Fu 10 Galician Night Work «2K»
Hanging from ancient chestnut trees, fishing nets woven with fairy lights. Long communal tables groaned under the weight of pementos de Padrón (some mild, some fiery—a game of roulette you play with your soul), polbo á feira , and steaming bowls of caldo galego . The air smelled of eucalyptus, woodsmoke, and wet earth. FU 10 Galician Night did not simply mix genres; it fused roots with the future. The night opened with a gaita solo—a lone piper standing on the highest terrace, playing a muiñeira that cut through the chatter like a blade of memory. For five minutes, 3,000 people went silent. Then the drums kicked in.
If you were there, you carry a piece of Galicia in your chest now. The scent of wet granite. The taste of queimada on your lips. The echo of a gaita in a techno beat.
If you missed it... do not worry. The sea remembers. And FU 11 is already listening. Soutelo do Monte, Galicia August 23–24, 2024 Presented by Festival FU in collaboration with Xunta de Galicia & Asociación de Meigas do Morrazo fu 10 galician night
Local heroes brought their raw, feminist reinterpretation of traditional alalás , their voices cracking with Atlantic grief and joy. Then came the pivot: DJ Sra. Catro layered field recordings of Galician cantareiras over a 140 BPM techno pulse. The dance floor—a mix of avós in wooden clogs and kids in neon fishnets—moved as one.
There are nights that feel like a whisper. Then there are nights that feel like a storm gathering over the Rías Baixas —charged, mystical, and impossible to forget. FU 10 Galician Night was the latter. Hanging from ancient chestnut trees, fishing nets woven
“Unha noite, mil mareas.” (One night, a thousand tides.)
For the tenth edition of the FU Festival, something shifted. The organizers didn't just want another party. They wanted a ritual. A tribute to the raw, haunting, and euphoric spirit of Galicia. And so, under a sky painted with the last gold of dusk and the first silver of stars, the took over. The Setting: A Stone Stage Between Sea and Forest Imagine this: An abandoned pazo stone courtyard, its granite walls warmed by thousands of candles and flickering LED veins. Moss creeps up the corners. The Atlantic Ocean breathes less than a kilometer away, its fog rolling in like a second audience. This was the FU 10 main stage—not built, but revealed . FU 10 Galician Night did not simply mix
A young couple from Berlin sat next to an old man from Muxía. He offered them aguardiente from a flask. “ Grazas pola noite ,” they said. Thank you for the night. He smiled, his gold tooth catching the first light. “ Esta noite non é miña. É de todos os que escoitan o mar. ” (This night isn't mine. It's for everyone who listens to the sea.) In an age of globalized, soulless festivals, FU 10 Galician Night dared to be local. It did not translate itself for an international crowd; instead, it invited the world to learn its words, its silences, its storms. It proved that tradition is not a museum piece—it's a bonfire you can dance around.
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