Small boats performing habaneras in Port de Sóller at sunset, voices coming from the water

Habaneras in Port de Sóller: Seafaring Songs from the Water

At Playa d’en Repic small boats sail out again playing habaneras — melancholic Cuban seafaring songs that bathe the bay in golden light.

When boats sing: Habaneras over Playa d’en Repic

There are evenings when air and sound fit together like bread and sobrasada. In Port de Sóller (Habaneras en Port de Sóller: canciones cubanas de marineros, de nuevo en vivo junto a la bahía) one such evening is near: several ensembles set off in small boats and sail through the bay to sing habaneras (Habaneras en Puerto de Sóller: Canciones de marinero que recorren la bahía) — those slightly melancholic seafaring songs with a Cuban touch that have been part of the coastal music here for generations.

The special thing about the scene: the voices don't come from a stage but from the water. Those who sit on the wooden benches of the promenade or play with their toes at the water's edge hear the songs as if they came from out at sea. Children dig beside the towel, an older couple gently sways with the waves, and the red Sóller train puffs up the hairpins somewhere — a small, locally romantic picture.

Practical information for your visit

For day-trippers from Palma there are special connections again: on Saturday evening an extra train departs at 18:30 to Sóller, from where you continue by the historic tram to the harbor. The return trip is planned by bus around midnight. The group ticket costs €12 and can be purchased at the Sóller line station in Palma at the ticket office — open between 09:00 and 15:00.

If you can make it on Sunday: the special train already departs at 15:10 from Palma, also with a connection to the tram to Port de Sóller. The return is scheduled for 21:00. Tip: it gets chilly in the evening, the tram wind likes to whistle across the bay — a light jacket is always worthwhile.

What to expect on site

The atmosphere is relaxed, almost a bit old-fashioned in the best sense. The wooden benches along the promenade are sought after; being close to the quay means you can smell the salt and feel the voices up close. Those who want to get closer spread a towel or a small blanket on the shingle. Small stalls offer drinks and tapas — no big food trucks, rather familiar flavors: olives, pan con tomate, a glass of vermut.

The sound is pure: voices, the occasional clap of the waves, the distant chattering of a boat engine. It is precisely this mix that makes the appeal. Photographers and smartphone users should raise their lenses shortly before sunset: when the bay turns golden, the habaneras seem even more wistful and beautiful.

Those walking through the alleys already hear the songs before they see the bay — sometimes faint, sometimes near. For many Mallorcans the habaneras are a piece of home: a remembrance of emigrants, of longing, and of evenings when the world slows down.

For visitors it's a little cultural gift: it combines music, nature and tradition, invites to a cozy evening without much fuss and brings local voices into the spotlight. So: shoes that like cobblestones, a jacket against the evening wind and perhaps some small change for tapas — then nothing stands in the way of a successful evening at the harbor.

Enjoy listening — and if you drive there on a whim: the pier always smells a little of adventure.

Similar News