logo
Rain and new rules don't dampen Somerville's PorchFest

Rain and new rules don't dampen Somerville's PorchFest

Boston Globe10-05-2025

Somerville's PorchFest began in 2011 and has grown steadily since. Last year, driven by a performance from Guster, a popular 1990s and 2000s band from the area, the event reached new heights, with countless thousands of people completely packing many of the city's streets.
The city became so packed that it — in collaboration with some musical artists — changed the rules this year in an effort to keep Somerville's primary arteries clear for traffic and emergency vehicles. The rules prohibited performances on 13 streets including Broadway, Summer Street, and Highland and Somerville avenues which hosted several dozen shows last year.
Advertisement
Also new this year is a team of 'ambassadors' to help guide foot traffic, point newcomers in the right direction, and serve as liaisons for bands performing in the same areas. They handed out maps with the locations of Porta-Potties, which were more numerous in an effort to keep people from relieving themselves on anyone's lawn.
Advertisement
The city also encouraged bands to coordinate time slots to space out performances.
Still, Somerville was bustling. Groups of people who looked to be in their 20s and 30s roved the streets stopping every half block or so to check out the latest show they'd stumbled across. Traffic on the highway exits leading into town backed up in barely-moving lines of brake lights. Powder House Square was a disaster. Parking spots were fever dreams.
'It's a great day for local music,' said Croteau's bandmate Dan Oshiro, 25. Done by 1 p.m., the guys planned on making the rounds and seeing what else was going on.
And the sounds of guitars and drums reverberated down every street. There was a variety of acts, from DJs to brass bands, but many had some flavor of rock. Often, it included 90s covers — think 'The Bends'-era Radiohead, Nirvana's 'Heart Shaped Box,' or Smash Mouth's 'All Star."
Chad Wishner and Hayley Lynch, both 27, stood on Hall Avenue suspiciously eyeing one particularly adventurous DJ who'd spun a trap remix of Lit's 'My Own Worst Enemy," another 90's anthem.
'It's the age everyone is,' Wishner said. 'It's music from when we all were kids.'
But the real draw, Lynch said, was the local acts. She provided quick directions to a good rock band and a fun horn section that performed with a vibraphone nearby.
'I love seeing all the local bands,' she said. 'It's really their time to shine.'
The event, as it always does, had a game-of-telephone feeling to it. Many people wandering around had a couple of spots they planned to hit. There, they'd be meeting a friend of a friend, or maybe that person's cousin, who is, perhaps, playing drums or bass on some other guy's porch.
Advertisement
Such was the case for 27-year-olds Kalina Korzec, Parth Dhruve, and Ali Bacon, who'd paused briefly near Davis Square to listen to the vibraphone act that Lynch had described. They planned to see someone they knew who was in an a cappella group, as well as a mutual friend's coworker, who was playing a show somewhere else.
Dhruve grinned: 'That's PorchFest.'
Sean Cotter can be reached at

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scottish rock band praised by Oasis set to play Carlisle in sold-out summer show
Scottish rock band praised by Oasis set to play Carlisle in sold-out summer show

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Scottish rock band praised by Oasis set to play Carlisle in sold-out summer show

A SCOTTISH indie band once named by Liam Gallagher as the 'second best band in the world' (after Oasis) are coming to Carlisle this summer. Teenage Fanclub, formed in Glasgow in 1989, have had a long career marked by both critical acclaim and commercial success. Tickets for the August 31 show at the Old Fire Station have sold out but hopeful gig-goers can join a waiting list via the venue's website. The band's debut album, 1990's A Catholic Education, was followed by The King, and then Bandwagonesque and Thirteen. Gallagher made the comments about Teenage Fanclub when the band shared a label with Oasis in the mid-90s, following the release of their top ten album Grand Prix. Songs from Northern Britain, the band's sixth studio album, was released in 1997 and reached number 3 in the album charts. The band are also a famed live act, and have played alongside the likes of Radiohead and the Foo Fighters during their career.

Items left on British buses include bales of hay, a frozen turkey
Items left on British buses include bales of hay, a frozen turkey

UPI

timea day ago

  • UPI

Items left on British buses include bales of hay, a frozen turkey

June 20 (UPI) -- British transport company Megabus is sharing some of the most unusual pieces of lost property left behind on its buses, including hay bales, a frozen turkey, a cooking wok and false teeth. The bus operator said items found left behind on buses in May included a Winnie the Pooh stuffed toy, a jar of honey, a guitar, a Radiohead vinyl record, insulin, an electric razor, a Neil Diamond CD, a single shoe and a collection of historic coins and stamps. The company said some of the more unusual items left on buses in years past included three bales of hay, family tree documents, a frozen turkey, false teeth, a cooking wok and multiple lone shoes and socks. Megabus said about 95% of lost and found items are eventually returned to their owners, and those that go unclaimed after 28 days are usually donated to charity. Anyone who loses an item on a Megabus vehicle is encouraged to report their lost property on the company's website.

Arlington Porchfest to feature more than 300 performances across town in Massachusetts
Arlington Porchfest to feature more than 300 performances across town in Massachusetts

CBS News

time2 days ago

  • CBS News

Arlington Porchfest to feature more than 300 performances across town in Massachusetts

Musicians are preparing for this weekend's Porchfest in Arlington, Massachusetts, an event that's taken months of planning to get right. "We take care of all the logistics of it and we help promote it so that on June 21 this year, we'll have more than 300 performances from literally one end of town to the other," said Tom Formicola, the executive director of the Arlington Center for the Arts. "It is a really joyful day." More than 300 performances this year Between March and May, residents, business owners and nonprofits register to become Porchfest hosts. "I think of the hosts as sort of the true organizers," said co-founder Bruce Hoppe. "We are sort of the promoters and the facilitators who let them have 150 parties." Carol Band has been a host and performer since the event began eight years ago. "You get to meet all kinds of people in here, all kinds of music and when you're hosting, it's like they're guests for just a few hours in your home and it's wonderful," said Band, who called it the highlight of the year in the city. "I'd call it a town-wide block party. Spirits are high, the music is everywhere, drifting out." "What's really exciting as a musician is to see audience response to what you do and then echo it," said performer Conrad Warre. "And I find myself focusing on the audience and looking at something and going, 'They're really interested in this. We should do more of that.' It's a great event. Very family-friendly and it's nice to play to kids for a change." The best part? "Free in every possible way." "It's free in every possible way," said Formicola. "The bands don't pay any fees, the porches don't pay any fees, the audiences don't pay any fees." The Arlington Center for the Arts has a website detailing all of the porches and bands, so your day can be mapped out. It all starts at noon on Saturday, with a rain date Sunday. Previous Porchfests were already held this year in Somerville, Dorchester and Medford.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store