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Live Aid

Live Aid was a multi-venue benefit concert held on Saturday 13 July 1985, as well as a music-based fundraising initiative. The original event was organised by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to raise further funds for relief of the 1983–1985 famine in Ethiopia, a movement that started with the release of the successful charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?" in December 1984. Billed as the "global jukebox", Live Aid was held simultaneously at Wembley Stadium in London, attended by about 72,000 people, and John F. Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia, attended by 89,484 people.[1][2]

Live Aid
Official Live Aid poster, artwork by Peter Blake
GenrePop
Rock
Dates13 July 1985; 38 years ago (1985-07-13)
Location(s)
Founded byBob Geldof
Midge Ure
Attendance72,000 (London)
89,484 (Philadelphia)
Websitewww.live8live.com

On the same day, concerts inspired by the initiative were held in other countries, such as the Soviet Union, Canada, Japan, Yugoslavia, Austria, Australia, and West Germany. It was one of the largest satellite link-ups and television broadcasts of all time; an estimated audience of 1.9 billion, in 150 nations, watched the live broadcast, nearly 40 percent of the world population.[3][4]

The impact of Live Aid on famine relief has been debated for years. One aid relief worker stated that following the publicity generated by the concert, "humanitarian concern is now at the centre of foreign policy" for Western governments.[5] Geldof has said, "We took an issue that was nowhere on the political agenda and, through the lingua franca of the planet – which is not English but rock 'n' roll – we were able to address the intellectual absurdity and the moral repulsion of people dying of want in a world of surplus."[6] In another interview he stated that Live Aid "created something permanent and self-sustaining" but also asked why Africa is getting poorer.[5] The organisers of Live Aid tried to run aid efforts directly, channelling millions of pounds to NGOs in Ethiopia. It has been alleged that much of this went to the Ethiopian government of Mengistu Haile Mariam – a regime the UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher opposed[7] – and it is also alleged some funds were spent on guns.[5][8] While the BBC World Service programme Assignment reported in March 2010 that the funds had been diverted, the BBC Editorial Complaints Unit later found "that there was no evidence to support such statements."[9] Brian Barder, British Ambassador to Ethiopia from 1982 to 1986, wrote on his website that "the diversion of aid related only to the tiny proportion that was supplied by some NGOs to rebel-held areas."[10]

Background edit

 
The BBC News reports of Michael Buerk (pictured) on the Ethiopian famine sparked the aid relief movement.[11]

The 1985 Live Aid concert was conceived as a follow-on to the successful charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?" which was also the brainchild of Geldof and Ure. In October 1984, images of hundreds of thousands of people starving to death in Ethiopia were shown in the UK in Michael Buerk's BBC News reports on the 1984 famine.[11] The BBC News crew were the first to document the famine, with Buerk's report on 23 October describing it as "a biblical famine in the 20th century" and "the closest thing to hell on Earth".[12] The reports featured a young nurse, Claire Bertschinger, who, surrounded by 85,000 starving people, told of her sorrow of having to decide which children would be allowed access to the limited food supplies in the feeding station and which were too sick to be saved.[13] She would put a little mark on the children who got chosen, with Geldof stating of her at the time, "In her was vested the power of life and death. She had become God-like and that is unbearable for anyone."[13] Traumatised by what she experienced she did not speak about it for two decades, recalling in 2005, "I felt like a Nazi sending people to the death camps. Why was I in this situation? Why was it possible in this time of plenty that some have food and some do not? It is not right".[13]

"There are thousands of people outside. I have counted 10 rows and each row has more than 100 people in and I can only take 60-70 children today, but they all need to come in."

—1984 diary entry from nurse Claire Bertschinger outside a feeding station.[13]

Shocked by the report, the British public inundated relief agencies, such as Save the Children, with donations, with the report also bringing the world's attention to the crisis in Ethiopia.[11][14] Such was the magnitude of Buerk's report it was also broadcast in its entirety on a major US news channel—almost unheard of at the time.[15] From his home in London Geldof also saw the report, and called Ure from Ultravox (Geldof and Ure had previously worked together for charity when they appeared at the 1981 benefit show The Secret Policeman's Ball in London) and together they quickly co-wrote the song, "Do They Know It's Christmas?" in the hope of raising money for famine relief.[11] Geldof then contacted colleagues in the music industry and persuaded them to record the single under the title 'Band Aid' for free.[11] On 25 November 1984, the song was recorded at Sarm West Studios in Notting Hill, London, and was released four days later.[16][17] It stayed at number one for five weeks in the UK, was Christmas number one, and became the fastest-selling single ever in Britain and raised £8 million, rather than the £70,000 Geldof and Ure had initially expected.[11] Geldof then set his sights on staging a huge concert to raise further funds.[11]

The idea to stage a charity concert to raise more funds for Ethiopia originally came from Boy George, the lead singer of Culture Club. George and Culture Club drummer Jon Moss had taken part in the recording of "Do They Know It's Christmas?" and in the same month, the band were undertaking a tour of the UK, which culminated in six nights at Wembley Arena. On the final night at Wembley, 22 December 1984, an impromptu gathering of some of the other artists from Band Aid joined Culture Club on stage at the end of the concert for an encore of "Do They Know It's Christmas?". George was so overcome by the occasion he told Geldof that they should consider organising a benefit concert. Speaking to the UK music magazine Melody Maker at the beginning of January 1985, Geldof revealed his enthusiasm for George's idea, saying, "If George is organising it, you can tell him he can call me at any time and I'll do it. It's a logical progression from the record, but the point is you don't just talk about it, you go ahead and do it!"[18]

It was clear from the interview that Geldof had already had the idea to hold a dual venue concert and how the concerts should be structured:

The show should be as big as is humanly possible. There's no point just 5,000 fans turning up at Wembley; we need to have Wembley linked with Madison Square Gardens, and the whole show to be televised worldwide. It would be great for Duran to play three or four numbers at Wembley, and then flick to Madison Square where Springsteen would be playing. While he's on, the Wembley stage could be made ready for the next British act like the Thompsons or whoever. In that way, lots of acts could be featured and the television rights, tickets and so on could raise a phenomenal amount of money. It's not an impossible idea, and certainly one worth exploiting.[18]

On how Geldof got artists to agree to play, Live Aid production manager Andy Zweck states, "Bob had to play some tricks to get artists involved. He had to call Elton and say Queen are in and Bowie's in, and of course they weren't. Then he'd call Bowie and say Elton and Queen are in. It was a game of bluff."[19]

Organisation edit

 
Bob Geldof successfully pitched the idea of the concert to promoter Harvey Goldsmith

Among those involved in organising Live Aid were Harvey Goldsmith, who was responsible for the Wembley Stadium concert, and Bill Graham, who put together the American leg.[20] On promoting the event, Goldsmith states, "I didn't really get a chance to say no. Bob [Geldof] arrived in my office and basically said, 'We're doing this.' It started from there."[19]

The concert grew in scope, as more acts were added on both sides of the Atlantic. Tony Verna, inventor of instant replay, was able to secure John F. Kennedy Stadium through his friendship with Philadelphia Mayor Goode and was able to procure, through his connections with ABC's prime time chief, John Hamlin, a three-hour prime time slot on the ABC Network and, in addition, was able to supplement the lengthy program through meetings that resulted in the addition of an ad-hoc network within the US, which covered 85 per cent of TVs there. Verna designed the needed satellite schematic and became the Executive Director as well as the Co-Executive Producer along with Hal Uplinger. Uplinger came up with the idea to produce a four-hour video edit of Live Aid to distribute to those countries without the necessary satellite equipment to rebroadcast the live feed.

Collaborative effort edit

The concert began at 12:00 British Summer Time (BST) (7:00 Eastern Daylight Time (EDT)) at Wembley Stadium in the United Kingdom.[21] It continued at John F. Kennedy Stadium (JFK) in the United States, starting at 13:51 BST (8:51 EDT). The UK's Wembley performances ended at 22:00 BST (17:00 EDT). The JFK performances and whole concert in the US ended at 04:05 BST 14 July (23:05 EDT). Thus, the concert continued for just over 16 hours, but since many artists' performances were conducted simultaneously in Wembley and JFK, the total concert's length was much longer.[21]

Mick Jagger and David Bowie intended to perform a transatlantic duet, with Bowie in London and Jagger in Philadelphia.[22] Problems of synchronisation meant the only practical solution was to have one artist, likely Bowie at Wembley, mime along to prerecorded vocals broadcast as part of the live sound mix for Jagger's performance from Philadelphia.[22] Veteran music engineer David Richards (Pink Floyd and Queen) was brought in to create footage and sound mixes Jagger and Bowie could perform to in their respective venues. The BBC would then have had to ensure those footage and sound mixes were in sync while also performing a live vision mix of the footage from both venues. The combined footage would then have had to be bounced back by satellite to the various broadcasters around the world. Due to the time lag (the signal would take several seconds to be broadcast twice across the Atlantic Ocean), Richards concluded there was no way for Jagger to hear or see Bowie's performance, meaning there could be no interaction between the artists, essentially defeating the whole point of the exercise. On top of this, both artists objected to the idea of miming at what was perceived as a historic event. Instead, Jagger and Bowie worked with Richards to create a video of the song they would have performed, a cover of "Dancing in the Street", which was shown on the screens of both stadiums and broadcast as part of many TV networks' coverage.[22]

Each of the two main parts of the concert ended with their particular continental all-star anti-hunger anthems, with Band Aid's "Do They Know It's Christmas?" closing the UK concert, and USA for Africa's "We Are the World" closing the US concert (and thus the entire event itself).[23]

