
Singer Victor Manuel He remembered his youth and years Anti-Franco strugglehas been marked Threats from right-wing extremist groupsnext to Gonzo in Save to Sixth. The grandson of a shotgunner and the son of a railroad worker, he reviewed decades of music and memories filled with fear and resistance.
He remembers the 1970s and his life as a member of PCE. “I feel more afraid now, when I approach the place where Ana Belen and I lived. “I didn’t think anything could happen, but now I’m afraid,” he said, recalling the days of tension and secrecy.
His struggle is what made him goal Attacks. Victor remembered how he got in 1975 They planted two bombs: One at his home and the other at Torellodon’s work. “It was just air,” a Civil Guard sergeant said, although one of the firecrackers that blew off the door was signed “Christ the King Gangsters.” He replied sarcastically:Set a record that air has demolished half my house“.
Decades later, it was discovered who was behind it: A right-wing extremist man from his townAfter a short period in prison, he moved to Brazil. “In the end we learned that he had planted bombs in our house in Malasaña, and that But there were victimsVictor Manuel explained.
Despite the danger, he was never afraid. “To scare you you will have to go home and not leave. I continued singing, it was my profession, it seemed to me It was worth it to keep touching the ballsHe concluded by explaining how music was his way of resistance during the most difficult years of the Franco regime.