Metallica covered The Proclaimersâ âIâm Gonna Be (500 Miles)â in Glasgow and The Pogues‘ âDirty Old Townâ in Dublin this week â check out footage below.
The metal icons played Glasgowâs Hampden Park on Thursday (June 25) as part of their ongoing âM72 World Tourâ, where guitarist Kirk Hammett and bassist Robert Trujillo used their mid-set âKirk and Rob Doodleâ section to pay tribute to two Scottish acts.
The pair first played Nazarethâs âHair Of The Dogâ, before leading the crowd through a rendition of The Proclaimersâ âIâm Gonna Be (500 Miles)â.
Check out fan-shot footage here:
Four days earlier, Hammett and Trujillo played Ewan MacCollâs âDirty Old Townâ during the second of Metallicaâs two shows at Dublinâs Aviva Stadium on Sunday (June 21). Although the song was written by MacColl about Salford, it has long been associated with Irish music through versions by The Dubliners and The Pogues.
Watch footage here:
The âKirk and Rob Doodleâ has become a regular part of Metallicaâs live shows in recent years, giving Hammett and Trujillo a mid-set slot to play loose bass-and-guitar jams, often paying tribute to local musical heroes. In the past, they have played Rammsteinâs âSonneâ in Berlin, ABBAâs âDancing Queenâ in Sweden and a-haâs âTake On Meâ in Norway.
At their first show in Dublin on June 19, Hammett fell from the stage during âSeek & Destroyâ, with the guitarist losing his footing near the edge of the stage, before being helped back up and continuing the song. He later joked about the moment on Instagram, captioning a clip: âSlip & Destroy.â
That came days after Hammett drew criticism from Taylor Swift fans for wearing a T-shirt reading âTaylor Swift Is A CIA Psyopâ at a June 13 show in Budapest. Hammett appeared to address the controversy in a recent interview, criticising the current state of popular music by claiming: âRight now, songwriting and pop music is crap.â
âIâm hoping that all these great musicians who can teach themselves through the internet step up and put all that great learning and all that great inspiration into creating new stuff, new songs, the future of music, and at a higher standard than what it is now,â he added. âBecause Iâll say it again, K-R-A-P. Crap. Sorry for all you pop fans out there.â
Metallica are currently on the UK and European leg of their âM72â world tour, which began in 2023 in support of their 11th studio album â72 Seasonsâ. Remaining UK and European dates are:
JUNEÂ
28 â Cardiff, Principality Stadium
JULYÂ
3 â London, London Stadium
5 â London, London Stadium
Find any remaining tickets here.
In a four-star review of Metallicaâs âM72â tour opener in Amsterdam, NME wrote: âMetallica have always been a gateway band for heavy music, but thereâs a renewed excitement around them now. Tonightâs surprising, ambitious and giddy gig matches that energy at every turn.â
âFrom the gorgeous âNothing Else Mattersâ through to the unifying âSeek & Destroyâ, the majesty of heavy music is on full display throughout the gig as Metallica prove why theyâre clearly still the greatest metal band around.â
Elsewhere, Metallica recently teamed up with UK blood services to urge fans to donate blood and plasma around their UK tour dates. The band also released âReload (Remastered)â, an expanded reissue of their 1997 album featuring previously unreleased demos, rough mixes, live performances and more, yesterday (June 26).
The post Watch Metallica cover The Pogues and The Proclaimers in Dublin and Glasgow appeared first on NME.