Concert organisers have subsequently said they were particularly keen to ensure at least one surviving member of the Beatles, ideally Paul McCartney, took part in the concert as they felt that having an 'elder statesman' from British music would give it greater legitimacy in the eyes of the political leaders whose opinions the performers were trying to shape. McCartney agreed to perform and has said it was "the management" – his children – who persuaded him to take part. In the event, he was the last performer (aside from the Band Aid finale) to take to the stage and one of the few to be beset by technical difficulties; his microphone failed for the first two minutes of his piano performance of "Let It Be", making it difficult for television viewers and impossible for those in the stadium to hear him.[3] He later joked by saying he had thought about changing the lyrics to "There will be some feedback, let it be".[24]

Phil Collins performed at both Wembley Stadium and JFK, travelling from Wembley by helicopter (piloted by UK TV personality Noel Edmonds) to London Heathrow Airport, then took a British Airways Concorde flight to New York City, before taking another helicopter to Philadelphia.[25] As well as his own set at both venues, he also played the drums for Eric Clapton, and played with the reuniting surviving members of Led Zeppelin at JFK. On the Concorde flight, Collins encountered actress and singer Cher, who was unaware of the concerts. Upon reaching the US, she attended the Philadelphia concert and can be seen performing as part of the concert's "We Are the World" finale.[19] In a 1985 interview, singer-songwriter Billy Joel stated that he had considered performing at the event, but ultimately chose not to because he had difficulties getting his band together and did not want to perform by himself.[26]

Broadcasts edit

Broadcaster Richard Skinner opened the Live Aid concert with the words:

It's twelve noon in London, seven AM in Philadelphia, and around the world it's time for Live Aid.[21]

The concert was the most ambitious international satellite television venture that had ever been attempted at the time. In Europe, the TV feed was supplied by the BBC, whose broadcast was presented by Richard Skinner, Andy Kershaw, Mark Ellen, David Hepworth, Andy Batten-Foster, Steve Blacknell, Paul Gambaccini, Janice Long and Mike Smith and included numerous interviews and chats in between the various acts.[27] The BBC's television sound feed was mono, as was all UK TV audio before NICAM was introduced, but the BBC Radio 1 feed was stereo and was simulcast in sync with the TV pictures. Unfortunately, in the rush to set up the transatlantic feeds, the sound feed from Philadelphia was sent to London via transatlantic cable, while the video feed was via satellite, which meant a lack of synchronisation on British television receivers. Due to the constant activities in both London and Philadelphia, the BBC producers omitted the reunion of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young from their broadcast. The BBC, however, did supply a 'clean feed' to various television channels in Europe.

ABC was largely responsible for the US broadcast (although ABC themselves only telecast the final three hours of the concert from Philadelphia, hosted by Dick Clark, with the rest shown in syndication through Orbis Communications, acting on behalf of ABC). An entirely separate and simultaneous US feed was provided for cable viewers by MTV, whose broadcast was presented in stereo, and accessible as such for those with stereo televisions. At the time, before multichannel television sound was enacted nationwide, very few televisions reproduced stereo signals and few television stations were able to broadcast in stereo. While the telecast was run advertisement-free by the BBC, both the MTV and syndicated/ABC broadcasts included advertisements and interviews. As a result, many songs were omitted due to the commercial breaks, as these songs were played during these slots.

The biggest issue of the syndicated/ABC coverage is that the network had wanted to reserve some of the biggest acts that had played earlier in the day for certain points in the entire broadcast, particularly in the final three hours in prime time; thus, Orbis Communications had some sequences replaced by others, especially those portions of the concert that had acts from London and Philadelphia playing simultaneously. For example, while the London/Wembley finale was taking place at 22:00 (10:00 pm) London time, syndicated viewers saw segments that had been recorded earlier, so that ABC could show the UK finale during its prime-time portion. In 1995, VH1 and MuchMusic aired a re-edited ten-hour re-broadcast of the concert for its 10th anniversary.

The Live Aid concert in London was also the first time that the BBC outside broadcast sound equipment had been used for an event of such scale. In stark contrast to the mirrored sound systems commonly used by the rock band touring engineers, with two 40–48-channel mixing consoles at the front of house and another pair for monitors, the BBC sound engineers had to use multiple 12-channel desks. Some credit this as the point where the mainstream entertainment industry realised that the rock concert industry had overtaken them in technical expertise.[28]

Stages and locations edit

Wembley Stadium edit

 
The old Wembley Stadium (exterior pictured) hosted the London concert

The Coldstream Guards band opened with the "Royal Salute", a brief version of the national anthem "God Save the Queen". Status Quo were the first act to appear and started their set with "Rockin' All Over the World", also playing "Caroline" and fan favourite "Don't Waste My Time".[29] "Bob told me, 'It doesn't matter a fuck what you sound like, just so long as you're there,'" recalled guitarist and singer Francis Rossi. "Thanks for the fucking honesty, Sir Bob."[30] This would be the band's last appearance with bassist and founder member Alan Lancaster and drummer Pete Kircher.[31] Princess Diana and Prince Charles were among those in attendance as the concert commenced.[11]

Bob Geldof performed with the rest of the Boomtown Rats, singing "I Don't Like Mondays". He stopped just after the line "The lesson today is how to die" to loud applause.[3][19] According to Gary Kemp, "Dare I say it, it was evangelical, that moment when Geldof stopped 'I Don't Like Mondays' and raised his fist in the air. He was a sort of statesman. A link between punk and the New Romantics and the Eighties. You would follow him. He just has a huge charisma; he'd make a frightening politician."[19] He finished the song and left the crowd to sing the final words. Elvis Costello sang a version of the Beatles' "All You Need Is Love", which he introduced by asking the audience to "help [him] sing this old northern English folk song".[32]

Queen's twenty-one minute performance, which began at 6:41 pm, was voted the greatest live performance in the history of rock in a 2005 industry poll of more than 60 artists, journalists and music industry executives.[33][34] Freddie Mercury at times led the crowd in unison refrains,[35] and his sustained note—"Aaaaaay-o"—during the a cappella section came to be known as "The Note Heard Round the World".[36][37] The band's six-song set opened with a shortened version of "Bohemian Rhapsody" and closed with "We Are the Champions".[3][38][39] According to the BBC's presenter David Hepworth, their performance produced "the greatest display of community singing the old stadium had seen and cemented Queen's position as the most-loved British group since the Beatles".[40] Later in the evening, Mercury and guitarist Brian May performed the first song of the three-part Wembley event finale, "Is This the World We Created...?"[39]

Other well-received performances on the day included those by U2 and David Bowie. Both The Guardian and Rolling Stone have cited Live Aid as the event that made stars of U2.[41][42] The band played a 12-minute rendition of "Bad". The length of "Bad" limited them to two songs; a third, "Pride (In the Name of Love)", had to be dropped. During "Bad", vocalist Bono jumped off the stage to join the crowd and dance with a teenage girl. In July 2005, the woman said that he had saved her life. She was being crushed by people pushing forwards; Bono saw this, and gestured frantically at the ushers to help her. They did not understand what he was saying, and so he jumped down to help her himself.[42] Rolling Stone described David Bowie's performance as "arguably Bowie's last triumph of the 1980s", observing that "as approximately two billion people sang along to 'Heroes' [...], he still seemed like one of the biggest and most vital rock stars in the world".[43] According to Ultimate Classic Rock, Phil Collins also "performed an especially crowd-pleasing selection of songs",[25] and John Illsley of Dire Straits recalled, "It was a very special feeling to be part of something so unique. Live Aid was a unique privilege for all of us. It's become a fabulous memory."[44]

"One afternoon before the concert, Bowie was up in the office and we started looking through some videos of news footage, and we watched the CBC piece [footage from the Ethiopian famine, cut to the Cars' song "Drive"]. Everyone just stopped. Bowie said, 'You've got to put that in the show, it's the most dramatic thing I've ever seen.' That was probably one of the most evocative things in the whole show and really got the money rolling in."

—Live Aid promoter Harvey Goldsmith on Bowie picking out the CBC news piece for the concert, a video Bowie introduced on the big screen at Wembley after his set.[19]

The transatlantic broadcast from Wembley suffered technical problems and failed during the Who's performance of their opening song "My Generation", immediately after Roger Daltrey sang "Why don't you all fade ..." (the last word "away" was cut off when a blown fuse caused the Wembley stage TV feed to temporarily fail).[3] The broadcast returned as the last verse of "Pinball Wizard" was played. John Entwistle's bass wouldn't work at the start, causing an awkward delay of over a minute before they could start playing. The band played with Kenney Jones on drums and it was their first performance since disbanding after a 1982 'farewell' tour. The Who's performance was described as "rough but right" by Rolling Stone, but they would not perform together again for another three years.[45] At 32 minutes Elton John had the longest set on the day;[46] his setlist included the first performance of "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" with George Michael.[47]

While performing "Let It Be" near the end of the Wembley show, the microphone mounted to Paul McCartney's piano failed for the first two minutes of the song, making it difficult for television viewers and the stadium audience to hear him.[3] During this performance, the TV audience were better off, audio-wise, than the stadium audience, as the TV sound was picked up from other microphones near McCartney. The stadium audience, who could obviously not hear the electronic sound feed from these mics, unless they had portable TV sets and radios, drowned out what little sound from McCartney could be heard during this part of his performance. As a result, organiser and performer Bob Geldof, accompanied by earlier performers David Bowie, Alison Moyet and Pete Townshend, returned to the stage to sing with him and back him up (as did the stadium audience despite not being able to hear much), by which time McCartney's microphone had been repaired.[48]

