Jump to content

Damaged Justice

Page semi-protected
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Damaged Justice
Tour by Metallica
Associated album...And Justice for All
Start dateSeptember 11, 1988
End dateOctober 8, 1989
Legs5
No. of shows219
Metallica concert chronology

Damaged Justice was the fourth concert tour by the American heavy metal band Metallica. It began on September 11, 1988, and ended on October 8, 1989. The name is believed to be inspired either by the cover of its fourth studio album ...And Justice for All, or by the song "Damage, Inc." from the group's previous album, Master of Puppets. The single "One" was released during the tour.[1]

Itinerary

The Damaged Justice tour began in Europe on September 11, 1988, and Royal Air Force were the supporting act on the tour's first few dates.[2] Metallica then played two Monsters of Rock shows in Spain with Iron Maiden, Anthrax and Helloween, and played a few headlining shows with Anthrax,[3] before heading to the UK, where Danzig served as the opening act.[4] Queensrÿche replaced Danzig for the remainder of the European leg and also served as the supporting act for the tour's first North American leg.[5][6] Following this was Metallica's first tour of Australia, which included support by Mortal Sin.[7] The Cult were the opening act for the second North American leg of the tour from May 31 to September 1, 1989, and were replaced by Faith No More for remaining tour dates.[8][9] The Damaged Justice tour concluded with three shows in Brazil in October 1989.[10]

The tour marked the first and, to date, only time that Metallica has played in the U.S. state of Delaware. On August 7, 1989, the band headlined a special and very drunken gig at Newark's Stone Balloon, with Wrathchild America as the supporting act.[11]

The line-up from left to right; Jason Newsted (bass), Lars Ulrich (drums), James Hetfield (lead vocals/rhythm guitar), Kirk Hammett (lead guitar).

Recordings

The Damaged Justice tour was the first time the band had used live recordings of their concerts in single B-Sides and EP's (Those used on the Jump in the Fire single from 1984 were demos with faked audience noise dubbed over). The concert of February 5, 1989 was recorded and "For Whom the Bell Tolls", "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)", "Seek and Destroy" and "Creeping Death" were used as B-Sides for the "One" single in Europe and Japan, as well as the majority of the concert being re-released as part of Fan Can 4.

Both of the August 29 and 30, 1989, shows in Seattle were also recorded and "Harvester of Sorrow", "One", "Breadfan" and "Last Caress" were used for The Good, The Bad and The Live.[12] The same mix of these shows used here was used on the digital re-masters of the band's first four albums when uploaded to digital retailers, though a different set of songs were used in this case, two from the respective album. In 1993, these concerts were re-mixed and released as video in the box set Live Shit: Binge & Purge.

In 2020, Metallica released a live concert video of the Irvine show.[13]

