
Event Details
Date
Time
9:00 PM - 11:30 PM
Location
Super Bock Arena – Pavilhão Rosa Mota, Rua de Dom Manuel II, 4050-345 Porto
Porto, Portugal
Price
from €30 to €50
About This Event
Felipe Amorim Live at Super Bock Arena Porto: Brazil's Forró Phenomenon Makes His Portuguese Debut on April 26, 2026
There are nights that Porto marks in its collective calendar. Not just the big stadium events with global names, but the nights when something genuinely new arrives in the city — when an artist who has been building a cultural phenomenon somewhere else finally crosses the Atlantic and stands on a Portuguese stage for the first time. Sunday, April 26, 2026 is one of those nights.
Felipe Amorim — the Fortaleza-born artist who has quietly become one of the most significant figures in a new generation of Brazilian popular music, accumulating billions of streams on digital platforms with a sound that fuses Forró, Pop, Funk, and Electronic Music into something addictive and entirely his own — makes his first ever solo concert in Portugal at the Super Bock Arena – Pavilhão Rosa Mota in Porto.
Doors open at 19:30, show at 21:00, duration approximately 90 minutes. Tickets from €30 to €50 at superbockarena.pt and BOL.
When the announcement came in September 2025, the caption was simple: "O Porto vai parar!" — Porto is going to stop. That level of confidence is not misplaced. This is a first. And first times, when the artist is Felipe Amorim, tend to be memorable.
Who Is Felipe Amorim? The Voice of Brazil's Northeast Coming of Age
Felipe Amorim was born and raised in Fortaleza, the capital of Ceará state in northeastern Brazil — a city of nearly 2.7 million people, one of Brazil's largest, and the heartland of Forró: the rhythmic, deeply communal dance music tradition of the Brazilian Northeast that has been a central part of the region's cultural identity for over a century.
Before anyone outside Brazil had heard his name as a solo artist, Amorim had already been shaping the sound that millions were dancing to. He was — and continues to be — one of the most sought-after songwriters and composers for Brazil's biggest Forró and Arrocha stars: Wesley Safadão (whose audiences routinely number in the hundreds of thousands at festivals), Xand Avião, and Barões da Pisadinha are among the names for whom Amorim has written hit songs.
Writing behind the scenes is one thing. Standing at the front is another. In 2021, Amorim launched his solo career under his own name — and the transition was immediate, substantial, and global. The numbers accumulated quickly: billions of views and streams across digital platforms, a devoted international fanbase, and the recognition that the man who had been writing the hits was now making his own.
The Sound: Where the Northeast Meets the World
The specific quality of Amorim's music — the thing that has made it travel so effectively beyond the Brazilian Northeast to international Portuguese-speaking communities and then beyond — is the fusion it achieves between tradition and modernity without sacrificing either.
Forró at its root is a music of rhythmic urgency, of movement, of communal celebration. The accordion, the triangle, the zabumba drum create a rhythmic engine that is deeply physical — you do not listen to Forró passively. Amorim takes that engine and plugs it into contemporary Pop, Funk, and Electronic Music production — specifically the kind of production associated with his long-term creative partners Kaleb Capitão and Caio Djay, who co-produced his most recent album.
The result has a specific quality: it sounds current without losing the emotional warmth of the tradition it comes from. Songs like "No Ouvidinho", "Sem Sentimento", and "Vou na sua casa" are the anthems that have become mandatory at parties and events across Brazil and the Brazilian diaspora — music that people know without having consciously decided to learn it, because it has been in every room they've been in.
The Show: "MODO REPEAT" as a Live Audiovisual Experience
The April 26 Porto concert presents Amorim's most recent project in its full live form — and that form goes significantly beyond what most concerts offer.
"MODO REPEAT" is described by the promoters not as an album performed live, but as "an audiovisual experience conceived with a cinematographic narrative". The show was conceived by Amorim in collaboration with Kaleb Capitão and Caio Djay as a total production: lighting design, visual content, staging, and the musical setlist together constitute a single artistic statement rather than a series of independent elements.
The setlist includes all the viral hits — "No Ouvidinho", "Sem Sentimento", "Vou na sua casa" — alongside the deeper album material, performed in an order and with a production logic that the team has carefully constructed to create an experience with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Duration: approximately 90 minutes
For a first Portuguese concert, the ambition is considerable. This is not an artist arriving cautiously to test the market. This is an artist arriving with his full production, his full artistic vision, and the intention of giving Porto a show that justifies the years of anticipation.
Super Bock Arena – Pavilhão Rosa Mota: Porto's Premier Indoor Venue
The venue for this historic debut is Porto's most important indoor concert and events arena. Super Bock Arena – Pavilhão Rosa Mota at Jardins do Palácio de Cristal, Rua de Dom Manuel II, 4050-346 Porto sits in the Palácio de Cristal gardens district of western Porto — one of the city's most beautiful settings, with the park surrounding the arena offering views across the Douro River valley and the Atlantic horizon beyond.
The Pavilhão Rosa Mota — named after the Porto-born marathon runner who won three World Marathon Majors and the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic marathon gold medal — has been Porto's principal indoor arena since its construction in the 1950s. Renovated and substantially updated in recent years, it functions as the Super Bock Arena under its current commercial branding, hosting the full spectrum of major concerts, international touring shows, and sporting events.
The arena's capacity — in excess of 7,000 for standing concert configurations — makes it the right scale for an artist of Amorim's current profile: large enough to create the collective energy that a show like "MODO REPEAT" needs, intimate enough that the connection between performer and audience is direct rather than distant.
