Vilar de Mouros Festival

(Redirected from Festival Vilar de Mouros)

The Vilar de Mouros Festival, currently named CA Vilar de Mouros for sponsorship reasons, is a music festival that takes place in Vilar de Mouros, Caminha, Viana do Castelo district in northwestern Portugal. It is the oldest rock festival in Portugal and in the Iberian Peninsula.[1] Its 1971 edition, the first as a rock festival, has been called the "Portuguese Woodstock".[2][3][4]

Vilar de Mouros Festival
Anathema playing in the main stage, in 2005
GenreRock, pop
Dates4th weekend of August (since 2016)
Location(s)Vilar de Mouros, Caminha, Portugal
Years active1965–1968 (as a folk festival), 1971, 1982, 1996, 1999–2006, 2014, 2016–present
FoundersAntónio Barge
Websitefestivalvilardemouros.pt

Since 2016, it is organized by the event company Surprise & Expectation.

History

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Beginnings as a folk festival (1965–1968)

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The Vilar de Mouros Festival was created in 1965 as an event for traditional folk music from the Alto Minho and Galicia regions. It was founded by António Barge, a medical doctor born and raised in Vilar de Mouros.[5]

In the following two years, the festival was organized annually and kept its focus on traditional folk music. In 1968, Barge decided to expand its musical scope and invited artists outside of the region. Folk singer-songwriter José Afonso and guitarist Carlos Paredes were the most notorious artists that performed in that edition. Around 15,000 people attended during the two days of the festival.[5]

After the 1968 edition, Barge opted for not organizing the festival in the next two years, in order to prepare a bigger and more eclectic festival. He would be helped by a team of volunteers and his family.[5]

1971 edition

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The 1971 edition of the Vilar de Mouros Festival was the first to feature rock music artists. Barge wanted to book high-profile rock artists from abroad, at some point considering The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, but The Beatles would disband in 1970 and The Rolling Stones did not have available dates to go to Portugal.[5] The international artists booked would end up being Elton John and Manfred Mann's Earth Band.

The festival took place during three weekends, between 31 July to 15 August. The first weekend was dedicated to classical music and featured the National Republican Guard band. The rock concerts took place on the second weekend, on 7 and 8 August. Elton John and Mannfred Mann were the headliners, and Portuguese acts, such as Quarteto 1111 and Sindicato, composed the rest of the lineup. On the final weekend, fado singer Amália Rodrigues and Angolan band Duo Ouro Negro performed.[5]

It is reported that at least 30,000 people attended the festival.[6] Some of the young people attending the festival were described as having "extravagant clothing, long hair and a hippie and libertine spirit". José Cid, who performed there as a member of Quarteto 1111, said that "never was something like it seen in Portugal. We would go bath naked in the river and we would smoke some stuff. It was a moment of total freedom".[5] There were also reports of pillaging of cornfields in the proximity from attendees wanting to eat, due to the structural problems inside the festival.[5]

In 1971, Portugal was not a democratic country and control and censorship of the arts were common. At least one agent from the DGS (formerly PIDE, Portugal's secret police during the Estado Novo) was present at the festival, and his report from the event is now disclosed.[7]

The festival ended up being a financial disaster, leaving a debt of over 5,000 euros. As a consequence, the Barge family decided not to organize the festival again.[4]

1982 edition

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In 1982, the Caminha municipality took the initiative to organize a new edition of the Vilar de Mouros festival. The festival had a duration of nine days, between 31 July and 8 August, and featured bands such as U2, Echo and the Bunnymen and The Stranglers.[4]

Constant schedule changes and divergences between the organizers, program managers and producers led a newspaper at the time to call this edition "the festival of bummers". Once again, the festival ended with big financial losses, and the Caminha municipality scrapped its plans for new editions of the festival.[4]

Nevertheless, the 1982 Vilar de Mouros festival is considered one of the most important festivals ever organized in Portugal.[4]