At the conclusion of the Wembley performances, Geldof was raised onto the shoulders of the Who's guitarist Pete Townshend and Paul McCartney.[49] Geldof stated that he hadn't slept "in weeks" in the lead-up to the concert, and when asked what his plans were post-Live Aid, he told an interviewer, "I'm going to go home and sleep."[50]

The Wembley speaker system was provided by Hill Pro Audio. It consisted primarily of the Hill J-Series Mixing Consoles, Hill M3 Speaker System powered by the Hill 3000 amplifiers.[51] In an interview with Studio Sound in December 1985, Malcolm Hill described the concept for the system in detail.[52]

John F. Kennedy Stadium edit

 
Stage view of Live Aid at John F. Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia
 
Live Aid under the lights at John F. Kennedy Stadium

The host of the televised portion of the concert in Philadelphia was actor Jack Nicholson. The opening artist Joan Baez announced to the crowd, "this is your Woodstock, and it's long overdue", before leading the crowd in singing "Amazing Grace" and "We Are the World".[53]

Despite the 95 °F (35 °C) ambient temperature, Madonna proclaimed "I ain't taking shit off today!" during her set, referring to the recent release of early nude photos of her in Playboy and Penthouse magazines.[54]

During his opening number, "American Girl", Tom Petty flipped the middle finger to somebody off stage about one minute into the song.[citation needed] Petty stated the song was a last-minute addition when the band realised that they would be the first act to play the American side of the concert after the London finale and "since this is, after all, JFK Stadium".[55]

When Bob Dylan broke a guitar string, while playing with the Rolling Stones members Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood, Wood took off his own guitar and gave it to Dylan. Wood was left standing on stage guitarless. After shrugging to the audience, he played air guitar, even mimicking the Who's Pete Townshend by swinging his arm in wide circles, until a stagehand brought him a replacement. The performance was included in the DVD, including the guitar switch and Wood talking to stage hands, but much of the footage used was close-ups of either Dylan or Richards.

During their duet on the reprise of "It's Only Rock 'n' Roll", Mick Jagger ripped away part of Tina Turner's dress, leaving her to finish the song in what was, effectively, a leotard.[56]

The JFK portion included reunions of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, the original Black Sabbath with Ozzy Osbourne, the Beach Boys with Brian Wilson, and surviving members of Led Zeppelin, with Phil Collins and the Power Station (and former Chic) member Tony Thompson sharing duties on drums in place of the band's late drummer John Bonham (although they were not officially announced by their group name from the stage, but were announced as Led Zeppelin on the VH1 10th Anniversary re-broadcast in 1995).[57]

Teddy Pendergrass made his first public appearance since his near-fatal car accident in 1982 which paralysed him. Pendergrass, along with Ashford & Simpson, performed "Reach Out and Touch".[58] Bryan Adams (who came on after Judas Priest), recalled "it was bedlam backstage", before performing a four-song set, including "Summer of '69".[19]

Duran Duran performed a four-song set which was the final time the five original band members would publicly perform together until 2003. Their set saw a weak, off-key falsetto note hit by frontman Simon Le Bon during "A View to a Kill". The error was dubbed "The Bum Note Heard Round the World" by various media outlets,[34][59] in contrast to Freddie Mercury's "Note Heard Round the World" at Wembley.[34] Le Bon later recalled it was the most embarrassing moment of his career.[59]

The UK TV feed from Philadelphia was dogged by an intermittent buzzing on the sound during Bryan Adams' turn on stage and continued less frequently throughout the rest of the UK reception of the American concert and both the audio and video feed failed entirely during that performance and during Simple Minds' performance.

Phil Collins, who had performed in London earlier in the day, began his solo set with the quip, "I was in England this afternoon. Funny old world, innit?" to cheers from the Philadelphia crowd.[25] Collins played drums during Eric Clapton's 17 minute set, which included well received performances of "Layla" and "White Room".[60]

Fundraising edit

Throughout the concerts, viewers were urged to donate money to the Live Aid cause. The BBC operated three hundred phone lines so that members of the public could make donations using their credit cards. The phone number and an address that viewers could send cheques to were repeated every twenty minutes.

Nearly seven hours into the concert in London, Bob Geldof enquired how much money had been raised so far; he was told about £1.2 million. He is said to have been sorely disappointed by the amount and marched to the BBC commentary position. Pumped up further by a performance by Queen which he later called "absolutely amazing", Geldof gave an interview in which BBC presenter David Hepworth had attempted to provide a postal address to which potential donations could be sent; Geldof interrupted him in mid-flow and shouted "Fuck the address, let's get the numbers". Although the phrase "give us your fucking money" has passed into folklore, Geldof has stated that it was never uttered.[61] Private Eye magazine made great humorous capital out of this outburst, emphasising Geldof's Irish accent which meant the profanities were heard as "fock" or "focking". After the outburst, donations increased to £300 per second.[62]

Later in the evening, following David Bowie's set, a video shot by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation was shown to the audiences in London and Philadelphia, as well as on televisions around the world (though neither US feed showed the film), showing starving and diseased Ethiopian children set to "Drive" by The Cars. (This would also be shown at the London Live 8 concert in 2005.[63]) The rate of donations became faster in the aftermath of the video. Geldof had previously refused to allow the video to be shown, due to time constraints, and had only relented when Bowie offered to drop the song "Five Years" from his set as a trade-off.[64]

Geldof mentioned during the concert that the Republic of Ireland gave the most donations per capita, despite being in the midst of a serious economic recession. The largest donation came from Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum, who was part of the ruling family of Dubai, who donated £1m in a phone conversation with Geldof. The next day, news reports stated that between £40 and £50 million had been raised. It is now estimated that around £150 million in total has been raised for famine relief as a direct result of the concerts.

Criticisms and controversies edit

Bob Dylan's performance generated controversy; prior to performing "When the Ship Comes In," he said: "I hope that some of the money that's raised for the people in Africa, maybe they can just take a little bit of it, maybe one or two million, maybe, and use it, say, to pay the mortgages on some of the farms and the farmers here owe to the banks."[3] He is often misquoted, as on the Farm Aid website,[65] as saying: "Wouldn't it be great if we did something for our own farmers right here in America?". In his autobiography, Is That It? (published in 1986), Geldof was critical of the remark, saying "He displayed a complete lack of understanding of the issues raised by Live Aid. ... Live Aid was about people losing their lives. There is a radical difference between losing your livelihood and losing your life. It did instigate Farm Aid, which was a good thing in itself, but it was a crass, stupid, and nationalistic thing to say."[66] Although Dylan's comments were criticised, his remark inspired fellow musicians Willie Nelson, Neil Young and John Mellencamp to organise the Farm Aid charity, which held its first concert in September 1985.[67][68] The concert raised over $9 million for America's family farmers and became an annual event.[69]

Geldof was not happy about the Hooters being added as the opening band in Philadelphia. He felt pressured into it by Graham and local promoter Larry Magid. Magid, promoting the concert through Electric Factory Concerts, argued that the band was popular in Philadelphia; their first major label album Nervous Night had been released almost three months earlier and had been a hit. In an interview for Rolling Stone, Geldof asked: "Who the fuck are the Hooters?"[70] Ironically, in December 2004, Geldof appeared on the bill with the Hooters in Germany as their opening act.[70]

Adam Ant subsequently criticised the event and expressed regrets about playing it, saying, "I was asked by Sir Bob [sic] to promote this concert. They had no idea they could sell it out. Then in Bob's book he said, 'Adam was over the hill so I let him have one number.' ... Doing that show was the biggest fucking mistake in the world. Knighthoods were made, Bono got it made, and it was a waste of fucking time. It was the end of rock 'n' roll."[71] Geldof stated in his autobiography that Miles Copeland, manager of Adam Ant and Sting, asked Geldof if he had thought of asking Ant after Geldof contacted him to get Sting to appear: "I hadn't. I thought he was a bit passé. But then so were the Boomtown Rats, and each represented a certain piece of pop history, so I agreed. I also thought that might entice him to encourage Sting, or perhaps all three of the Police."[72]

BBC coverage co-host Andy Kershaw was heavily critical of the event in his autobiography No Off Switch, stating, "Musically, Live Aid was to be entirely predictable and boring. As they were wheeled out – or rather bullied by Geldof into playing – it became clear that this was another parade of the same old rock aristocracy in a concert for Africa, organised by someone who, while advertising his concern for, and sympathy with, the continent didn't see fit to celebrate or dignify the place by including on the Live Aid bill a single African performer." Kershaw also described the event as "irritating, shallow, sanctimonious and self-satisfied" for failing to confront the fundamental causes of the famine and being "smug in its assumption that a bunch of largely lamentable rock and pop floozies was capable of making a difference, without tackling simultaneously underlying problems".[73]

Led Zeppelin reunion edit

"I thought it was just going to be low-key and we'd all get together and have a play. But something happened between that conversation and the day – it became a Led Zeppelin reunion."