Tour dates

List of 1988 concerts
Date City Country Venue
September 11, 1988 Budapest Hungary MTK Football Stadium
September 13, 1988 Padua Italy Palasport
September 14, 1988 Milan Palatrussardi
September 15, 1988 Bern Switzerland Festhalle
September 17, 1988 Pamplona Spain Plaza de Toros de Pamplona
September 18, 1988 Madrid Casa de Campo
September 20, 1988 Toulon France Espace Culture des Lices
September 21, 1988 Montpellier Zénith Sud
September 22, 1988 Barcelona Spain La Monumental
September 24, 1988 Edinburgh Scotland Edinburgh Playhouse
September 25, 1988
September 26, 1988 Bradford England St George's Hall
September 28, 1988 Newport Wales Newport Centre
September 29, 1988 Birmingham England NEC Arena
September 30, 1988 Sheffield Sheffield City Hall
October 1, 1988 Antrim Northern Ireland Antrim Forum
October 3, 1988 Dublin Ireland Top Hat
October 4, 1988
October 6, 1988 Newcastle England Newcastle City Hall
October 8, 1988 Manchester Manchester Apollo
October 9, 1988 London Hammersmith Odeon
October 10, 1988
October 11, 1988
October 13, 1988 Copenhagen Denmark K.B. Hallen
October 15, 1988 Helsinki Finland Helsinki Ice Hall
October 17, 1988 Stockholm Sweden Solnahallen
October 18, 1988 Oslo Norway Skedsmohallen
October 19, 1988 Gothenburg Sweden Frölundaborg
October 21, 1988 Munich West Germany Rudi-Sedlmayer-Halle
October 22, 1988 Saarbrücken Saarlandhalle
October 23, 1988 Würzburg Carl-Diem-Halle
October 24, 1988 Hanover Niedersachsenhalle
October 26, 1988 Cologne Sporthalle
October 27, 1988 Dortmund Westfalenhallen
October 28, 1988 Heidelberg Rhein-Neckar-Halle
October 29, 1988 Brussels Belgium Forest National
October 31, 1988 Paris France Le Zénith
November 1, 1988 Frankfurt West Germany Festhalle Frankfurt
November 2, 1988 Stuttgart Schleyerhalle
November 3, 1988 Regensburg Donauhalle
November 5, 1988 Leiden Netherlands Groenoordhallen
November 15, 1988 Toledo, Ohio United States Toledo Sports Arena
November 17, 1988 Chicago, Illinois UIC Pavilion
November 18, 1988 Cincinnati, Ohio Cincinnati Gardens
November 19, 1988 Columbus, Ohio Battelle Hall
November 21, 1988 Madison, Wisconsin Dane County Coliseum
November 22, 1988 Milwaukee, Wisconsin MECCA Arena
November 24, 1988 Indianapolis, Indiana Market Square Arena
November 25, 1988 Detroit, Michigan Cobo Arena
November 26, 1988 Richfield, Ohio Richfield Coliseum
November 28, 1988 St. Louis, Missouri Kiel Auditorium
November 29, 1988 Kansas City, Missouri Municipal Auditorium
November 30, 1988 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Myriad Convention Center
December 2, 1988 Albuquerque, New Mexico Tingley Coliseum
December 4, 1988 Phoenix, Arizona Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum
December 5, 1988 San Diego, California San Diego Sports Arena
December 7, 1988 Long Beach, California Long Beach Arena
December 8, 1988
December 10, 1988 Daly City, California Cow Palace
December 11, 1988
December 12, 1988 Sacramento, California ARCO Arena
December 14, 1988 Fresno, California Selland Arena
December 16, 1988 Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Palace
December 18, 1988 Denver, Colorado McNichols Sports Arena
List of 1989 concerts
Date City Country Venue
January 11, 1989 Knoxville, Tennessee United States Knoxville Civic Coliseum
January 13, 1989 Memphis, Tennessee Mid-South Coliseum
January 14, 1989 Birmingham, Alabama Birmingham–Jefferson Convention Complex
January 15, 1989 New Orleans, Louisiana Lakefront Arena
January 17, 1989 Waco, Texas Heart O' Texas Coliseum
January 18, 1989 Odessa, Texas Ector County Coliseum
January 20, 1989 Lubbock, Texas City Bank Coliseum
January 21, 1989 El Paso, Texas El Paso County Coliseum
January 22, 1989 Amarillo, Texas Amarillo Civic Center
January 24, 1989 Beaumont, Texas Beaumont Civic Center
January 25, 1989 Corpus Christi, Texas Memorial Coliseum
January 27, 1989 Shreveport, Louisiana Hirsch Memorial Coliseum
January 28, 1989 Tulsa, Oklahoma Expo Square Pavilion
January 31, 1989 Abilene, Texas Taylor County Expo Center
February 1, 1989 San Antonio, Texas Convention Center Arena
February 3, 1989 Austin, Texas Frank Erwin Center
February 4, 1989 Houston, Texas The Summit
February 5, 1989 Dallas, Texas Reunion Arena
February 7, 1989 Little Rock, Arkansas Barton Coliseum
February 8, 1989 Huntsville, Alabama Von Braun Civic Center
February 10, 1989 Lakeland, Florida Lakeland Civic Center
February 11, 1989 Daytona Beach, Florida Ocean Center
February 12, 1989 Miami, Florida James L. Knight Center
February 14, 1989 North Fort Myers, Florida Lee County Civic Center
February 15, 1989 West Palm Beach, Florida West Palm Beach Auditorium
February 17, 1989 Jacksonville, Florida Jacksonville Memorial Coliseum
February 18, 1989 Atlanta, Georgia The Omni
February 19, 1989 Greensboro, North Carolina Greensboro Coliseum
February 25, 1989 Fayetteville, North Carolina Cumberland County Auditorium
February 26, 1989 Charlotte, North Carolina Charlotte Coliseum
February 27, 1989 Savannah, Georgia Savannah Civic Center
March 1, 1989 East Rutherford, New Jersey Brendan Byrne Arena
March 2, 1989 Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Stabler Arena
March 4, 1989 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Civic Arena
March 5, 1989 Binghamton, New York Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena
March 7, 1989 Rochester, New York Rochester Community War Memorial
March 8, 1989 Uniondale, New York Nassau Coliseum
March 9, 1989 Landover, Maryland Capital Centre
March 11, 1989 Norfolk, Virginia Norfolk Scope
March 12, 1989 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania The Spectrum
March 13, 1989 Buffalo, New York Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
March 15, 1989 Troy, New York RPI Field House
March 16, 1989 Worcester, Massachusetts The Centrum
March 17, 1989 Hartford, Connecticut Hartford Civic Center
March 18, 1989 Syracuse, New York War Memorial at Oncenter
