Concert review

The best farewell to remember Joaquín Sabina

The Andalusian singer-songwriter fills the Palau Sant Jordi in the first of two concerts of his latest tour in Barcelona.

Joaquín Sabina

  • Sant Jordi Palace. October 2, 2025

"It's wonderful to sing with you," Joaquín Sabina repeated several times. That was it, to sing for the last time accompanying the singer-songwriter from Úbeda. "It's wonderful," he insisted, overwhelmed by the response of the audience that filled the Palau Sant Jordi for the first of Sabina's last two concerts in Barcelona (the second is on Saturday). Tickets were sold out, and everyone was seated and in place when the performance began at 9:20 p.m., twenty minutes later than scheduled precisely to allow time for those who suffered circulatory collapse due to The demonstration protesting the Israeli assault on the flotilla that wanted to reach Gaza.

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Sabina folds at 76 years old, at least from his musical life on stage, as he did three years ago Joan Manuel Serrat, teacher and colleague who did not want to miss the performance, and who he made stand up to receive an ovation before dedicating it to him Melancholy StreetBy the way, a few minutes before I had remembered the times when I listened The man in the street, by Quico Pino de la Sierra; Tribute to Teresa, by Ovidi Montllor, and Palabras de amor, "del chico del Poble-sec".

The concert started with the cards facing up. "Barcelona, ​​​​hello and goodbye" projected on the screens, like the video clip ofThe Last Waltz, to make it clear that now yes, now he is leaving of his own free will, and not because his health or a fall forces him to give up. Marble tears and I deny everything, twilight recapitulations of glories and miseries, served as a prelude before entering the sensitive material. Sabina, wearing a hat and light-colored jacket, sings them sitting on a stool, his voice full of reverberation, in tune but hoarse like a plastered wall that has seen them in every color. He takes his bow, accepts the ovation, and manages the emotion with serenity and gratitude. There will be rigor and few jokes throughout two hours. Only the memory of the best Sabina: the author of a songbook that is so difficult to cover because only Sabina's voice, the younger and the one of today, makes him truly credible.

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Anthological repertoire

It's immediately clear that this will be a night of anthological repertoire, a well-chosen selection from the entire discography. White lies, a tragicomedy that he performs with a smile, and settles into the best of his work. "As I knew this would be the last tour, I opened the trunk of half-forgotten old songs to recover some," he says, lying a little, because immediately afterward he does Melancholy Street, "the second or third" he composed, he says. It's true that it had been dropped from the live repertoire for years, but it can by no means be considered half-forgotten: just look at how the audience sings it. He links it to the rumba de rumbas 19 days and 500 nights. These are two songs that condense the best of Sabina, the lyrical talent especially gifted for melancholy, and the narrator of stories of heartbreak and spite with just the right dose of drama and fun. This sequence, completed with Who robbed me in April?, demonstrates the depth of Sabina's legacy in Spanish-language songwriting, and the respect he is showing for the audience on this tour so that the farewell is worthy of the connection so many people have with his songbook.

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It also respects the band, efficient as always and this time with more flair to take on a more leisurely repertoire, performed with less stridency than on previous tours. It introduces the musicians mid-concert while they play More than a hundred lies: Jaime Asúa (guitar), Mara Barros (vocals), Laura Gómez Palma (bass), Pedro Barceló (drums), Borja Montenegro (guitar), José Sagaste (saxophone and keyboards) and Antonio García de Diego (keyboards, vocals, guitar and musical direction).

"As it is the farewell tour, I have decided to fulfill some unfulfilled fantasies. Two, specifically. When I finished a song I always thought about how it would sound in the voice of a girl. And when I finished a rock song, I thought about how it would sound in the voice of a real rocker. I leave you with the best of the girls. leaving the stage as she has done on other tours so that Mara Torres and Jaime Asúa could sing a few songs. Two, specifically: Empty legs she, and Gentleman's agreement he.

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Bob Dylan and Chavela Vargas

Sabina returns with a black hat and a black shirt with white dots, and sitting down he continues to give away great songs, like Dylanesque City pieces (a weakness of this chronicler), the Sabina who picks up influences naturally. He also makes Along the boulevard of broken dreams, which takes the opportunity to pay tribute to Chavela Vargas, and the band plays it with the impetus of Glory days Bruce Springsteen, another influence, this one perhaps less obvious. At this point in the concert, it's clear that the event will be memorable in the best sense. The most exciting moment comes almost by surprise. Sabina and Torres share A song for the Magdalena, and he drags out the last verse as if his breath had surrendered its weapons. He breathes. The audience rises and cheers him on. He takes off his hat and looks without looking. We have it. Goosebumps. Applause. As Sabina repeated, "how wonderful." It's understandable that a musician never wants to leave the stage. There's no drug capable of offering a reward of that magnitude.

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With the acoustic guitar as a shield, he makes And it was ten o'clock., whose intimacy suits him well, without hammering home the rhetorical point of nostalgia. He marches to a standing ovation, of course. The band begins the encore with Antonio García de Diego singing. The most beautiful song in the world, and Sabina returns with a jacket and black t-shirt to climb the final stretch with So young and so old, Bob Dylan again in the rearview mirror, and also with a very exciting tone that equally soaks With youIt's the Sabina of a small venue, but in a huge space where the chorus sung by the audience resonates. The ending, of course, had to be grand, with the electric guitars and the saxophone at full blast to catapult PrincessTwo hours to say goodbye. The best possible farewell to Joaquín Sabina. On Saturday, another sold-out performance at the Palau Sant Jordi. Then, three concerts in Valencia, two in Bilbao, and six in Madrid.