1996 edition

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The festival returned in 1996 as a celebration of 25 years since the iconic 1971 edition. It was organized by the live entertainment company Música no Coração and took place between 9 and 11 August. The Stone Roses, The Young Gods, Madredeus and Xutos & Pontapés were some of the bands that took part in this edition.[4]

The lack of quality of the festival grounds forced another stop of its organization for some years.[4]

1999–2006

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Attendees by the Coura river during the festival, in 2003

The civil parish of Vilar de Mouros, Música no Coração and Portoeventos signed a deal regarding the terrains for the festival that permitted the festival to be organized between 1999 and 2004. Some highlights from these years were concerts by Bob Dylan, Peter Gabriel, Neil Young, The Pretenders, Alanis Morissette, Iron Maiden, Skunk Anansie, Ben Harper, Manu Chao, UB40, Joe Cocker, The Cure, Rammstein, Robert Plant, Sonic Youth, Lamb, Beck, Bush, Sepultura and Guano Apes.[4]

At the end of the first concession contract in 2004, Música no Coração and Portoeventos ended their partnership. Portoeventos signed a new contract with the civil parish of Vilar de Mouros, without consultation from the Caminha municipality. Displeased with the lack of involvement, the Caminha municipality cut its logistic support for the festival. The festival went on for two more years, and a 2007 edition was being planned, but ended up being cancelled.[4]

2014, 2016–present

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In July 2013, the municipality of Caminha announced that the festival would be revived in 2014.[8] The 2014 edition was considered unsuccessful, failing to attract large crowds.[9] In 2015, the festival was again cancelled, due to difficulties from the organizers.[9]

Since 2016, the festival has been organized annually. The 2020 edition was cancelled due to Covid-19 pandemic. In 2021 a special edition celebrated the 50th anniversary of 1971 edition with only 400 free tickets available, due to restrictions caused by the pandemic.

Lineups

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Year Dates Main sponsor Lineup (notable acts)
1968 José Afonso, Carlos Paredes, Adriano Correia de Oliveira, Quinteto Académico, Shegundo Galarza
1971 31 July - 15 August 7 and 8 August: Elton John, Mannfred Mann's Earth Band, Quarteto 1111, Sindicato, Pop Five Music Inc., Celos, Pentágono

Third weekend: Amália Rodrigues, Duo Ouro Negro[5]