March 29, 1989 Providence, Rhode Island Providence Civic Center
March 30, 1989 Portland, Maine Cumberland County Civic Center
April 1, 1989 Moncton, New Brunswick Canada Moncton Coliseum
April 3, 1989 Sydney, Nova Scotia Centre 200
April 4, 1989 Halifax, Nova Scotia Halifax Metro Centre
April 6, 1989 Ottawa, Ontario Ottawa Civic Centre
April 7, 1989 Toronto, Ontario Maple Leaf Gardens
April 8, 1989 Hamilton, Ontario Copps Coliseum
April 10, 1989 Quebec City, Quebec Colisée de Québec
April 11, 1989 Chicoutimi, Quebec Centre Georges-Vézina
April 12, 1989 Montreal, Quebec Montreal Forum
April 14, 1989 Battle Creek, Michigan United States Kellogg Arena
April 15, 1989 Saginaw, Michigan Wendler Arena
April 16, 1989 Trotwood, Ohio Hara Arena
April 18, 1989 Peoria, Illinois Peoria Civic Center
April 19, 1989 Ashwaubenon, Wisconsin Brown County Veterans Memorial Arena
April 20, 1989 La Crosse, Wisconsin La Crosse Center
April 21, 1989 Bloomington, Minnesota Met Center
May 1, 1989 Auckland New Zealand Logan Campbell Center
May 3, 1989 Torrensville Australia Thebarton Theatre
May 4, 1989 West Melbourne Festival Hall
May 6, 1989 Sydney Hordern Pavilion
May 11, 1989 Kawasaki Japan Sangyo Bunka Kaikan
May 13, 1989 Tokyo Yoyogi National Gymnasium
May 14, 1989
May 16, 1989 Osaka Koseinekin Hall
May 17, 1989
May 18, 1989 Nagoya Shi Kokaido
May 24, 1989 Honolulu, Hawaii United States Neal S. Blaisdell Center
May 27, 1989 Anchorage, Alaska Sullivan Arena
May 31, 1989 Vancouver, British Columbia Canada PNE Expo Center
June 2, 1989 Edmonton, Alberta Northlands Coliseum
June 3, 1989 Calgary, Alberta Saddledome
June 4, 1989 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Saskatchewan Place
June 6, 1989 Winnipeg, Manitoba Winnipeg Arena
June 7, 1989 Minot, North Dakota United States Minot Municipal Auditorium
June 8, 1989 Duluth, Minnesota Duluth Arena Auditorium
June 10, 1989 Bloomington, Minnesota Met Center
June 11, 1989 Ames, Iowa Hilton Coliseum
June 13, 1989 Sioux Falls, South Dakota Sioux Falls Arena
June 14, 1989 Omaha, Nebraska Omaha Civic Auditorium
June 16, 1989 Rapid City, South Dakota Rushmore Plaza Civic Center
June 17, 1989 Bismarck, North Dakota Bismarck Civic Center
June 18, 1989 Grand Forks, North Dakota Hyslop Sports Center
June 20, 1989 Cedar Rapids, Iowa Five Seasons Center
June 21, 1989 Bonner Springs, Kansas Sandstone Amphitheatre
June 22, 1989 Springfield, Illinois Prairie Capital Convention Center
June 24, 1989 East Troy, Wisconsin Alpine Valley Music Theatre
June 25, 1989 Fort Wayne, Indiana Allen County War Memorial Coliseum
June 27, 1989 Evansville, Indiana Roberts Municipal Stadium
June 28, 1989 Louisville, Kentucky Louisville Gardens
June 29, 1989 Noblesville, Indiana Deer Creek Music Center
July 1, 1989 Mears, Michigan Val du Lakes Amphitheatre
July 3, 1989 Clarkston, Michigan Pine Knob Music Theatre
July 4, 1989
July 5, 1989 Cincinnati, Ohio Riverbend Music Center
July 7, 1989 Hoffman Estates, Illinois Poplar Creek Music Theater
July 8, 1989 Richfield, Ohio Richfield Coliseum
July 9, 1989 Charleston, West Virginia Charleston Civic Center
July 11, 1989 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Civic Arena
July 12, 1989 Harrisburg, Pennsylvania City Island
July 14, 1989 Middletown, New York Orange County Fairgrounds
July 15, 1989 Manchester, New Hampshire Riverfront Park
July 16, 1989 Weedsport, New York Cayuga County Fair Speedway
July 18, 1989 Bristol, Connecticut Lake Compounce
July 19, 1989 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania The Spectrum
July 21, 1989 East Rutherford, New Jersey Brendan Byrne Arena
July 22, 1989
July 23, 1989 Uniondale, New York Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum
July 25, 1989 Worcester, Massachusetts The Centrum
July 26, 1989 Burlington, Vermont Burlington Memorial Auditorium
July 28, 1989 Landover, Maryland Capital Centre
July 29, 1989 Allentown, Pennsylvania Great Allentown Fair
July 30, 1989 Richmond, Virginia Richmond Coliseum
August 7, 1989 Newark, Delaware Stone Balloon
August 8, 1989 Roanoke, Virginia Roanoke Civic Center
August 9, 1989 Columbia, South Carolina Carolina Coliseum
August 11, 1989 Johnson City, Tennessee Freedom Hall Civic Center
August 12, 1989 Thornville, Ohio Buckeye Lake Music Center
August 13, 1989 Greenville, South Carolina Greenville Memorial Auditorium
August 15, 1989 Chattanooga, Tennessee UTC Arena
August 16, 1989 Nashville, Tennessee Starwood Amphitheatre
August 18, 1989 Atlanta, Georgia Lakewood Amphitheatre
August 19, 1989 Jackson, Mississippi Mississippi Coliseum
August 20, 1989 Biloxi, Mississippi Mississippi Coast Coliseum
August 22, 1989 Houston, Texas The Summit
August 23, 1989 Dallas, Texas Starplex Amphitheatre
August 25, 1989 Morrison, Colorado Red Rocks Amphitheatre
August 26, 1989
August 28, 1989 Spokane, Washington Spokane Coliseum
August 29, 1989 Seattle, Washington Seattle Center Coliseum
August 30, 1989
September 1, 1989 Portland, Oregon Memorial Coliseum
September 3, 1989 Boise, Idaho Boise State University Pavilion
September 5, 1989 Billings, Montana MetraPark Arena
September 6, 1989 Casper, Wyoming Casper Events Center
September 8, 1989 Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Palace
September 9, 1989 Paradise, Nevada Thomas & Mack Center
September 10, 1989 Chandler, Arizona Compton Terrace Amphitheatre
September 12, 1989 Reno, Nevada Lawlor Events Center
September 14, 1989 Concord, California Concord Pavilion
September 15, 1989 Mountain View, California Shoreline Amphitheatre
September 16, 1989 Sacramento, California California Exposition & State Fair
September 19, 1989 Tucson, Arizona Tucson Community Center
September 21, 1989 Irvine, California Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre
September 22, 1989
September 23, 1989
October 4, 1989 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Maracanã Arena
October 6, 1989 São Paulo Ibirapuera Gymnasium
October 7, 1989

