudspeakers and amplifiers playing electronic dance music. It resembles a carnival parade in some respects, but the vehicles (called lovemobiles) are usually less elaborately decorated.[citation needed] Unlike some carnival parades, a technoparade does not share the tradition of bombarding the spectators with sweets.[citation needed] However, the revellers do occasionally throw confetti (usually larger and more sparkly than that in a carnival parade) and spray foam from the vehicles onto the crowd.[citation needed]
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2016) |
General Information | |
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Related genres | Trance music, electronic dance music, goa, dub techno, psychedelic trance, happy hardcore, etc. |
Location | Germany (origin) Worldwide |
Related events | Music festival, carnival parade, rave, doof, algorave, trance festivals, electronic dance music festivals, teknivals |
Related topics | Live electronic music |
Nearly all of the vehicles are converted trucks.[citation needed] In order to power the amplifiers, the trucks are frequently equipped with an additional electrical generator.[citation needed] For safety reasons, horse-drawn floats are never used in technoparades: there would be a danger of horses panicking from the noise and chaos.[citation needed] However, there are occasional human-drawn floats equipped with generators, record players, amplifiers and loudspeakers.[citation needed] Some of the vehicles allow people to ride along, for a fee.[citation needed] For those on the sidelines, or travelling alongside on foot or bicycles, attendance is free.[citation needed]
The official program of a technoparade is generally not as important as what happens informally.[citation needed] In contrast to a carnival parade, the vehicles are little more than flatbed trucks with sound equipment, rather than elaborately decorated floats.[citation needed] There are usually no fireworks or other traditional elements of large celebrations.[citation needed] Technoparades are rarely linked to anniversaries of historical events:[citation needed] they usually simply take place in the summer to take advantage of the good weather.[citation needed]
However, in Germany technoparades are usually officially registered as a political demonstration and thus have an appropriate motto. That way techno fans have a constitutional right to dance in the streets, and any objections from the authorities to noise and traffic obstructions are overruled and the cities also have to pay for security and cleaning up the streets afterwards.[1]
Technoparades generally have a carnival atmosphere,[citation needed] where social rules (and some laws, or at least their enforcement) are at least loosened, and sometimes broken outright.[citation needed] An atmosphere of chaos and tolerance prevails[citation needed] as bystanders dance to the shifting sounds of successive vehicles rolling by them:[citation needed] the music blasting from one vehicle blends into that from another,[citation needed] which can mean a sudden change of dance style in the area where the spheres of influence overlap.[citation needed] The music coming from two sound trucks overlaps with approximately equal intensity,[citation needed] and people can dance to either of two competing rhythms.[citation needed] In the technoparade subculture they call this the Verwirrungsgebiet ("overlap zone") by analogy to a concept in radio frequency engineering.[citation needed]
The street allows for a type of dancing that would be literally impossible in cramped German nightclubs[citation needed], and the breadth of some people's dancing is further exaggerated as they throw their clothes outwards.[citation needed] Some in the crowd generally climb up to any high point that can possibly be scaled, more and more as the event continues.[citation needed] The spirit is usually continued at after-parties in the local nightclubs[citation needed], sometimes including unofficial after-parties at venues having no official connection to the parade.[citation needed]
Technoparades are not without problems:
5 big technoparades of the 1990s and early 2000s:
Parades with a political character:
Small town or onetime moves:
Similar to technoparades, electronic dance events have also been organized using other moving vehicles such as boats and trams. In contrast to technoparades which are characterized by free participation on the street, in this case only the passengers on the vessels or inside the trams are part of the event. An example for a boatparade is the Berlin Beats & Boats event which takes place annually since 2009 and involves up to 14 swimming dancefloors.[2] A regular Housetram event has been organized by Monika Kruse in Munich since 1995.[3]
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