|
|
About · Contact · Help · Desk · ⚙ · 3,562 articles | Contents · A–Ž index |
(imported from XML by extractor/importer) |
m (Text replace - "{{Abstract" to "{{Teaser") |
||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | {{ | + | {{Teaser| |
Inaugurated in 1992, the [[No Border Jam Festival]] is the oldest Slovene underground music festival, a punk festival similar to the ‘If Kids are United’ festival in Vienna, Austria, and the ‘Monte Paradiso’ festival in Pula, Croatia. The programme has presented some significant names of the anarcho-punk and punk scene, including Oi Polloi, Marky Ramone, Citizen Fish, Wat Tyler, Icons of Filth, Anarcrust and several local groups which are well-known in Europe, eg Pridigarji, Scuffy Dogs, [[Center za dehumanizacijo (CZD)]] and a number of other new groups. The festival takes place in eastern Slovenia; the first one was held in Ptuj and the second one at Ormož, but all subsequent festivals have been hosted by the [[Pekarna Cultural Centre]] in Maribor. | Inaugurated in 1992, the [[No Border Jam Festival]] is the oldest Slovene underground music festival, a punk festival similar to the ‘If Kids are United’ festival in Vienna, Austria, and the ‘Monte Paradiso’ festival in Pula, Croatia. The programme has presented some significant names of the anarcho-punk and punk scene, including Oi Polloi, Marky Ramone, Citizen Fish, Wat Tyler, Icons of Filth, Anarcrust and several local groups which are well-known in Europe, eg Pridigarji, Scuffy Dogs, [[Center za dehumanizacijo (CZD)]] and a number of other new groups. The festival takes place in eastern Slovenia; the first one was held in Ptuj and the second one at Ormož, but all subsequent festivals have been hosted by the [[Pekarna Cultural Centre]] in Maribor. | ||
}} | }} |
This logo is missing!
If you have it, please email it to us.
Culture.si offers information on Slovene cultural producers, venues, festivals and support services, all in one place. It encourages international cultural exchange in the fields of arts, culture and heritage. The portal and its content is owned and funded by the Ministry of Culture, funded by the European Union Recovery and Resilience Plan and developed by Ljudmila Art and Science Laboratory.