Personnel

References

  1. ^ "Inside the Tour That Made Metallica Megastars". Rolling Stone. November 15, 2018.
  2. ^ "Intervista Royal Air Force/R.A.F. (Mario Riso)". truemetal.it (in Italian). January 16, 2006. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
  3. ^ "Anthrax". metallipromo.com. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
  4. ^ "Danzig Tour Dates". misfitscentral.com. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
  5. ^ "Adverisments for Operation Mindcrime". Queensryche.com. Archived from the original on May 1, 2008. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
  6. ^ "Queensryche - Operation:Mindcrime - Metal Forces #33 November 1988". users.totalise.co.uk. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
  7. ^ "Mortal Sin Biography". Mortalsin.co.au. Archived from the original on January 6, 2010. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
  8. ^ "Metallica at Portland Memorial Coliseum in Portland, OR on September 1, 1989". metallica.com. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
  9. ^ "Metallica at BSU Pavilion in Boise, ID on September 3, 1989". metallica.com. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
  10. ^ "Past Tour Date Archive". metallica.com. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
  11. ^ "Wrathchild America". Metallipromo.com. Retrieved May 18, 2024.
  12. ^ "For whom the needle shakes: When Metallica rocked the Coliseum". November 19, 2020.
  13. ^ "METALLICA SHARE 1989 SET FILMED ON LARS ULRICH'S CAMCORDER". July 27, 2020.