—Phil Collins on the Led Zeppelin performance[74]

Led Zeppelin performed for the first time since the death of their drummer John Bonham in 1980. Two drummers filled in for Bonham: Phil Collins, who had played on singer Robert Plant's first two solo albums, and Tony Thompson. The performance was criticised for Plant's hoarse vocals, Jimmy Page's intoxication and out-of-tune guitar, a lack of rehearsal, and poorly functioning monitors. Plant described the performance as "a fucking atrocity for us ... It made us look like loonies."[75]

Page later criticised Collins' performance, saying: "Robert told me Phil Collins wanted to play with us. I told him that was all right if he knows the numbers. But at the end of the day, he didn't know anything. We played 'Whole Lotta Love', and he was just there bashing away cluelessly and grinning. I thought that was really a joke."[76] Collins responded: "It wasn't my fault it was crap... If I could have walked off, I would have. But then we'd all be talking about why Phil Collins walked off Live Aid – so I just stuck it out... I turned up and I was a square peg in a round hole. Robert was happy to see me, but Jimmy wasn't."[74]

Led Zeppelin have blocked broadcasts of the performance and withheld permission for it to be included on the DVD release.[77] Philadelphia named it "one of the worst rock-and-roll reunions of all time", with Victor Fiorillo writing: "I'd like to be able to blame all of the awfulness on anaemic Phil Collins, who sat in on drums, and Page himself later fingered the Genesis drummer for screwing up the set. But Collins was just the beginning of the bad. Go ahead. Watch and remember. It really was that terrible."[78]

Fund use in Ethiopia edit

In 1986, Spin published an exposé on Live Aid's actions in Ethiopia. They claimed that Geldof deliberately ignored warnings from Médecins Sans Frontières, who had complained directly to Geldof even before Live Aid, about the role of the Ethiopian government under Derg leader Mengistu Haile Mariam in causing the famine and that by working with Mengistu directly, much of the relief funds intended for victims were in fact siphoned off to purchase arms from the Soviet Union, thereby exacerbating the situation.[79] Geldof responded by deriding both the articles and Médecins Sans Frontières, who had been expelled from the country, and reportedly saying, "I'll shake hands with the Devil on my left and on my right to get to the people we are meant to help".[79][80]

According to the BBC World Service, a certain proportion of the funds were siphoned off to buy arms for the Tigrayan People's Liberation Front.[81] This coalition battled at the time against Derg. The Band Aid Trust complained to the BBC Editorial Complaints Unit regarding the specific allegations in the BBC World Service documentary, and their complaint was upheld.[82] In 2010 the BBC issued an apology to the Trust and stated there was no evidence money had been diverted,[9] while the former British Ambassador to Ethiopia, Brian Barder, states, "the diversion of aid related only to the tiny proportion that was supplied by some NGOs to rebel-held areas."[10]

Although a professed admirer of Geldof's generosity and concern, American television commentator Bill O'Reilly was critical of the Live Aid's oversight of the use of the funds raised. O'Reilly believed that charity organizations, operating in aid-receiving countries, should control donations, rather than "chaotic nations."[83] Arguing that Live Aid accomplished good ends while inadvertently causing harm at the same time, David Rieff gave a presentation of similar concerns in The Guardian at the time of Live 8.[84]

Tim Russert, in an interview on Meet the Press shortly after O'Reilly's comments, addressed these concerns to Bono. Bono responded that corruption, not disease or famine, was the greatest threat to Africa, agreeing with the belief that foreign relief organisations should decide how the money is spent. On the other hand, Bono said that it was better to spill some funds into nefarious quarters for the sake of those who needed it than to stifle aid because of possible theft.[85]

Performances edit

London, Wembley Stadium edit

Time Performer(s) Performed song(s)
12:00 Coldstream Guards "Royal Salute"
"God Save the Queen" (First six bars only)
12:01 Status Quo "Rockin' All Over the World"
"Caroline"
"Don't Waste My Time"
12:19 The Style Council "You're the Best Thing"
"Big Boss Groove"
"Internationalists"
"Walls Come Tumbling Down!"
12:44 The Boomtown Rats "I Don't Like Mondays"
"Drag Me Down"
"Rat Trap"
13:01 Adam Ant "Vive Le Rock"
13:17 Ultravox "Reap the Wild Wind"
"Dancing with Tears in My Eyes"
"One Small Day"
"Vienna"
13:46 Spandau Ballet "Only When You Leave"
"Virgin"
"True"
14:07 Elvis Costello "All You Need Is Love"
14:22 Nik Kershaw "Wide Boy"
"Don Quixote"
"The Riddle"
"Wouldn't It Be Good"
14:53 Sade "Why Can't We Live Together"
"Your Love Is King"
"Is It a Crime?"
15:18 Sting
Phil Collins
Branford Marsalis
"Roxanne" (Sting)
"Driven to Tears" (Sting)
"Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now)" (Phil Collins)
"Message in a Bottle" (Sting)
"In the Air Tonight" (Phil Collins)
"Long Long Way to Go" (both)
"Every Breath You Take" (both)
15:49 Howard Jones "Hide and Seek"
16:08 Bryan Ferry (w/David Gilmour as backing guitarist) "Sensation"
"Boys and Girls"
"Slave to Love"
"Jealous Guy"
16:40 Paul Young "Do They Know It's Christmas?" (intro)
"Come Back and Stay"
"That's the Way Love Is" (with Alison Moyet)
"Everytime You Go Away"
17:19 U2 "Sunday Bloody Sunday"
"Bad" (w/snippets of "Satellite of Love", "Ruby Tuesday", "Sympathy for the Devil" and "Walk on the Wild Side")
18:00 Dire Straits "Money for Nothing" (with Sting)
"Sultans of Swing"
18:41 Queen "Bohemian Rhapsody" (first part)
"Radio Ga Ga"
"Hammer to Fall"
"Crazy Little Thing Called Love"
"We Will Rock You"
"We Are the Champions"
19:23 David Bowie "TVC 15"
"Rebel Rebel"
"Modern Love"
"Heroes"
19:59 The Who "My Generation"
"Pinball Wizard"
"Love, Reign o'er Me"
"Won't Get Fooled Again"
20:50 Elton John "I'm Still Standing"
"Bennie and the Jets"
"Rocket Man"
"Don't Go Breaking My Heart" (with Kiki Dee)
"Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" (with Wham!)
"Can I Get a Witness"
21:48 Freddie Mercury
Brian May
"Is This the World We Created...?"
21:51 Paul McCartney
(w/David Bowie, Bob Geldof, Alison Moyet and Pete Townshend)
"Let It Be"
21:57 Band Aid "Do They Know It's Christmas?"

Presenters:

Philadelphia, John F. Kennedy Stadium edit

Time Performer(s) Performed song(s)
8:51 Bernard Watson "All I Really Want to Do"
"Interview"
9:01 Joan Baez "Amazing Grace"
"We Are the World"
9:10 The Hooters "And We Danced"
"All You Zombies"
9:32 Four Tops "Shake Me, Wake Me (When It's Over)"
"Bernadette"
"It's the Same Old Song"
"Reach Out I'll Be There"
"I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)"
9:45 Billy Ocean "Caribbean Queen"
"Loverboy"
9:55 Black Sabbath "Children of the Grave"
"Iron Man"
"Paranoid"
10:12 Run–D.M.C. "Jam Master Jay"
"King of Rock"
10:27 Rick Springfield "Love Somebody"
"State of the Heart"
"Human Touch"
10:47 REO Speedwagon "Can't Fight This Feeling"
"Roll with the Changes"
11:12 Crosby, Stills and Nash "Southern Cross"
"Teach Your Children"
"Suite: Judy Blue Eyes"
11:29 Judas Priest "Living After Midnight"
"The Green Manalishi (With the Two-Pronged Crown)"
"You've Got Another Thing Comin'"
12:01 Bryan Adams "Kids Wanna Rock"
"Summer of '69"
"Tears Are Not Enough"
"Cuts Like a Knife"
12:39 The Beach Boys "California Girls"
"Help Me, Rhonda"
"Wouldn't It Be Nice"
"Good Vibrations"
"Surfin' U.S.A."
13:26 George Thorogood and the Destroyers
(w/Bo Diddley and Albert Collins)
"Who Do You Love?" (w/Bo Diddley)
"The Sky Is Crying"
"Madison Blues" (w/Albert Collins)
14:05 Simple Minds "Ghost Dancing"
"Don't You (Forget About Me)"
"Promised You a Miracle"
14:41 Pretenders "Time the Avenger"
"Message of Love"
"Stop Your Sobbing"
"Back on the Chain Gang"
"Middle of the Road"
15:21 Santana
(w/Pat Metheny)
"Brotherhood"
"Primera Invasion"
"Open Invitation"
"By the Pool"
"Right Now"
15:57 Ashford & Simpson
(w/Teddy Pendergrass)
"Solid"
"Reach Out and Touch (Somebody's Hand)" (w/Teddy Pendergrass)
16:27 Madonna
(w/Thompson Twins and Nile Rodgers)
"Holiday"
"Into the Groove"
"Love Makes the World Go Round" (w/Thompson Twins and Nile Rodgers)
17:02 Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers "American Girl"
"The Waiting"
"Rebels"
"Refugee"
17:30 Kenny Loggins "Footloose"
17:39 The Cars "You Might Think"
"Drive"
"Just What I Needed"
"Heartbeat City"
18:06 Neil Young "Sugar Mountain"
"The Needle and the Damage Done"
"Helpless"
"Nothing Is Perfect (In God's Perfect Plan)"
"Powderfinger"
18:42 The Power Station "Murderess"
"Get It On"
19:21 Thompson Twins
(w/Madonna, Steve Stevens and Nile Rodgers)
"Hold Me Now"
"Revolution" (w/Madonna, Steve Stevens and Nile Rodgers)
19:38 Eric Clapton
(w/Phil Collins)
"White Room"
"She's Waiting"
"Layla"
20:00 Phil Collins "Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now)"
"In the Air Tonight"
20:10 Led Zeppelin
(w/Phil Collins)
"Rock and Roll"
"Whole Lotta Love"
"Stairway to Heaven"
20:39 Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young "Only Love Can Break Your Heart"
"Daylight Again/Find the Cost of Freedom"
20:46 Duran Duran "A View to a Kill"
"Union of the Snake"
"Save a Prayer"
"The Reflex"
21:20 Patti LaBelle "New Attitude"
"Imagine"
"Forever Young"
"Stir It Up"
"Over the Rainbow"
"Why Can't I Get It Over"
21:50 Hall & Oates
(w/Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin)
"Out of Touch"
"Maneater"
"Get Ready" (w/Eddie Kendricks)
"Ain't Too Proud to Beg" (w/David Ruffin)
"The Way You Do the Things You Do"
"My Girl" (w/Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin)
22:15 Mick Jagger
(w/Tina Turner)
"Lonely at the Top"
"Just Another Night"
"Miss You"
"State of Shock" (w/Tina Turner)
"It's Only Rock 'n Roll (But I Like It) (Reprise)" (w/Tina Turner)
22:39 Bob Dylan
Keith Richards
Ronnie Wood
"Ballad of Hollis Brown"
"When the Ship Comes In"
"Blowin' in the Wind"
22:55 USA for Africa "We Are the World"