1982 31 July - 8 August U2, Echo & the Bunnymen, The Stranglers, The Gist, The Durutti Column, Johnny Copeland, A Certain Ratio, Sun Ra Arkestra, Rip Rig Panic, Renaissance, Mikis Theodorakis, Carlos Paredes, GNR, Vitorino [10]
1996 9-11 August Super Bock The Stone Roses, The Young Gods, Pato Banton, Madredeus, Xutos & Pontapés, Da Weasel, Primitive Reason, Tara Perdida[11]
1999 20-22 August The Pretenders, Tindersticks, Joe Strummer, Eagle-Eye Cherry, Madder Rose, Soul Coughing, Mad Professor, Catatonia, Silence 4
2000 14-16 July Iron Maiden, Alanis Morissette, Skunk Anansie, Sonic Youth, The Priory of Brion feat. Robert Plant, Rollins Band, Frank Black, Rui Veloso, Lúcia Moniz[12]
2001 13-15 July Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Megadeth, Ben Harper, Beck, Fantômas, Xutos & Pontapés, Sérgio Godinho, Clã
2002 12-14 July Rammstein, UB40, Bush, Manu Chao, Lamb, Cake, Da Weasel, Primitive Reason
2003 18-20 July Public Enemy, Guano Apes, Tricky, HIM, Sepultura, Rufus Wainwright, David Fonseca, Blasted Mechanism[13]
2004 16-18 July Bob Dylan, The Cure, Peter Gabriel, The Chemical Brothers, PJ Harvey, Ice-T, Macy Gray, Clã[14]
2005 28-31 July Nightwish, Peter Murphy, Robert Plant, Joss Stone, Within Temptation, Anathema, Porcupine Tree, Faithless, Joe Cocker, Echo & The Bunnymen, Blues Explosion, Jorge Palma[15]
2006 21-23 July Iggy & The Stooges, Sepultura, Cradle of Filth, Tricky, Mojave 3, Moonspell, Soulfly, Xutos & Pontapés[16]
2014 31 July - 2 August Guano Apes, UB40, The Stranglers, Tricky, Pedro Abrunhosa, Xutos & Pontapés, La Unión, Deolinda[17]
2016 25-27 August Peter Murphy, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, The Waterboys, Tindersticks, Happy Mondays, Peter Hook and the Light, Milky Chance, António Zambujo, David Fonseca, Blasted Mechanism, Linda Martini, The Legendary Tigerman[18]
2017 24-26 August EDP Primal Scream, George Ezra, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Morcheeba, The Dandy Warhols, The Psychedelic Furs, The Boomtown Rats, The Mission, 2ManyDJs (DJ set), Salvador Sobral[19]
2018 23-25 August Peter Murphy, Incubus, Deus, The Pretenders, Editors, James, The Human League, Public Image Ltd, Kitty, Daisy & Lewis, Crystal Fighters, John Cale, David Fonseca, GNR[20]
2019 22-24 August Manic Street Preachers, The Offspring, Prophets of Rage, The Cult, Skunk Anansie, Gogol Bordello, Anna Calvi, Nitzer Ebb, The Wedding Present, Killing Joke, The Sisters of Mercy, Fischer-Z, Gang of Four, The House of Love, Linda Martini[21]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Os festivais de Verão ainda não acabaram: estão aí o EDP Vilar de Mouros e o Forte | Música | PÚBLICO".
  2. ^ "Vilar de Mouros: O que aconteceu em 1971?". www.sabado.pt (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  3. ^ "Vilar de Mouros: As histórias do Woodstock português - JN". www.jn.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Vilar de Mouros Um festival amaldicoado - JN". www.jn.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Ferreira, Rita Dantas. "Vilar de Mouros. O sonho do Dr. Barge continua". Observador (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  6. ^ "Morreu o pai do Festival de Vilar de Mouros". PÚBLICO (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  7. ^ "BLITZ – "Homens de mão na mão, a dançar de roda" e "sexo entre dois pares". Como a polícia política controlava os festivais antes do 25 de Abril". Jornal blitz (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  8. ^ "BLITZ – Festival Vilar de Mouros regressa em 2014, promete Câmara de Caminha". Jornal blitz (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  9. ^ a b Observador. "Festival Vilar de Mouros foi cancelado". Observador (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-25.
  10. ^ Portugal, Rádio e Televisão de. "Cronologia de todos os festivais de Vilar de Mouros". Cronologia de todos os festivais de Vilar de Mouros (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  11. ^ "Ao Vivo... Festival Vilar de Mouros" (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  12. ^ "Festival Vilar de Mouros 2000 - Vilar de Mouros". Maiden France (in French). 2000-07-16. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  13. ^ "Ao vivo... Festival Vilar de Mouros 2003" (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  14. ^ "Ao vivo... Festival Vilar de Mouros 2004" (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  15. ^ "Noticias edição Internet: Vilar de Mouros 2005". Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  16. ^ Pm (2006-07-21). "JAZZminde blog: Festival Vilar de Mouros 2006". JAZZminde blog. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  17. ^ SAPO. "Festival Vilar de Mouros 2014 anuncia cartaz completo". SAPO Mag (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  18. ^ "Vilar de Mouros 2016 já tem cartaz principal completo". Wav (in European Portuguese). 2016-06-07. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  19. ^ Redação (2017-07-24). "Guia: Falta um mês para Vilar de Mouros. Saiba tudo (tudo, tudo)". O Minho (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  20. ^ "EDP Vilar de Mouros 2018: Horários e Informações Úteis | Arte Sonora". Arte Sonora: Revista de Música e Instrumentos Musicais (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  21. ^ AMF.COOL. "Festival Vilar de Mouros 2019". amf.cool. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
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