San Francisco metal band Metallica, consisting of James Hetfield (vocals, rhythm guitar), Lars Ulrich (drums), Kirk Hammett (lead guitar), and Robert Trujillo (bass), played the second of their two 40th anniversary shows to a sold-out Chase Center in San Francisco on Sunday night. As was the case with Fridayâs well-received opening show, all 18,000 tickets were sold to the longtime âFifth Membersâ of the bandâs fan club, which put the band in the position of having to deliver a setlist that would surprise and please the bandâs most hardcore fans, who traveled in from dozens of states and five continents. Metallica would pull it off once again through another unique set presented in an in-the-round configuration, whose material ran in reverse chronological order, with the front half of the set bolstered by breakouts of six long-dormant songs before a second half of all-time classics.
The start of the show was nearly delayed when the buildingâs fire alarms were activated around five minutes before the house lights dimmed and evacuation orders appeared on the arenaâs display screens. Fortunately, it was a false alarm and the show started on time, with a Metallica photo montage running during AC/DCâs âItâs A Long Way To The Top If You Wanna Rock Nâ Rollâ, followed by a second photo montage narrated by Rage Against The Machineâs Tom Morello as Ennio Morriconeâs ‘The Ecstasy of Goldâ played.
Taking the opposite approach to Friday night, Sunday’s setlist ran in reverse chronological order, kicking off with the high-velocity title track of 2016âs Hardwired… to Self-Destruct LP, and âThe End Of The Lineâ from 2008âs Death Magnetic, a song that successfully recalls the bandâs mid-80s rifftastic prime.
The raw, unpolished St. Anger LP from 2003 was represented by âDirty Windowâ, one of the albumâs shorter, more direct songs, and was immediately offset by the oscillating, accessible cruncher âI Disappearâ, which appeared on 2000âs Mission Impossible 2 soundtrack. From there, the band headed offstage for a short break as a video played of all four band members talking about their favorite cover songs to play, and every cover song Metallica has ever recorded was seemingly mentioned at some point to tantalize the crowd, who were all trying to guess which song from 1998âs 2CD compilation of Garage, Inc might get the nod.
Metallica â “Dirty Window” â 12/19/21
[Video: hellawaits77NY]
Metallica â “I Disappear” â 12/19/21
[Video: hellawaits77NY]
Fortunately, Metallica would make one of the best choices of the weekend as Ulrich counted in the full-8-minute version of Diamond Headâs âAm I Evilâ for the first time since their 30th anniversary shows. This 1980 New Wave Of British Heavy Metal classic would serve as inspiration as well as a songwriting blueprint for the two albums the band would write with bassist Cliff Burton, who was killed in a tour bus crash in 1986. By the time it was finished, it had visibly changed the energy onstage, with Hetfield in particular projecting in an unusually bright and visible way that went well beyond his current-day “Papa Hetâ stage persona.
Hetfieldâs energy would continue through the next four songs from the bandâs mid-90s stadium-rock era and make this section of the show stand out even with what followed it. Reload from 1997 was represented by two songs instead of one, and theyâd be both of the albumâs staples: the slower sing-along âThe Memory Remainsâ, followed by Hetfieldâs signature anthem âFuelâ.
Next up were the last two major surprises of the set, both from 1996âs Load. First was the expansive, suspenseful âBleeding Meâ, a peak moment of the show with Hetfield barking out his lyrics with a level of intensity that made him admit, âThat was therapeutic,” to the crowd upon its conclusion. Next up was the underrated âWasting My Hate”, with each of the previous electric performances of these two songs coming a decade ago at the bandâs 30th-anniversary shows.
Metallica â “Bleeding Me” â 12/19/21
[Video: hellawaits77NY]
The second half of the concert featured more commonly played songs, but all of them were classics: 1991âs self-titled Black Album was represented by the slower âThe Unforgivenâ and its powerful Hammett solo, along with signature song âEnter Sandmanâ, whose mid-set placement gave it a novel feel. From there, the most surprising aspect of the second half of the show was that three of the bandâs best-loved albums only had one song played, but all of them were winners.
Metallica â “The Unforgiven” â 12/19/21
[Video: zerocool 18]
Mid-paced groover âHarvester Of Sorrowâ represented 1988âs âŠAnd Justice For All album, 1986âs Master Of Puppets was represented by its epic eight-minute title track, and the offering from 1984âs Ride The Lightning was âFade To Blackâ, the bandâs first signature slow-buildup song whose suicidal lyrics were offset by a heartfelt mid-song dedication from Hetfield, who advised anyone who might identify too closely with the lyrics that theyâre not alone.
The set and the show careened to a slam-bang conclusion with two songs from the bandâs 1983 debut Kill âEm Allâfirst the signature thrasher âWhiplashâ, followed by the direct, straight-ahead chugfest of âSeek And Destroyâ, whose street-fighting lyrics havenât prevented the song from becoming a group celebration in a live setting.
Overall, the band did justice to themselves and their legacy while representing all eras, digging out the deep cuts and still finding room for the classics. However, this night set itself apart from Fridayâs opener through its six breakouts in the first nine songs, with the most inspired of those choices prompting Hetfield to deliver one of his most powerful performances in years.
The overall mood was augmented by ongoing horseplay and wisecracking between all the band members as the set progressed, and despite the fact that these were one-off shows, Sunday’s gig had the feel of a well-oiled machine in a mid-tour setting, which was all the more remarkable given how many breakouts were in the set.
After the band took their final bows, Ulrich would get the last word, as usual: âWeâre just getting started! Weâll see you soon.”
Setlist: Metallica | Chase Center | San Francisco, CA | 12/19/21
Set: Hardwired, The End Of The Line [1], Dirty Window [2], I Disappear [3], Am I Evil [4], The Memory Remains, Fuel, Bleeding Me [5], Wasting My Hate [6], The Unforgiven, Enter Sandman, Harvester Of Sorrow, Master Of Puppets, Fade To Black, Whiplash, Seek & Destroy
[1] LTP 11/18/10
[2] LTP 12/10/11
[3] LTP 8/10/13
[4] LTP 2018, first full version since 12/5/11
[5] first electric version since 12/7/11
[6] first electric version since 12/7/11


