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Vodafone Paredes de Coura 2018: our picks and playlist

Blah blah blah our favourite festival is back blah blah blah it’s the same intro every year, and you should know by now going to this festival is as important as spending Christmas with your family for us who live far away from home. No matter what or where we are, come the time, we’re purchasing expensive flights to Portugal just to make it. It doesn’t matter if we manage to see many of these artists on tour somewhere else in Europe before or after the festival, there’s something about enduring the daytime heat, the nighttime cold, and the antics of our perpetually drunken friends that always drives us there. Or maybe it’s just the beauty of the landscape. We don’t know and it doesn’t matter as long as we’re there.

Printable timetables (PDF, XLS) will be published when all stage times are made available. Update: PDF // XLS

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The local gems: CONAN OSIRIS (Wed 15, 02:00), SURMA (Thu 16, 22:20), DEAD COMBO (Sat 18, 23:15), ERMO (Sat 18, 02:00)

We have limited ourselves a bit by only picking four artists for each category – especially in this one! There was enough local talent across all stages available for us to focus on Portuguese artists only. Conan Osiris is the hottest artist in Portugal right now, and his late addition to the lineup reads as “holy shit people still care about him 7 months after his album came out despite haters saying he would be forgotten come April”. Said album, ADORO BOLOS (literally I LOVE CAKES) is a graceful blend of fado, dancehall, reggaeton, Middle Eastern, gypsy and African sonorities enhanced with some of the most exquisite lyrics you can find in contemporary pop music – sometimes funny, sometimes nonsensical, sometimes dead serious and fatalistic as they can be. In other words, it’s hard to argue Conan Osiris’ work is not one of a kind, even if you think you can turn “list all of his influences” into a seasonal sport. It was quietly published on Bandcamp one day before the end of 2017, and hasn’t left our playlist ever since. We would have put half of the tracks of this diamond on our playlist, but it’s not on Spotify yet. Check it out here.

Arriving in the festival from the nearby city of Braga, Ermo sound similarly otherworldly. The duo makes contemporary glitchy electronic pop music – with the odd footwork nod here and there – with highly processed Portuguese vocals that ends up being more accessible and easy listening than you’d think. If Arcade Fire are being too corny, just escape the crowd and go wait in the smaller stage before it floods with beat-hungry clubbers. In theory, Surma’s music can sound a bit less weird than her two peers, but only in a world where Björk’s weirdness was normalised. 2017′s Antwerpen is the result of the one-woman-band we all want in our lives and, after missing her for a few times both home and abroad – her international touring included SXSW and Eurosonic Noorderslag, and she is already confirmed at next edition of Iceland Airwaves – we can’t wait to finally see her on stage. Finally, Dead Combo, one of our favourite Portuguese bands, is presenting their new album, Odeon Hotel. We’re ashamed of having missed it on our playlists, but it will surely be amongst our top albums of the 2018. Dead Combo are what Calexico would be if Arizona bordered the Portuguese-speaking world instead of Mexico. It’s something you didn’t know you needed until you were aware of it but of course you do now. Oh, and Mark Lanegan is apparently joining them on stage. If you needed an American artist to validate a local one, here he is.


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The safe bets: FLEET FOXES (Thu 16, 23:15), SHAME (Thu 16, 19:40), …AND YOU WILL KNOW US BY THE TRAIL OF DEAD (Fri 17, 22:20), KEVIN MORBY (Fri 17, 19:40)

You can design the lineup of a festival based on pure experimentation, but there’s nothing wrong with being a people pleaser. It might be odd to feature Shame in a list like this, given the fact that they have just put out their first record, while some of the ‘newcomers’ below already have a few albums in their name. But the truth is they’re returning after a very eventful poolside gig at last year’s Milhões de Festa. Having seen them a few months ago in an iconic Welsh venue, we’re absolutely sure we’ll be there as frontman Charlie Steen strolls through the audience and turns us into a sweaty mess. Kevin Morby is the #1 fan of Porto and Portugal in general, having played in the country every single year since we organised his first one back in 2014, including stops at Primavera Sound 2015, Paredes de Coura 2016 and Super Bock Super Rock 2017. 4 records into his career, we can’t wait to see how his band’s live show has improved.

…And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead and Fleet Foxes are two bands that may be past their peak, but it doesn’t mean 2018 is not the right time to see them again. 16 years after its release, the Austin indie rock band are playing their monument of a record Source Tags & Codes in its entirety and it doesn’t matter if they don’t sound as good as back then – just make sure you sing louder. Crack Up might not have been the record Fleet Foxes fans were wishing for after a six years wait, but it’s not mediocre either. Expect a career-spanning setlist, though – and the band does not disappoint on a stage. Especially in a setting like Coura, the place they deserved to after a few parking-lot-festival shows in previous years.


