Album: Shish (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • Shish is an abbreviation for Shishmaref, a small Inupiat village of around 600 residents on a narrow barrier island on the Chukchi Sea, just five miles from the Alaskan mainland on the Seward Peninsula.

    Portugal. The Man's founding members John Gourley and Zach Carothers grew up in Wasilla, Alaska, and their family has deep ties to Shishmaref through dog mushing culture. Their first sled dog came from the late Iditarod Hall-of-Famer Herbie Nayokpuk, known as the "Shishmaref Cannonball," and both of Gourley's parents competed in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race.

    The title track of Portugal. The Man's 10th album, "Shish" weaves together vivid Indigenous Alaskan detail - traditional clothing, subsistence wild berries, and native Devil's Club plant - to paint a raw portrait of rural adolescence. Gourley described the song and the rest of the album as being about "survival, connection, and ambition."
  • When Gourley visited Shishmaref in 2011, it wasn't for sightseeing, but to take stock. "I went there to learn where I come from as an Alaskan and how best to represent the people and land," he told The Sun. "It's a reminder that indigenous knowledge matters."
  • Other songs have drawn on Alaska's vast mythology:"Oh, What A Life" by American Authors was partly inspired by summiting Denali (Mount McKinley), while "Juneau" by Funeral For a Friend took its name from the state capital because, in the band's words, "it's a cold, harsh, unforgiving country." Maggie Rogers' "Alaska" uses the wilderness as a metaphor for personal transformation. "Shish," by contrast, is less interested in Alaska as symbol or backdrop; Gourley is writing from the inside, honoring the specific textures of Indigenous village life rather than reaching for the state's mythology.
  • In a move that would make cartographers weep with joy, many other Shish tracks are also named after an Alaskan location - "Denali," "Knik," "Tyonek," "Tanana" - turning the album into a kind of musical atlas.
  • The album cover image, an archival shot of a man hauling two seals across the snow, doesn't scream "easy listening," but it does set the tone: this is an album that knows exactly where it's from and isn't interested in softening the edges.
  • After fulfilling their deal with Atlantic Records, Gourley struck out on his own, founding KNIK Records and recording Shish at home with the band's touring drummer Kane Ritchotte. The songs, he told Luna, "just started naturally pouring out."
  • Personal circumstances also shaped the Shish album. Gourley's daughter Frances has a rare genetic disease, causing Parkinson's-like symptoms in children, and her resilience gave him a "punk" spirit as a touchstone while writing the record.

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