Start date August 1, 1991 No. of shows 224 | End date December 18, 1992 Period 1991 – 18 December 1992 | |
Metallica oakland ca usa 1991 10 12 full concert
Wherever We May Roam (mentioned by band members in interviews as Wherever I May Roam) was the fifth concert tour by the American thrash metal band Metallica. It began in autumn of 1991. The North American legs ran through summer 1992, followed by the Guns N' Roses/Metallica Stadium Tour, the Wherever We May Roam European leg, and finally the Nowhere Else to Roam tour of smaller markets in North America, Mexico, Asia, Australia, South America, Europe and Israel, ending in the summer of 1993.
Contents
- Metallica oakland ca usa 1991 10 12 full concert
- First typical setlist
- Second typical setlist
- The show
- Personnel
- References
These initial North American shows took place in arenas, with multiple dates in largely populated areas not uncommon. The band was at a commercial peak, following the release of their fifth album as well as their highly successful and best-selling album called Metallica (The Black Album) and its breakthrough hit "Enter Sandman". The leg of the tour overlapped with the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert, which Metallica performed a short setlist at.
The 1991 European leg was part of the Monsters of Rock festival. The last concert of that leg, held on September 28, 1991, at Tushino Airfield in Moscow, was described as "the first free outdoor Western rock concert in Soviet history" and had a crowd estimated between 150,000 and 500,000 people, with some unofficial estimates as high as 1,600,000. On the North American leg, the January 13 and 14, 1992 shows in San Diego were later released in the box set Live Shit: Binge & Purge, while the tour and the album were later documented in A Year and a Half in the Life of Metallica.
During the Guns N' Roses/Metallica Stadium Tour, Hetfield suffered second and third degree burns to his arms, face, hands, and legs during a live performance of the introduction of "Fade to Black".
First typical setlist
(Taken from the Cincinnati, Ohio Riverfront Coliseum show on March 2, 1992)
- "Enter Sandman"
- "Creeping Death"
- "Harvester of Sorrow"
- "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)"
- "Sad but True"
- "Wherever I May Roam"
- Bass Solo
- "Through the Never"
- "The Unforgiven"
- "Justice Medley"
- "Eye of the Beholder"
- "Blackened"
- "The Frayed Ends of Sanity"
- "...And Justice for All"
- "Blackened"
- Drum solo
- Guitar solo
- "Nothing Else Matters"
- "For Whom the Bell Tolls"
- "Fade to Black"
- "Whiplash"
- "Master of Puppets"
- "Seek & Destroy"
- "One"
- "Last Caress" (originally performed by the Misfits)
- "Am I Evil?" (originally performed by Diamond Head)
- "Battery"
- "Stone Cold Crazy" (originally performed by Queen)
Second typical setlist
Taken from the Rome, Italy Palamarino show on November 16, 1992
- "Enter Sandman"
- "Creeping Death"
- "Harvester of Sorrow"
- "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)"
- "Sad but True"
- "Wherever I May Roam"
- "The Unforgiven"
- "Justice Medley"
- "Eye of the Beholder"
- "Blackened"
- "The Frayed Ends of Sanity"
- "...And Justice for All"
- "Blackened"
- Bass Solo
- Guitar Solo
- "Through the Never"
- "For Whom the Bell Tolls
- "Fade to Black"
- "Master of Puppets"
- "Seek & Destroy"
- "Whiplash"
- "Nothing Else Matters"
- "Am I Evil?" (originally performed by Diamond Head)
- "Last Caress" (originally performed by the Misfits)
- "One"
- "Battery"
- "Stone Cold Crazy" (originally performed by Queen)
The show
The band dispensed with supporting acts on the tour, billing it on tickets as "An Evening with Metallica / No Opening Act". Instead, a video presentation was shown before the concerts actually started which lasted about 20 or 25 minutes. Included might be clips of local sights near the venue, Metallica shopping in local stores, roadies prepping the arena, Lars Ulrich walking around backstage giving introductions and reciting band history, or other band members engaging in various hijinks. The video would conclude with a montage of "Enter Sandman" with film clips of Clint Eastwood in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.
Setlists consisted of a mixture of Metallica (The Black Album) material with fan-favorite songs from their first four albums. Shows were typically three hours long.
The stage itself was a diamond form, with a number of singing and playing positions as well as drum kit positions that would allow band members to rotate around. Some selected fans were located in a pit inside the stage area.
Once in the show's midsection, individual unaccompanied solo slots were offered up, typically a bass solo, then later a drum solo, and in another while a guitar one. The drum slot was often the most popular, with a second drum kit popping up and Hetfield taking a seat, dueling with Ulrich. Drum parts from other bands such as Slayer might be quoted, or Kirk Hammett might appear to play a bit of "Smoke on the Water" along the drums.