City halls and governments
Secretariats of Culture, Education, and Tourism across Brazil that make the event possible in schools and public spaces.
Celebrating music on every corner, transforming urban spaces into democratic stages under the coordination of ANAFIMA.
Born in France in 1982 as Fête de la Musique, the movement was created by Jack Lang to celebrate the summer solstice with free music everywhere.
Today, Make Music Day is one of the planet's greatest musical mobilizations, happening simultaneously in more than 2,000 cities around the world. In Brazil, coordinated by ANAFIMA, the movement grows with documented presence in hundreds of municipalities, school networks, and local partners.
Make Music Day exists because city halls, secretariats, schools, retailers, professional artists, amateur musicians, and volunteers decide, together, that it is worth it. ANAFIMA coordinates and drives — but the movement belongs to those who make it.
Secretariats of Culture, Education, and Tourism across Brazil that make the event possible in schools and public spaces.
A network of more than 26 volunteer coordinators who mobilize their cities, contact partners, and ensure June 21st truly happens.
Professionals and amateurs, of all ages and musical genres — because Make Music is open to anyone who wants to play, sing, or simply listen.
From vibrant capitals to small inland towns, music fills every corner of Brazil.
Regional coordinators, city halls, schools, and businesses across Brazil make Make Music happen — from North to South, from capitals to small cities.