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08:46 PM UTC · TUESDAY, MAY 5, 2026 LA ERA · Chile
May 5, 2026 · Updated 08:46 PM UTC
Culture

Megadeth delivers a masterclass in technical precision during first night of Chilean farewell tour

The Dave Mustaine-led thrash metal legends packed the Movistar Arena with a setlist featuring both timeless classics and tracks from their latest album.

Camila Fuentes

2 min read

Megadeth set the Movistar Arena in Santiago ablaze during the first of two farewell shows in Chile. The thrash metal icons delivered a performance centered on technical precision and sheer musicianship, eschewing massive visual spectacles for pure sonic power, according to latercera.com.

Dave Mustante kicked off the evening with 'Tipping Point' from the band's latest album, greeted by a crowd erupting in flares and chants. The concert reaffirmed the group's status as one of the most technically proficient acts in the genre, anchored by the formidable lineup of Teemu Mäntysaari, James LoMenzo, and Dirk Verbeuren.

A journey through the classic catalog

The setlist featured essential anthems like 'Hangar 18,' during which Mustaine offered a brief, deep “Good evening” to the crowd. Despite some evident vocal strain during the more demanding tracks, the frontman maintained a defiant presence throughout songs like 'She Wolf' and 'Sweating Bullets.'

The band also showcased newer material such as 'Let there be shred' and 'Tipping Point,' weaving them seamlessly between career-defining classics. During 'Symphony of Destruction,' the audience responded with massive chants that transformed the iconic riff into a stadium-sized anthem, as reported by the media outlet.

A standout moment of the night was the performance of 'Ride the Lightning.' The band included a rendition of this 1984 classic—a track Mustaine co-wrote but never recorded with Metallica—highlighting a blistering guitar solo from Mäntysaari.

The show featured an appearance by a performer dressed as the band's mascot, Vic Rattlehead, and closed with high-impact hits like 'Peace Sells' and 'Holy Wars.' The concert, which ran just over an hour and a half with a 16-song set, felt more like a tribute to their own legacy than a definitive goodbye.

While the tour is being promoted as a farewell, Mustaine had already hinted during a stop in Colombia that “this is not over,” suggesting that the band's current chapter may not conclude with these performances.

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