Presenters:

Others edit

Time Location Performer(s) Performed song(s)
13:05   Sydney Oz for Africa various (depends on the broadcaster)
13:34 studio
  (performers from Japan)
Loudness "Gotta Fight"
Off Course "Endless Night"
Takako Shirai "Foolish War"
Eikichi Yazawa "Take It Time"
Motoharu Sano "Shame"
Meiko Nakahara "Ro-Ro-Ro-Russian Roulette" (from the anime Dirty Pair)
14:12   Vienna, Austria Austria für Afrika [de] "Warum?"
14:40   The Hague, Netherlands
(from the North Sea Jazz Festival)
B.B. King "When It All Comes Down"
"Why I Sing the Blues"
"Don't Answer the Door"
"Rock Me Baby"
15:10   Belgrade, Yugoslavia YU Rock Misija "Za milion godina"
15:55   Moscow, Soviet Union Autograph "Golovokruzhenie"
"Nam nuzhen mir"
16:27   Cologne, West Germany Band für Afrika [de] "Nackt Im Wind"
"Ein Jahr (Es geht voran)"
20:44   Norway Stavanger for Africa "All of Us"
Forente Artister "Sammen for Livet"
21:19 studio Kool & the Gang "Stand Up and Sing"
"Cherish"
2:11   London, United Kingdom Cliff Richard "A World of Difference"

Presenters:

Notable absences edit

Bruce Springsteen decided not to appear at Live Aid despite his huge global popularity in 1985. Geldof had originally scheduled the event for 6 July, but moved the date to the 13th especially to accommodate Springsteen. Springsteen later expressed regret at turning down Geldof's invitation, stating that he "simply did not realise how big the whole thing was going to be"[86] and regretted not performing an acoustic set.[87] During the MTV broadcast, VJ Martha Quinn repeatedly and erroneously claimed that Springsteen would in fact make an appearance.[88]

Michael Jackson declined to appear. His press agent, Norman Winter, released a statement at the time saying that Jackson was "working around the clock in the studio on a project that he's made a major commitment to," and consequently could not free up sufficient time to rehearse and perform at Live Aid. Winter added, "Michael is just about living in the studio, rehearsing and recording. I know, what could be more major than Live Aid, but Michael couldn't turn his back on his responsibility to the people he's working with. This affected employment for a lot of people."[89]

Prince also declined to appear in person, but sent a pre-taped video of an acoustic version of "4 the Tears in Your Eyes", which was played during the concert in Philadelphia. The original version appears on the We Are the World album,[90] while the video version was released in 1993 on Prince's compilation The Hits/The B-Sides.[91]

Culture Club leader Boy George decided not to take part in the concert. He feared that Culture Club would fail to measure up performing for two billion people, and he disliked what he viewed as self-important posturing on the part of other participants. In his memoir Take It Like a Man he said his band members were angry with him because he had "ruined their chance of a part in history".[92]

Huey Lewis and the News were scheduled to play the Philadelphia leg, and were in some of the promotional material, but decided on 28 June to pull out over concerns that the money raised by relief efforts thus far had not been reaching those it was intended to help. "It was a very tough decision", Lewis told Rolling Stone. "We felt, having done the USA for Africa thing, that we should wait and watch that ... The prudent thing to do is to see how that money translates into food for the people before we do another one." Harry Belafonte, who had organised USA for Africa, responded harshly, calling Lewis's scepticism "disruptive and divisive". He had himself recently returned from a trip to Africa to see how the money had so far been spent, and suggested that Lewis do the same. "For him to sit back here and send out information based on hearsay is unfair to his colleagues and very unfair to the victims."[93]

Annie Lennox, whose hits as the vocalist of Eurythmics included 1983's "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)", was forced to pull out of performing at Live Aid due to a serious throat infection; she appeared at Live 8 held in Hyde Park, London in 2005.[94]

Cliff Richard later stated he had been unable to perform as he was already committed to a gospel charity concert in Birmingham the same day.[95]

A reunited Deep Purple were also due to appear from Switzerland via satellite, but pulled out after guitarist Ritchie Blackmore refused to take part.[96] Deep Purple (minus Blackmore, who left the band in 1993) appeared at Geldof's Live 8 sequel 20 years later, performing at the Toronto leg of the event. Bill Graham is said to have turned down Foreigner and Yes because there was no free space on the bill for them.[96]

Marillion, riding high in the UK charts that summer with their Misplaced Childhood album and "Kayleigh" single, missed out on an invitation to perform at Wembley because their manager had deemed it not worthwhile for singer Fish to participate in the "Do They Know It's Christmas?" single. Fish was quoted: "When it came to the bill for the concert we were passed over."[97]

UB40 lead singer Ali Campbell admitted that his band was also ignored by Geldof while planning the list of musical acts of the British leg of the event: "We weren't asked to do Live Aid because Uncle Bob didn't like our music much. It was a great gig, but I thought it was a bit dodgy not having any black acts on the bill when it was raising money for Africa."[98]

Thin Lizzy keyboard player Darren Wharton expressed regrets about the band not being asked to perform: "That was a tragic, tragic decision. It could've been and it should've been the turning point for Phil (Lynott). And I think that really did Phil in quite a lot, that we were never asked to play. I mean Phil, he had a few problems at the time, but at the end of the day, if he would've been asked to play Live Aid, that would've been a goal for him to clean himself up to do that gig. We were all very upset of the fact that we weren't asked to do it because Phil knew Geldof and Midge Ure very well indeed. I was surprised that we weren't asked to do that. I don't think Phil ever forgave Bob."[99] Lynott died less than five months after the concert, from complications associated with his drug and alcohol addictions.

 
Roger Waters (right) rejoined his former bandmates Pink Floyd at Live 8 in Hyde Park, London on 2 July 2005

"I tried to pitch into Live Aid," recalled Roger Waters, "They asked me to put Pink Floyd back together for it and I said no, but I'd bring my new band to play. They didn't want that. But that's alright. I went along on my own."[100] Waters appeared backstage at the Wembley Stadium leg of Live Aid (where he was interviewed), and the classic Pink Floyd lineup reunited for the follow-up to Live Aid, Live 8, in 2005.[101]

Neil Peart, drummer of Canadian rock band Rush said: "Geddy was involved with the Northern Lights charity record here in Canada, although Rush weren't invited to participate in the Live Aid event—mainly because if you look at the guest list, it was very much an 'in-crowd' situation. We were 'out' by then. We didn't refuse to take part because of any principles. Mind you, I wouldn't have been happy being part of this scenario. Those stars should have shut up and just given over their money if they were genuine. I recall that Tears for Fears, who made a musical and artistic decision to pull out of the concert, were subsequently accused by Geldof of killing children in Africa—what a shockingly irresponsible and stupid attitude to take. But I have nothing bad whatsoever to say about Bob Geldof; he sacrificed his health, his career, everything for something he believed in. But others around him got involved for their own reasons. Some of those involved in Northern Lights were actually quoted as saying that their managers told them to get down to the recording sessions because it would be a good career move!"[102]

Live Aid recordings edit

When organiser Bob Geldof was persuading artists to take part in the concert, he promised them that it would be a one-off event, never to be seen again. Hence, the concert was never recorded in its complete original form, and only secondary television broadcasts were recorded. Following Geldof's request, ABC erased its own broadcast tapes.[103] However, before the syndicated/ABC footage was erased, copies of it were donated to the Smithsonian Institution and have now been presumed lost. The ABC feed of the USA for Africa/"We Are The World" finale does exist in its entirety, complete with the network end credits, and can be found as a supplemental feature on the We Are The World: The Story Behind The Song DVD.

Meanwhile, MTV decided to keep recordings of its broadcast and eventually located more than 100 tapes of Live Aid in its archives, but many songs in these tapes were cut short by MTV's ad breaks and presenters (according to the BBC).[104] Many performances from the US were not shown on the BBC, and recordings of these performances are missing. There were four separate Audio Trucks in Philadelphia provided by David Hewitt of Remote Recording Services. ABC had taken the decision that no multi track tape recordings would be allowed, so no remixing of the Philadelphia show was possible.

