The Manna They are already warming up their engines for their arrival in Spain in June and July, where they will stop with their new world tour, ‘México Lindo y Querido’. The lucky Spanish fans of the Mexican band will have many opportunities to see their favorite group, as they will stop at Barcelona, ​​Valencia, Murcia, Fuengirola, A Coruña, Bilbao, Madrid, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Chiclana.

But they are not the only ones anxious for that moment to arrive. This is clear from the interview that the group recently gave to EFE. And the box office response from the Spanish public to the tour is being very satisfactory for the musicians. “Hearing how people sing in Spain, it is an amazing audience, a very energetic audience, very effusive, with a lot of adrenaline. They sing amazingly,” says vocalist Fher Olvera.

He himself recommends to his Spanish fans “that hurry up to buy your ticket because if not, then they will want it resell very expensive and we don’t like that”, and promises them that “They are going to eat a little piece of Mexicoa little piece of Mexican taco made into music”.

“Sharing Maná’s music with the Spanish was very hard work, but when we put both legs on the field, the people loved us, there was a lot of empathy and we loved them. The mosaic of cultures that Spain has is amazing We play in many countries and it is amazing to go to Spain, we are very excited“, he claimed.

New works on the way: compilation and studio album

After ten studio albums, Maná will soon release a compilation of duets titled ‘Noches de Cantina’ which includes collaborations with artists of the caliber of Alejandro Sanz, Pablo Alborán or Christian Nodal. “The collaborations have been very nutritious for the band. Listening to young voices, performing our songs, like Pablo Alborán, Christian Nodal, Alejandro Sanz is a pleasure,” said Fher. In addition, they are also preparing their eleventh full-length work.

“I could humbly tell you that I think we are a band that Over the years we have become better“added the drummer, for whom the example is groups like the Rolling Stoneswho still play “like when they were kids.”

About reggaeton and current music

The Maná also had time to reflect deeply on current music and the simplistic and hypersexualized lyrics of a certain type of reggaeton. We are “a group that is not good enough to move our asses and be jumping and twerking. But we can make a song that you can send to a boy or a girl,” says Fher, who gives more value to the concerts, to the number of people who make an effort to pay for a ticket, than to the impact and dissemination on social networks.

Thus, the band promises a new album as well engaged “because right now there are many topics to talk about, the planet, politics, very convulsed“. “Now is when we have to talk about many things, not only social, but also environmental and everything that happens to our planet, that it is urgent yesterday to stop everything about CO2 gas emissions and the way to move the world,” concluded Fher.