ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 9月4日 22時20分


J’Ouvert, the uninhibited early-hours parade and street party that occurs each #LaborDay, has long been a celebration of freedom. And one of the purest expressions of that freedom is called jab jab — a drum-fueled frenzy in which masqueraders paint themselves with old motor oil, put horns on their heads and dance for hours through the streets of Brooklyn. #JOuvert emerged in Brooklyn in the 1980sh. The event grew into a quasi-legal all-night opening act for the much larger and more established West Indian American Day Parade. In recent years, violence has resulted in stepped up security measures, which have frustrated many revelers. But its essential energy remained strong yesterday. “Once the drum starts to beat, people get almost trancelike,” said Adrian Isaac, the leader of Greenhouse Jab Jab, one of Brooklyn’s leading drum ensembles. “The drum, the beat, everything, it’s just the rhythm, it takes over,” said Andrew Jones, 20. “You have no choice but to move. Once you feel the rhythm, the jab jab is here.” @nataliekeyssar took this photo while on #nytassignment in Brooklyn. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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