Upcoming concerts at the Super Bock Arena in the same period include Tame Impala (April 4), and Juanes World Tour 2026 (July 26) — company that confirms the venue's position as Porto's home for international touring at the highest level.
Practical Information for April 26
- DetailInformationDateSunday, April 26, 2026Doors19:30Show21:00Durationapproximately 90 minutesAgePermitted from age 6 (under 3 free with paying adult)Tickets€30 – €50Ticket Platformssuperbockarena.pt (official)
- BOL (bol.pt)
- TicketSwap for resale
- OrganiserMalpeventArtistFelipe Amorim — born Fortaleza, Ceará, Brazil; songwriter for Wesley Safadão, Xand Avião, Barões da Pisadinha; solo career since 2021GenreForró / Pop / Funk / Electronic MusicAlbum Concept"MODO REPEAT" (produced with Kaleb Capitão and Caio Djay) — audiovisual experience with cinematographic narrativeKey Songs"No Ouvidinho", "Sem Sentimento", "Vou na sua casa"ContextFirst ever solo concert in Portugal; only confirmed Portugal date in 2026TransportMetro Line E (Purple) to Casa da Música + 10 min walk
- STCP buses 201/207
- Uber recommended for evening
Porto in Late April: A City Made for a Sunday Night Out
April 26 puts you in Porto at one of the finest moments of the year — the city in mid-to-late spring, warm and alive, the Douro River reflecting the long afternoon light, the outdoor terraces full and the streets busy with people who are genuinely glad to be outside.
Porto Before the Show
The Ribeira and Ponte Luís I:
Start the day at Porto's Ribeira — the riverside quarter of medieval streets, coloured facades, and wooden Rabelo boats along the Douro's north bank — and walk across the lower tier of the Ponte Luís I to Vila Nova de Gaia for a port wine cellar tour. The major port wine lodges (Sandeman, Taylor's, Graham's, Ramos Pinto) all offer guided tours and tastings — typically €20–25 per person, fully worth the time. The view back across the Douro to Porto from Gaia's riverside is one of the most photographed in Portugal.
Livraria Lello and the Bolhão Market:
Walk back up into the city through the Bairro dos Leiteiros to the Livraria Lello — the extraordinary neo-Gothic bookshop whose carved wooden interior and sweeping red staircase have made it one of the most visited bookshops in the world. A short walk east brings you to the Mercado do Bolhão — Porto's magnificent 19th-century iron market, recently restored, where Minhota regional produce, fresh fish, flowers, and Portuguese crafts fill the stalls under the open sky of the central courtyard.
The Palácio de Cristal Gardens:
In the late afternoon, make your way up to the Jardins do Palácio de Cristal — the gardens surrounding the Super Bock Arena, which offer some of the finest panoramic views in Porto: the Douro River winding west toward the Atlantic, the Gaia lodges on the opposite bank, and the Atlantic horizon beyond. Walking through these gardens before the show, watching Porto's Sunday evening fill with people and music, is one of the better ways to spend an hour in this city.
Brazil in Porto, for the First Time
The Brazilian community in Porto — and in Portugal broadly — has been waiting for a Felipe Amorim concert since before his solo career began. The Portuguese-Brazilian cultural relationship runs deep: shared language, shared music, shared cultural references built across decades of Brazilian television, music, and film that are as present in Portuguese homes as anything produced domestically.
When Amorim steps onto the Super Bock Arena stage on Sunday, April 26, 2026 at 21:00, the audience will know every word. The energy of Fortaleza, of the Brazilian Northeast, of billions of streams and parties and dance floors across two continents will be entirely alive in a concert hall in the Palácio de Cristal gardens, overlooking the Douro.
That is what a first time looks like. Tickets at superbockarena.pt from €30.
Verified Information at a Glance
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Event | Felipe Amorim — First Solo Concert in Portugal |
| Category | Live Music / Brazilian Forró-Pop / Concert / Solo Show |
| Date | Sunday, April 26, 2026 |
| Doors | 19:30 |
| Show Time | 21:00 |
| Duration | approximately 90 minutes |
| Venue | Super Bock Arena – Pavilhão Rosa Mota |
| Address | Jardins do Palácio de Cristal, Rua de Dom Manuel II, 4050-346 Porto, Portugal |
| Ticket Price | €30 – €50 (official) |
| Ticket Platforms | superbockarena.pt / BOL (bol.pt) / TicketSwap (resale) |
| Age Rating | Permitted from age 6; under 3 free with paying adult |
| Organiser | Malpevent |
| Artist | Felipe Amorim — born Fortaleza, Ceará, Brazil; songwriter for Wesley Safadão, Xand Avião, Barões da Pisadinha; solo career since 2021 |
| Genre | Forró / Pop / Funk / Electronic Music |
| Album Concept | "MODO REPEAT" (produced with Kaleb Capitão and Caio Djay) — audiovisual experience with cinematographic narrative |
| Key Songs | "No Ouvidinho", "Sem Sentimento", "Vou na sua casa" |
| Context | First ever solo concert in Portugal; only confirmed Portugal date in 2026 |
| Transport | Metro Line E (Purple) to Casa da Música + 10 min walk; STCP buses 201/207; Uber recommended for evening |
More Events in Porto
Event Details
Date
Time
9:00 PM - 11:30 PM
Location
Super Bock Arena – Pavilhão Rosa Mota, Rua de Dom Manuel II, 4050-345 Porto
Porto, Portugal
Price
from €30 to €50