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The newcomers: MARLON WILLIAMS (Wed 15, 19:40), IMARHAN (Fri 17, 19:00), LUCY DACUS (Fri 17, 18:30), BIG THIEF (Sat 18, 21:20)

Imarhan have played their first Portuguese show a couple of weeks ago in the amazing world music festival FMM Sines and it’s great to see them here too. The Tuareg band’s second record, Temet, came out last February and their desert blues has never strayed too far away from our headphones ever since. Half an hour earlier, American singer-songwriter Lucy Dacus opens the afternoon on the big stage with the heartfelt songs of her sophomore album, Historian. If you follow our playlists, you already know how much we like her music; the same can be said about the other two artists in this section, whose albums were featured as album of the week multiple times.

Marlon Williams might be doing his debut in the festival, but he’s already scheduled for a second round next November in Braga, which says enough about the popularity the songwriter from New Zealand currently enjoys in the country. Being witness to his band’s live show a couple of times already, it’s a safe bet to say these will not be his only two shows in the country in the near future. Big Thief, one of our favourite bands in the planet, has already secured a prime time time slot in the main stage after only two albums and we’d like to believe our spam has contributed a bit to the phenomenon. With or without lead guitarist Buck Meek, who’s doing a solo tour at the moment, Adrianne Lenker’s voice and guitar playing will be enough to make it memorable. Expect some new songs. 

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Bolachas Now Playing

#121: Margo Price, “All American Made”

Bolachas Now Playing, 36/2017 (#121):

Sean Riley & the Slowriders – Bring Your Boy Home

Lucinda Williams – Something About What Happens When We Talk

Margo Price – Wild Women

Margo Price – Don’t Say It

The Deep Dark Woods – San Juan Hill

Hayes Carll – Magnolia Wind

Ronnie Fauss – Bright Lights of L.A.

Kevin Morby – Baltimore (Sky at Night)

Sammy Brue – I Know

Scott Orr – Violent Blue

Leif Vollebekk – Tallahassee

Adam Ostrar – Spare Me

Ron Gallo – Am I Demon?

Gun Outfit – Sally Rose

Xylouris White – Only Love

tUnE-yArDs – Look at Your Hands

Jessie Ware – Stay Awake, Wait For Me

Frazey Ford – When We Get By

Nicholas Krgovich – My Riverboat

John Maus – Bombs Away

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Bolachas Now Playing

#109: Fleet Foxes, “Crack-Up”

Bolachas Now Playing, 24/2017 (#109):

Fleet Foxes – I Am All That I Need / Arroyo Seco / Thumbprint Scar

So Much Light – Be Afraid

Lambchop – The Hustle Unlimited

Ride – Rocket Silver Symphony

Broken Social Scene – Skyline

Protomartyr – A Private Understanding

Thurston Moore – Smoke of Dreams

Beach House – Baby

Will Samson – Welcome Oxygen – Day Five

Kronos Quartet & Sam Amidon – Oh Where

Roselit Bone – By the Glint of Your Horns

House and Land – The Day is Past and Gone

Offa Rex – Sheepcrook and Black Dog

Richard Thompson – Gethsemane

Kevin Morby – Pearly Gates

Zephaniah Ohora and the 18 Wheelers – She’s Leaving in the Morning

Jolie Holland & Samantha Parton – You Are Not Needed Now

Karima Walker – Indigo

Demen – Flor

Fleet Foxes – Crack-Up

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Bolachas Now Playing

#106: Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit, “Nashville Sound”

Bolachas Now Playing, 21/2017 (#106):

Julia Jacklin – Eastwick

Protomartyr – 580 Memories

Waxahatchee – Never Been Wrong

Marika Hackman – Good Intentions

Big Thief – Watering

Ulrika Spacek – Modern English Decoration

Queens of the Stone Age – The Way You Used to Do

The War On Drugs – Holding On

Iron & Wine – Stranger Lay Beside Me

Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit – Anxiety

Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit – Something to Love

The Deslondes – (This Ain’t A) Sad Song

Songhoy Blues – Mali Nord

Daniel Romano – I Tried to Hold the World (In My Mouth)

Sammy Brue – Jealous

Minta & the Brook Trout – So This Has to Do

Kevin Morby – City Music

Benjamin Clementine – Phantom of Aleppoville

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Bolachas Now Playing

#95: Mount Eerie, “A Crow Looked at Me”

Bolachas Now Playing, 11/2017 (#95):

Slowdive – Sugar for the Pill
Land of Talk – This Time
Blonde Redhead – Where Your Mind Wants to Go
ANOHNI – Paradise
The New Pornographers – Whiteout Conditions
Future Islands – Cave
Timber Timbre – Grifting
Mount Eerie – Real Death
Mount Eerie – Seaweed
Daniel Martin Moore – You Are Home
Bonnie “Prince” Billy & Nathan Salsburg – Wallins Creek Girls
Kevin Morby – Come to Me Now
Andrew Combs – Rose Colored Blues
RF Shannon – Had a Revelation
Sam Outlaw – Bottomless Mimosas
John Andrews & the Yawns – Homesick in Heaven
Yasmine Hamdan – Douss
Craig Finn – Be Honest