Official Live Aid DVD edit

An official four-disc DVD set of the Live Aid concerts was released on 8 November 2004. A premiere to launch the new DVD was held on 7 November and shown in DTS surround sound featuring a short compilation of the four-disc set. The screening was held at the Odeon Cinema in Kensington, London and included guests such as Brian May, Anita Dobson, Roger Taylor, Bob Geldof and partner Jean Marie, Annie Lennox, Midge Ure, Michael Buerk, Gary Kemp and The Darkness.[105] Other theatrical premieres were held in Zurich, Milan, Rome, Vienna, Hamburg and Berlin.[106] A 52-minute compilation was later released as a limited edition DVD in July 2005 titled 20 Years Ago Today: Live Aid.[107] The box set contains 10-hour partial footage of the 16-hour length concert. The DVD was produced by Geldof's company, Woodcharm Ltd., and distributed by Warner Music Vision. The DVD has since been out of print and no longer available in stores. The decision to finally release it was taken by Bob Geldof nearly 20 years after the original concerts, after he found a number of unlicensed copies of the concert on the Internet.[108]

The most complete footage that exists is used from the BBC source, and this was the main source of the DVD. During production on the official DVD, MTV lent Woodcharm Ltd. their B-roll and alternate camera footage where MTV provided extra footage of the Philadelphia concert (where ABC had erased the tapes from the command of Bob Geldof). Songs that were not originally interrupted with advertisements were also used on the official DVD.

Working from the BBC and MTV footage, several degrees of dramatic licence were taken, to release the concert on DVD. Many songs had their soundtracks altered for the DVD release, mainly in sequences where there were originally microphone problems. In one of those instances, Paul McCartney had re-recorded his failed vocals for "Let It Be" in a studio the day after the concert (14 July 1985). Beatles biographer Keith Badman explains, "because of what happened, he decided to re-record his vocals for any future film of the concert. That's the version you'll hear when the DVD comes out."[109] Also, in the US finale, the original USA for Africa studio track for "We Are the World" was overlaid in places where the microphone was absent (consequently, it includes the vocals of Kenny Rogers and James Ingram, two artists who did not even take part in Live Aid).

Some artists did not want their performances to be featured on the DVD. At their own request, Led Zeppelin and Santana were omitted. The former defended their decision not to be included on the grounds that their performance was "sub-standard", but to lend their support, Jimmy Page and Robert Plant pledged to donate proceeds from the DVD release of Page & Plant: No Quarter to the campaign, and John Paul Jones pledged proceeds from his American tour with Mutual Admiration Society.[110]

Judicious decisions were also made on which acts would be included and which ones would not, due to either technical difficulties in the original performances, the absence of original footage, or for music rights reasons. Rick Springfield, the Four Tops, the Hooters, the Power Station, Billy Ocean and Kool and the Gang were among those acts that were left off the DVD. Several artists who did feature on the DVD also had songs that were performed omitted. Madonna performed three solo songs in the concert, but only two were included on the DVD ("Love Makes the World Go Round" was omitted). Phil Collins played "Against All Odds" and "In the Air Tonight" at both Wembley and JFK, but only the London performance of the former and the Philadelphia performance of the latter were included on the DVD. The JFK performance of "Against All Odds" was later included on Collins' Finally ... The First Farewell Tour DVD. Tom Petty performed four songs, and only two were included on DVD. Patti LaBelle played six songs but only two songs were included.

In 2007, Queen released a special edition of Queen Rock Montreal on Blu-ray and DVD formats containing their 1981 concert from The Forum in Montreal, Canada, and their complete Live Aid performance, along with Freddie Mercury and Brian May performing "Is This the World We Created...?" from the UK Live Aid finale, all re-mixed in DTS 5.1 sound by Justin Shirley-Smith. Also included is their Live Aid rehearsal, and an interview with the band, from earlier in the week.

On its release, the then British Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, decided the VAT collected on sales of the Live Aid DVD would be given back to the charity, which would raise an extra £5 for every DVD sold.[111]

On 14 November 2004, the DVD entered the UK Official Music Video Chart at number one and stayed in the top position for twelve consecutive weeks.[112]

Charts edit

Charts (2004) Peak
position
Ref(s)
Dutch Music DVDs Chart 2 [113]
Spanish Music DVD Chart (Promusicae) 8 [114]
UK Music Video Chart (OCC) 1 [112]
US Top Music Video (Billboard) 2 [115]

Certifications edit

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[116] 2× Platinum 30,000^
Austria (IFPI Austria)[117] Gold 5,000*
Canada (Music Canada)[118] 2× Diamond 200,000^
France (SNEP)[119] Platinum 15,000*
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[120] Platinum 6,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[121] 6× Platinum 300,000*
United Kingdom (BPI)[122]
20 Years Ago Today version
Gold 25,000*
United States (RIAA)[123] 10× Platinum 1,000,000^

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

Official Live Aid audio edit

An audio copy of Live Aid was officially released by the Band Aid Trust label on 7 September 2018 on digital download. When first released in 2018, the Queen performance was excluded. The band's set was, however, later included as a part of the digital download in May 2019. It has a total of ninety-three audio tracks.[124]

Live Aid channel edit

On 12 September 2018, YouTube launched the Official Live Aid channel with a total of 87 videos from the Live Aid 1985 concert. According to the channel, all earnings from viewings go to the Band Aid Trust.[125] As with the digital download release, a few notable performances are not included for unknown reasons, although Queen's set was uploaded to the channel with its inclusion on the digital download.

Unofficial recordings edit

Because the Live Aid broadcast was watched by 1.5 billion people,[126] most of the footage was recorded on home consumer video recorders all around the world, in various qualities. Many of these recordings were in mono, because in the mid-1980s most home video machines could only record mono sound, and also because the European BBC TV broadcast was in mono. The US MTV broadcast, the ABC Radio Network and BBC Radio 1 simulcasts were stereo. These recordings circulated among collectors, and in recent years, have also appeared on the Internet in file sharing networks.

Since the official DVD release of Live Aid includes only partial footage of this event, unofficial distribution sources continue to be the only source of the most complete recordings of this event. The official DVD is the only authorised video release in which proceeds go directly to famine relief, the cause that the concert was originally intended to help.

Legacy edit

"Everyone has a common experience of it, everyone remembers where they were and what they felt about it. It's one of those little pegs that you hang all your other memories on."

Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling speaking on the BBC's Live Aid – Rockin' All Over the World in 2005.[127]

Live Aid eventually raised $127 million ($350 million in 2022 terms) in famine relief for African nations, and the publicity it generated encouraged Western nations to make available enough surplus grain to end the immediate hunger crisis in Africa.[128] According to one aid worker, a larger impact than the money raised for the Ethiopian famine is that "humanitarian concern is now at the centre of foreign policy" for the west.[5]

Regarding Buerk's landmark BBC News report as a watershed moment in crisis reporting that influenced modern coverage—one that was broadcast in its entirety with Buerk's narration on a major US channel—Suzanne Franks in The Guardian states, "the nexus of politics, media and aid are influenced by the coverage of a famine 30 years ago."[15]

Many artists and performers at Live Aid gained prominence and positive commercial influence. For all the cultural, charitable, and technological significance of 1985's Live Aid, its most immediate impact was on the charts. In the UK, for example, No Jacket Required by Phil Collins and Madonna's Like a Virgin leapt back into the top ten. Queen's three-year-old Greatest Hits rose fifty-five places into the top twenty, followed by Freddie Mercury's Mr. Bad Guy. Every U2 album available at the time also returned to the chart.[129] In 1986, Geldof received an honorary knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II for his efforts.[128] Claire Bertschinger, the nurse who featured in Buerk's news reports that sparked the aid relief movement, received the Florence Nightingale Medal in 1991 for her work in nursing, and was made a Dame by Queen Elizabeth II in 2010 for "services to Nursing and to International Humanitarian Aid".[130]

Queen's performance at Live Aid was later recreated in the band's biographical film Bohemian Rhapsody in 2018.[131] Footage from the original performance can be seen to match very accurately with the movie performance.[131] In 2020, Queen + Adam Lambert reprised the original Queen setlist from Live Aid for the Fire Fight Australia charity concert in Sydney, Australia.[132]

The background to the staging of the concert as a whole was dramatised in the 2010 television drama When Harvey Met Bob.[133]

In November 2023, Geldof stated that a six-part miniseries about Live Aid was being produced by Disney as well as an IMAX-format theatrical documentary from Geldof himself.[134]

A jukebox musical based on the day, Just For One Day (named after a line in Bowie's song "Heroes", which he performed at the event), will have its world premiere at The Old Vic in London in February 2024.[135][136]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Live Aid on Bob Geldof's official site 5 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Billboard Boxscore". Billboard. 27 July 1985. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Live Aid 1985: A day of magic. CNN. Retrieved 22 May 2011
  4. ^ World Population Prospects: The 2017 Revision 19 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine. United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d "Cruel to be kind?". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  6. ^ "Live Aid index: Bob Geldof". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
  7. ^ "Margaret Thatcher demanded UK find ways to 'destabilise' Ethiopian regime in power during 1984 famine". The Independent. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
  8. ^ "Live Aid: The Terrible Truth". Spin. 13 July 2015. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  9. ^ a b "BBC apologises over Band Aid money reports". BBC. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  10. ^ a b "Ethiopia famine relief aid: misinterpreted allegations out of control". Barder.com. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h "Live Aid: The show that rocked the world". BBC. Retrieved 15 September 2011
  12. ^ "Higgins marvels at change in Ethiopia's Tigray province". The Irish Times. 7 January 2018.
  13. ^ a b c d "The nurse who inspired Live Aid". BBC. Retrieved 28 September 2020.
  14. ^ "Live Aid: Against All Odds: Episode 1". BBC. 7 January 2018.
  15. ^ a b "Ethiopian famine: how landmark BBC report influenced modern coverage". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 September 2020.
  16. ^ The 20th anniversary of Band Aid BBC. Retrieved 15 December 2011
  17. ^ Billboard 8 Dec 1984 Billboard. Retrieved 15 December 2011
  18. ^ a b "Band Aid ... On Stage". Melody Maker. London, England. 12 January 1985. p. 3.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g "Live aid in their own words". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
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Bibliography edit

  • Davis, H. Louise. "Feeding the world a line?: Celebrity activism and ethical consumer practices from Live Aid to Product Red." Nordic Journal of English Studies 9.3 (2010): 89–118.
  • Westley, Frances. "Bob Geldof and Live Aid: the affective side of global social innovation." Human Relations 44.10 (1991): 1011–1036.
  • Live Aid: Rockin' All Over the World – BBC2 documentary, recalling the build-up to the day, and the day itself; viewed 18 June 2005.
  • Live Aid: World Wide Concert Book – Peter Hillmore with Introduction by Bob Geldof, ISBN 0-88101-024-3, Copyright 1985, The Unicorn Publishing House, New Jersey.

