Half a century ago, Plácido Domingo sang for the first time at Barcelona's Gran Teatre del Liceu. At that time, Madrid’s Teatro Real couldn’t host operas due to structural problems in the building, and the Liceu was the most important opera house in Spain. So Domingo’s career was initially built on his impressive performances on this stage. The Liceu is in a certain way his home, and it is evident even nowadays, as tickets were sold out long before this concert performance of Thaïs, singing Athänael, a role he added to his repertoire just five years ago.
Aged 76, it is impressive to see how Domingo is still able to make good music and how his presence on stage can overshadow any other performer. His voice is no longer at its best, but after fifty years performing in the world's main opera houses he knows very well how to deliver musical emotion to the audience from the very first bar.
Athanäel is no short, secondary role. It requires being on-stage almost continuously, depicting a psychology that evolves from absolute security at the beginning (Thaïs is a sinner who needs to be converted to the Christian faith) to doubts until he finally falls in love with her. Although the opera was offered in a concert version, Domingo did not just sing, but moved and behaved as the character would have been required to do in a staged performance. He did so with elegance and effectiveness.