Fans were given placards as they entered Oracle Park in San Francisco on Saturday night (July 19).

On the red side of the placard was the word “Yea,” while the black flipside simply read “Nay.” Fans would later be directed to use these signs to determine the fate of some hooded individuals lined up in front of a (fake) firing squad on the stage. A majority of “yea” (or red) votes would mean the “execution” would commence.

“I see an overwhelming ocean of red,” My Chemical Romance’s Gerard Way reasoned as he looked out at the highly charged capacity crowd in front of him.

And with the fan decision in the books, the firing squad let loose — bang, bang, bang, bang, bang — and the hooded individuals dropped “dead” to the floor.

It was the dramatic and sinister moment of a highly theatrical show that included no shortage of shock and awe. And all of the former came during the first portion of the massively sold-out concert, as My Chemical Romance revisited its greatest commercial triumph — 2006’s mall-rock manifesto “The Black Parade” — as a fully fleshed out and disturbing rock opera before returning to play a totally straight-forward (and, in my opinion, more enjoyable) second set of other material.

My Chemical Romance performs at Oracle Park in San Francisco on July 19, 2025. (Jim Harrington, Bay Area News Group)
My Chemical Romance performs at Oracle Park in San Francisco on July 19, 2025. (Jim Harrington, Bay Area News Group) 

But Way and his alt-rock companions didn’t just play “The Black Parade” in its entirety, but rather they fully took on the characters of the piece’s fictional Black Parade band and threw themselves completely into the sad dystopian storyline that borrows no shortage of ideas from Soviet Union Cold War times while keeping one foot in today’s Trump era.

This was Night 2 of the roadshow — dubbed the Long Live The Black Parade Tour — which opened in Seattle a little over a week prior is currently set to include a dozen dates (stretching into 2006). It’s celebrating the 20th anniversary of “The Black Parade,” a work that has only grown in stature and acclaim over the past two decades as OG MCR fans keep returning to the opus and younger generations latch onto a rock opera with a lineage that can be easily traced back Pink Floyd’s “The Wall.”



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