External links edit

  • Live Aid at IMDb  
  • BBC news stories about the Live Aid DVD
  • Twenty-Five Years on...memories from Herald UK
  • How Live Aid was saved for history: BBC News
  • Geldof thwarts 'Live Aid pirate': BBC News
  • Philly.com: Live Aid Philadelphia Photo Gallery
  • In-depth interview between Hal Uplinger, producer of the "Live Aid Concert", the United States event, and the National Museum of American History (part of the Smithsonian Institution)
  • Full set list, including Philadelphia – JFK Stadium

live, 2005, benefit, concerts, live, multi, venue, benefit, concert, held, saturday, july, 1985, well, music, based, fundraising, initiative, original, event, organised, geldof, midge, raise, further, funds, relief, 1983, 1985, famine, ethiopia, movement, that. For the 2005 benefit concerts see Live 8 Live Aid was a multi venue benefit concert held on Saturday 13 July 1985 as well as a music based fundraising initiative The original event was organised by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to raise further funds for relief of the 1983 1985 famine in Ethiopia a movement that started with the release of the successful charity single Do They Know It s Christmas in December 1984 Billed as the global jukebox Live Aid was held simultaneously at Wembley Stadium in London attended by about 72 000 people and John F Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia attended by 89 484 people 1 2 Live AidOfficial Live Aid poster artwork by Peter BlakeGenrePopRockDates13 July 1985 38 years ago 1985 07 13 Location s Wembley Stadium in London England United Kingdom John F Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia Pennsylvania United StatesFounded byBob GeldofMidge UreAttendance72 000 London 89 484 Philadelphia Websitewww wbr live8live wbr comOn the same day concerts inspired by the initiative were held in other countries such as the Soviet Union Canada Japan Yugoslavia Austria Australia and West Germany It was one of the largest satellite link ups and television broadcasts of all time an estimated audience of 1 9 billion in 150 nations watched the live broadcast nearly 40 percent of the world population 3 4 The impact of Live Aid on famine relief has been debated for years One aid relief worker stated that following the publicity generated by the concert humanitarian concern is now at the centre of foreign policy for Western governments 5 Geldof has said We took an issue that was nowhere on the political agenda and through the lingua franca of the planet which is not English but rock n roll we were able to address the intellectual absurdity and the moral repulsion of people dying of want in a world of surplus 6 In another interview he stated that Live Aid created something permanent and self sustaining but also asked why Africa is getting poorer 5 The organisers of Live Aid tried to run aid efforts directly channelling millions of pounds to NGOs in Ethiopia It has been alleged that much of this went to the Ethiopian government of Mengistu Haile Mariam a regime the UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher opposed 7 and it is also alleged some funds were spent on guns 5 8 While the BBC World Service programme Assignment reported in March 2010 that the funds had been diverted the BBC Editorial Complaints Unit later found that there was no evidence to support such statements 9 Brian Barder British Ambassador to Ethiopia from 1982 to 1986 wrote on his website that the diversion of aid related only to the tiny proportion that was supplied by some NGOs to rebel held areas 10 Contents 1 Background 2 Organisation 3 Collaborative effort 4 Broadcasts 5 Stages and locations 5 1 Wembley Stadium 5 2 John F Kennedy Stadium 6 Fundraising 7 Criticisms and controversies 7 1 Led Zeppelin reunion 7 2 Fund use in Ethiopia 8 Performances 8 1 London Wembley Stadium 8 2 Philadelphia John F Kennedy Stadium 8 3 Others 8 4 Notable absences 9 Live Aid recordings 9 1 Official Live Aid DVD 9 1 1 Charts 9 1 2 Certifications 9 2 Official Live Aid audio 9 3 Live Aid channel 9 4 Unofficial recordings 10 Legacy 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksBackground edit nbsp The BBC News reports of Michael Buerk pictured on the Ethiopian famine sparked the aid relief movement 11 The 1985 Live Aid concert was conceived as a follow on to the successful charity single Do They Know It s Christmas which was also the brainchild of Geldof and Ure In October 1984 images of hundreds of thousands of people starving to death in Ethiopia were shown in the UK in Michael Buerk s BBC News reports on the 1984 famine 11 The BBC News crew were the first to document the famine with Buerk s report on 23 October describing it as a biblical famine in the 20th century and the closest thing to hell on Earth 12 The reports featured a young nurse Claire Bertschinger who surrounded by 85 000 starving people told of her sorrow of having to decide which children would be allowed access to the limited food supplies in the feeding station and which were too sick to be saved 13 She would put a little mark on the children who got chosen with Geldof stating of her at the time In her was vested the power of life and death She had become God like and that is unbearable for anyone 13 Traumatised by what she experienced she did not speak about it for two decades recalling in 2005 I felt like a Nazi sending people to the death camps Why was I in this situation Why was it possible in this time of plenty that some have food and some do not It is not right 13 There are thousands of people outside I have counted 10 rows and each row has more than 100 people in and I can only take 60 70 children today but they all need to come in 1984 diary entry from nurse Claire Bertschinger outside a feeding station 13 Shocked by the report the British public inundated relief agencies such as Save the Children with donations with the report also bringing the world s attention to the crisis in Ethiopia 11 14 Such was the magnitude of Buerk s report it was also broadcast in its entirety on a major US news channel almost unheard of at the time 15 From his home in London Geldof also saw the report and called Ure from Ultravox Geldof and Ure had previously worked together for charity when they appeared at the 1981 benefit show The Secret Policeman s Ball in London and together they quickly co wrote the song Do They Know It s Christmas in the hope of raising money for famine relief 11 Geldof then contacted colleagues in the music industry and persuaded them to record the single under the title Band Aid for free 11 On 25 November 1984 the song was recorded at Sarm West Studios in Notting Hill London and was released four days later 16 17 It stayed at number one for five weeks in the UK was Christmas number one and became the fastest selling single ever in Britain and raised 8 million rather than the 70 000 Geldof and Ure had initially expected 11 Geldof then set his sights on staging a huge concert to raise further funds 11 The idea to stage a charity concert to raise more funds for Ethiopia originally came from Boy George the lead singer of Culture Club George and Culture Club drummer Jon Moss had taken part in the recording of Do They Know It s Christmas and in the same month the band were undertaking a tour of the UK which culminated in six nights at Wembley Arena On the final night at Wembley 22 December 1984 an impromptu gathering of some of the other artists from Band Aid joined Culture Club on stage at the end of the concert for an encore of Do They Know It s Christmas George was so overcome by the occasion he told Geldof that they should consider organising a benefit concert Speaking to the UK music magazine Melody Maker at the beginning of January 1985 Geldof revealed his enthusiasm for George s idea saying If George is organising it you can tell him he can call me at any time and I ll do it It s a logical progression from the record but the point is you don t just talk about it you go ahead and do it 18 It was clear from the interview that Geldof had already had the idea to hold a dual venue concert and how the concerts should be structured The show should be as big as is humanly possible There s no point just 5 000 fans turning up at Wembley we need to have Wembley linked with Madison Square Gardens and the whole show to be televised worldwide It would be great for Duran to play three or four numbers at Wembley and then flick to Madison Square where Springsteen would be playing While he s on the Wembley stage could be made ready for the next British act like the Thompsons or whoever In that way lots of acts could be featured and the television rights tickets and so on could raise a phenomenal amount of money It s not an impossible idea and certainly one worth exploiting 18 On how Geldof got artists to agree to play Live Aid production manager Andy Zweck states Bob had to play some tricks to get artists involved He had to call Elton and say Queen are in and Bowie s in and of course they weren t Then he d call Bowie and say Elton and Queen are in It was a game of bluff 19 Organisation edit nbsp Bob Geldof successfully pitched the idea of the concert to promoter Harvey GoldsmithAmong those involved in organising Live Aid were Harvey Goldsmith who was responsible for the Wembley Stadium concert and Bill Graham who put together the American leg 20 On promoting the event Goldsmith states I didn t really get a chance to say no Bob Geldof arrived in my office and basically said We re doing this It started from there 19 The concert grew in scope as more acts were added on both sides of the Atlantic Tony Verna inventor of instant replay was able to secure John F Kennedy Stadium through his friendship with Philadelphia Mayor Goode and was able to procure through his connections with ABC s prime time chief John Hamlin a three hour prime time slot on the ABC Network and in addition was able to supplement the lengthy program through meetings that resulted in the addition of an ad hoc network within the US which covered 85 per cent of TVs there Verna designed the needed satellite schematic and became the Executive Director as well as the Co Executive Producer along with Hal Uplinger Uplinger came up with the idea to produce a four hour video edit of Live Aid to distribute to those countries without the necessary satellite equipment to rebroadcast the live feed Collaborative effort editThe concert began at 12 00 British Summer Time BST 7 00 Eastern Daylight Time EDT at Wembley Stadium in the United Kingdom 21 It continued at John F Kennedy Stadium JFK in the United States starting at 13 51 BST 8 51 EDT The UK s Wembley performances ended at 22 00 BST 17 00 EDT The JFK performances and whole concert in the US ended at 04 05 BST 14 July 23 05 EDT Thus the concert continued for just over 16 hours but since many artists performances