The Argentine musician, leader of the Redonditos de Ricota, will participate in an interview in Gelatina this Sunday at 8 p.m.
Carlos “Indio” Solari will reappear in public again this Sunday in an exclusive interview conducted by the journalist Pedro Rosemblat on his Gelatina streaming channel. The appointment will be from 8 p.m. on social networks.
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“Friends, a before and after for Gelatina. An immense joy. How can we not feel that way,” says Rosemblat on social networks, when presenting the program paraphrasing the song “Todo un palo” by Los Redondos.


“I think we’re going to have a good time chatting together for a while,” the artist is heard saying, that he has been limiting his public appearances, suffering from Parkinson’s.
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The last public appearance of Indio Solari
In his last public appearance, “Indio” closed the cycle of interviews “the Black Box” of Julio Leiva and he delved into his state of health: “I feel like ass. And what remedy do you have left? I have this super activity that keeps me abstracted from that and there I get a few rounds of rest. But as soon as I come back to reality, I’m already walking very badly“, admitted the artist about how his musical activity coexists with the Parkinson’s disease.
The leader of Los Fundamentalistas also referred to the political moment that Argentina is going through: “People are tired of the thread, and suddenly, they choose anything that seems new. The thing is that they have a very bad memory. This is not new. Thinking that this neoliberal government is new is the same thing that happened to us. “I have experienced it three times before.”said.
“And I think it’s… I don’t know if that can last long, because people are still with the inertia that caste and all that nonsense that was around the description of the income of these people, that disembarks to take care of everything. It’s like that.”
In another passage of the conversation, Solari praised the “impressive viola players” with whom he had the opportunity to collaborate in his career, in particular Skay Beilinson, Gaspar Benegas and Baltasar Comottoand revealed that he tries to “not look at anything that the Redondos are involved in” because it “gives him mixed feelings”: “Because on the one hand we did very, very valuable things in screwed up times. And on the other hand, what happened afterwards was a misery.”
Source: Ambito