The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Oakhurst Porchfest to bring music to 200 front lawns

Each porch can host band for one hour in ‘carnival on move.’

- By Zachary Hansen zachary.hansen@ajc.com

After taking a year off due to the pandemic, a volunteer-run music festival will take place this weekend in a Decatur neighborho­od.

Nearly 200 homeowners in the Oakhurst neighborho­od will host bands Saturday afternoon and evening as part of a grassroots music event. The bands will perform on resi- dents’ front porches as neigh- bors and visitors wander from street to street.

Scott Doyon, Oakhurst Porchfest’s co-organizer, told The Atlanta Journal-consti- tution that he thinks of the event as a “carnival on the move.” Each porch can only host a band for one hour to avoid people camping in one spot, making them see new places and hear new music.

“A part of Porchfest is to showcase the Oakhurst com- munity,” he said. “A big part of the model is keeping everyone on the move so Porchfest doesn’t become a cer- tain number of yards that just have music all day.”

The idea for a grassroots music festival on people’s porches originated in Ithaca, New York, in 2007. Doyon, who has lived in Oakhurst for about 25 years, brought the idea to his neighborho­od in 2015. Since then, it’s become an annual October staple for the southwest Decatur area.

Each year, roughly 200 bands participat­e and thousands of people attend. The event is free to attend and all the performers and porch-owners also participat­e for free. The Decatur Arts Alliance assists in host- ing Oakhurst Porchfest.

While last year’s festival was canceled due to COVID-19 concerns, Doyon said it wasn’t hard to drum up support for this year’s event, which will take place from noon to 7 p.m. Saturday.

“The loss of 2020 meant that there was a lot of pent-up interest,” he said.

Typically, the proceeds from the Oakhurst Business Associatio­n’s wine crawl each February covers the event’s costs, but Doyon had to raise more than $15,000 through a Gofundme campaign because that event also couldn’t take place due to the pandemic.

Attendees are encouraged to follow Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines, but since each concert takes place on private prop- erty, Doyon said each person will have to use their discretion.

“We are not a top-down event where public access and attendee behavior is carefully controlled by a central organizing authority,” the event’s website said. “We’re a grassroots gathering where every venue is someone’s yard — where they have every right to set guidelines or not — and connection between those yards takes place on open and fully accessible public streets.”

Decatur police and sanitation workers will assist with the event. Public streets will not be closed, but Doyon recommends travelers avoid driving to participat­e, since he anticipate­s a lot of traffic. Parking and travel informatio­n, along with a list of performers and participat­ing porches, is available at oakhurstpo­rchfest.org.

 ?? COURTESY ?? The Joe & Joe Show perform at Oakhurst Porchfest in 2015, the year the festival was brought to the area. This year’s festival is set for Saturday.
COURTESY The Joe & Joe Show perform at Oakhurst Porchfest in 2015, the year the festival was brought to the area. This year’s festival is set for Saturday.

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