Official MetOnTour video footage of METALLICA performing the song "Harvester Of Sorrow" on October 29 at Parque Bicentenario in Quito, Ecuador can be seen below. The band's setlist was as follows: 01. Creeping Death 02. For Whom The Bell Tolls 03. King Nothing 04. Harvester Of Sorrow 05. Wherever I May Roam 06. Moth Into Flame 07. The Memory Remains 08. The Four Horsemen 09. Sad But True 10. One 11. Master Of Puppets 12. Battery 13. Fade To Black 14. Seek And Destroy ENCORE 15. Hardwired 16. Whiskey In The Jar 17. Nothing Else Matters 18. Enter Sandman As previously reported, METALLICA plans to make a video for every song on its new album, "Hardwired... To Self-Destruct". Drummer Lars Ulrich said in an interview with The Strait Times: "Now that YouTube is the world's biggest television station, we figured we may as well knock a video out for every song," adding, "The practicality of shooting 12 music videos is kind of crazy, especially when you're trying to promote your record, and you're all over the place, and trying to make sure it doesn't leak. It's crazy but, at the same time, fun." METALLICA guitarist Kirk Hammett told The Pulse Of Radio that the band has to be in better than average shape physically to play the songs on the new record. "There's a physicality to our music that we cannot ignore, so we just kind of have to keep ourselves in a certain sort of physical sort of state where that, you know, we can't let ourselves get to a point where we can't play these songs, you know," he said. "That's just not allowed. You know, when we write this music, we have to make sure that we can play it and play it, you know, when we need to play it." So far the band has revealed clips for the title track, as well as the tracks "Moth Into Flame" and "Atlas, Rise!" The long-awaited follow-up to 2008's "Death Magnetic" is out November 18 and consists of two discs, containing a dozen songs and nearly 80 minutes of music. Ulrich also said that METALLICA has done its best to keep up with the shifting fortunes of the music industry, explaining: "20 to 30 years ago, there was a right way and wrong way to do things, but now it's just what suits you the best because it’s a whole new game out there."
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