From May 29 to 31, Murmur Festival celebrates its sixth edition, delving into that idea of a short-distance festival that has turned the Almeria event into one of the most unique cultural experiences in Andalusia. 091, Miguel Campello, Rufus T. Firefly and Amparo Sánchez lead a program where music, gastronomy, nature and rurality once again dialogue from different corners of the Alpujarra of Almería.
Concerts in squares, wineries and natural spaces, local gastronomy, hiking, family activities and cultural programming distributed among municipalities such as Laujar de Andarax, Fondón, Padules, Almócita, Canjáyar, Rágol either Victoria Fountain They once again define the spirit of an event that continues to focus on closeness, coexistence and the bond with the land.
The main event on Saturday, May 30, will take place at the Laujar Bullring with a poster that once again combines historical names and contemporary proposals. 091 They will take to the Alpujarra that repertoire that has already become the collective memory of state rock, while Miguel Campello will once again display that mixture of flamenco roots, mestizo energy and spirituality so recognizable in his career. They will also be Rufus T. Fireflywith all those good things that they accumulate disc by disc, step by step, like a walk through that Alpujarra Almeriense. Then the electronic and elegant universe of Ale Acosta and contemporary folk The Nest.
One of the great attractions of Murmura continues to be precisely in those unique concerts that transform wineries and small rural spaces into unrepeatable stages. This year the Fuente Victoria Winery Stage will gather Bow, Guadalupe Silver, Maruja Lemon and the british The Molotovs in a format designed to experience music from a short distance and direct contact with the environment.
The programming will also extend again towards parallel activities that connect culture and territory: guided hiking routes, gastronomic breakfasts, stories from oral tradition, poetic slam, theater, DJ sessions or family proposals spread across different municipalities in the region. The closing will come on Sunday in Padules with the performance of Amparo Sanchezputting the finishing touch to an edition that once again understands culture as a way of inhabiting the landscape and sharing community.
Six years after his birth, Murmurs continues to demonstrate that there are still festivals capable of growing without losing their essence: less noise, more identity and a much more human relationship between music, territory and collective experience.

