Whether they’re played in a club, a theater or a stadium, most rock shows are sweaty affairs for musicians. But what’s it like to perform on some of the coldest stages on Earth?
From Metallica’s record-breaking 2013 Antarctica expedition to Van Halen performing in a blizzard and Tesseract gracing a stage made entirely of ice, rock history has delivered some frosty gigs. As far as experiences go, there’s nothing quite like them.
Thrash-metal giants Metallica entered the record books 13 years ago when performing a 10-song set in a packed-out dome near the Argentine Antarctic Base Carlini. In doing so, they became the first musical act to have played a show on all seven of the Earth’s continents.
The 120-strong audience comprised Coca-Cola competition winners from across Latin America, research station scientists from Russia, South Korea, China, Poland, Chile, Brazil and Germany, along with the ship’s crew.
“Part of the deal was we couldn’t disturb the environment, the penguins, and all the incredible wildlife down there,” drummer Lars Ulrich said of the show in 2023 (via Metal Hammer).
Not only was it the first metal show where penguins were of paramount importance, but it also meant that the band had to ditch their tube amps and anything else that might get loud.
The solution was to send the band’s live feed to the audience via headphones, essentially turning the performance into a silent headbangers’ ball. At a time when digital amp modelers were still looked upon dubiously by gear nerds, the band turned to Fractal.
“The initial question is, can we make this work?” James Hetfield’s tech, Chad Zaemisch, later told Guitar World. “From a technician’s point of view, you don’t want to say to the guy you’re working for that what you’re doing is not going to be as good as before.”
Yet, the show went down without a hitch, and Metallica has stayed loyal to Fractal’s Axe Fx modeler ever since. But other bands haven’t been so lucky.
In 1995, Van Halen were in Denver on the Balance tour when a freak blizzard whipped through the city. The weather conditions deteriorated as the show went on, leading to snow accumulating onstage. Still, the band refused to cut the show short, given that so many fans had made the effort to get there. Even with frozen fingers, Eddie Van Halen and company tore through a 21-song set.
It’s a sentiment that U.K. progressive metal band Tesseract can relate to. Two years after Metallica’s glacial gig, the seven-string guitar advocates made their own way into the record books.
As part of Jägermeister’s Ice Cold series of shows at Snow Village in Kittila, Lapland, they became the first band to perform on top of a structure made completely out of ice.
Snow Village in Kittila is built each year from 44 million pounds of snow and 78,000 pounds of ice, and while it looked impressive, the onstage temperature of -4°F was anything but. As Metal Hammer reports, several band members suffered a loss of feeling in their hands after just the first song of soundcheck.
“One of the main challenges is keeping the instruments at the same temperature,” Amos Williams, the band’s bass guitar player, explained. “If the strings become colder during the set, then tuning will become a massive issue.”
“The strings are ice, and that’s making our fingers pretty dead,” Williams told Total Guitar from backstage. “I’ve actually got a heat pad on my palms [under my glove].”
“The bit I’m worried about,” he added, “is snow getting into [our gear], because it isn’t, basically, water? Hopefully nothing’s going to short-circuit.”
Unlike Metallica’s carefully controlled Antarctic performance, neither Van Halen nor Tesseract had the luxury of insulating themselves from the elements. Together, they prove that some of rock’s greatest gigs are remembered not just for the songs that were played, but for the conditions the bands overcame to play them.