were conducted simultaneously in Wembley and JFK the total concert s length was much longer 21 Mick Jagger and David Bowie intended to perform a transatlantic duet with Bowie in London and Jagger in Philadelphia 22 Problems of synchronisation meant the only practical solution was to have one artist likely Bowie at Wembley mime along to prerecorded vocals broadcast as part of the live sound mix for Jagger s performance from Philadelphia 22 Veteran music engineer David Richards Pink Floyd and Queen was brought in to create footage and sound mixes Jagger and Bowie could perform to in their respective venues The BBC would then have had to ensure those footage and sound mixes were in sync while also performing a live vision mix of the footage from both venues The combined footage would then have had to be bounced back by satellite to the various broadcasters around the world Due to the time lag the signal would take several seconds to be broadcast twice across the Atlantic Ocean Richards concluded there was no way for Jagger to hear or see Bowie s performance meaning there could be no interaction between the artists essentially defeating the whole point of the exercise On top of this both artists objected to the idea of miming at what was perceived as a historic event Instead Jagger and Bowie worked with Richards to create a video of the song they would have performed a cover of Dancing in the Street which was shown on the screens of both stadiums and broadcast as part of many TV networks coverage 22 Each of the two main parts of the concert ended with their particular continental all star anti hunger anthems with Band Aid s Do They Know It s Christmas closing the UK concert and USA for Africa s We Are the World closing the US concert and thus the entire event itself 23 Concert organisers have subsequently said they were particularly keen to ensure at least one surviving member of the Beatles ideally Paul McCartney took part in the concert as they felt that having an elder statesman from British music would give it greater legitimacy in the eyes of the political leaders whose opinions the performers were trying to shape McCartney agreed to perform and has said it was the management his children who persuaded him to take part In the event he was the last performer aside from the Band Aid finale to take to the stage and one of the few to be beset by technical difficulties his microphone failed for the first two minutes of his piano performance of Let It Be making it difficult for television viewers and impossible for those in the stadium to hear him 3 He later joked by saying he had thought about changing the lyrics to There will be some feedback let it be 24 Phil Collins performed at both Wembley Stadium and JFK travelling from Wembley by helicopter piloted by UK TV personality Noel Edmonds to London Heathrow Airport then took a British Airways Concorde flight to New York City before taking another helicopter to Philadelphia 25 As well as his own set at both venues he also played the drums for Eric Clapton and played with the reuniting surviving members of Led Zeppelin at JFK On the Concorde flight Collins encountered actress and singer Cher who was unaware of the concerts Upon reaching the US she attended the Philadelphia concert and can be seen performing as part of the concert s We Are the World finale 19 In a 1985 interview singer songwriter Billy Joel stated that he had considered performing at the event but ultimately chose not to because he had difficulties getting his band together and did not want to perform by himself 26 Broadcasts editBroadcaster Richard Skinner opened the Live Aid concert with the words It s twelve noon in London seven AM in Philadelphia and around the world it s time for Live Aid 21 The concert was the most ambitious international satellite television venture that had ever been attempted at the time In Europe the TV feed was supplied by the BBC whose broadcast was presented by Richard Skinner Andy Kershaw Mark Ellen David Hepworth Andy Batten Foster Steve Blacknell Paul Gambaccini Janice Long and Mike Smith and included numerous interviews and chats in between the various acts 27 The BBC s television sound feed was mono as was all UK TV audio before NICAM was introduced but the BBC Radio 1 feed was stereo and was simulcast in sync with the TV pictures Unfortunately in the rush to set up the transatlantic feeds the sound feed from Philadelphia was sent to London via transatlantic cable while the video feed was via satellite which meant a lack of synchronisation on British television receivers Due to the constant activities in both London and Philadelphia the BBC producers omitted the reunion of Crosby Stills Nash amp Young from their broadcast The BBC however did supply a clean feed to various television channels in Europe ABC was largely responsible for the US broadcast although ABC themselves only telecast the final three hours of the concert from Philadelphia hosted by Dick Clark with the rest shown in syndication through Orbis Communications acting on behalf of ABC An entirely separate and simultaneous US feed was provided for cable viewers by MTV whose broadcast was presented in stereo and accessible as such for those with stereo televisions At the time before multichannel television sound was enacted nationwide very few televisions reproduced stereo signals and few television stations were able to broadcast in stereo While the telecast was run advertisement free by the BBC both the MTV and syndicated ABC broadcasts included advertisements and interviews As a result many songs were omitted due to the commercial breaks as these songs were played during these slots The biggest issue of the syndicated ABC coverage is that the network had wanted to reserve some of the biggest acts that had played earlier in the day for certain points in the entire broadcast particularly in the final three hours in prime time thus Orbis Communications had some sequences replaced by others especially those portions of the concert that had acts from London and Philadelphia playing simultaneously For example while the London Wembley finale was taking place at 22 00 10 00 pm London time syndicated viewers saw segments that had been recorded earlier so that ABC could show the UK finale during its prime time portion In 1995 VH1 and MuchMusic aired a re edited ten hour re broadcast of the concert for its 10th anniversary The Live Aid concert in London was also the first time that the BBC outside broadcast sound equipment had been used for an event of such scale In stark contrast to the mirrored sound systems commonly used by the rock band touring engineers with two 40 48 channel mixing consoles at the front of house and another pair for monitors the BBC sound engineers had to use multiple 12 channel desks Some credit this as the point where the mainstream entertainment industry realised that the rock concert industry had overtaken them in technical expertise 28 Stages and locations editWembley Stadium edit nbsp The old Wembley Stadium exterior pictured hosted the London concertThe Coldstream Guards band opened with the Royal Salute a brief version of the national anthem God Save the Queen Status Quo were the first act to appear and started their set with Rockin All Over the World also playing Caroline and fan favourite Don t Waste My Time 29 Bob told me It doesn t matter a fuck what you sound like just so long as you re there recalled guitarist and singer Francis Rossi Thanks for the fucking honesty Sir Bob 30 This would be the band s last appearance with bassist and founder member Alan Lancaster and drummer Pete Kircher 31 Princess Diana and Prince Charles were among those in attendance as the concert commenced 11 Bob Geldof performed with the rest of the Boomtown Rats singing I Don t Like Mondays He stopped just after the line The lesson today is how to die to loud applause 3 19 According to Gary Kemp Dare I say it it was evangelical that moment when Geldof stopped I Don t Like Mondays and raised his fist in the air He was a sort of statesman A link between punk and the New Romantics and the Eighties You would follow him He just has a huge charisma he d make a frightening politician 19 He finished the song and left the crowd to sing the final words Elvis Costello sang a version of the Beatles All You Need Is Love which he introduced by asking the audience to help him sing this old northern English folk song 32 Queen s twenty one minute performance which began at 6 41 pm was voted the greatest live performance in the history of rock in a 2005 industry poll of more than 60 artists journalists and music industry executives 33 34 Freddie Mercury at times led the crowd in unison refrains 35 and his sustained note Aaaaaay o during the a cappella section came to be known as The Note Heard Round the World 36 37 The band s six song set opened with a shortened version of Bohemian Rhapsody and closed with We Are the Champions 3 38 39 According to the BBC s presenter David Hepworth their performance produced the greatest display of community singing the old stadium had seen and cemented Queen s position as the most loved British group since the Beatles 40 Later in the evening Mercury and guitarist Brian May performed the first song of the three part Wembley event finale Is This the World We Created 39 Other well received performances on the day included those by U2 and David Bowie Both The Guardian and Rolling Stone have cited Live Aid as the event that made stars of U2 41 42 The band played a 12 minute rendition of Bad The length of Bad limited them to two songs a third Pride In the Name of Love had to be dropped During Bad vocalist Bono jumped off the stage to join the crowd and dance with a teenage girl In July 2005 the woman said that he had saved her life She was being crushed by people pushing forwards Bono saw this and gestured frantically at the ushers to help her They did not understand what he was saying and so he jumped down to help her himself 42 Rolling Stone described David Bowie s performance as arguably Bowie s last triumph of the 1980s observing that as approximately two billion people sang along to Heroes he still seemed like one of the biggest and most vital rock stars in the world 43 According to Ultimate Classic Rock Phil Collins also performed an especially crowd pleasing selection of songs 25 and John Illsley of Dire Straits recalled It was a very special feeling to be part of something so unique Live Aid was a unique privilege for all of us It s become a fabulous memory 44 One afternoon before the concert Bowie was up in the office and we started looking through some videos of news footage and we watched the CBC piece footage from the Ethiopian famine cut to the Cars song Drive Everyone just stopped Bowie said You ve got to put that in the show it s the most dramatic thing I ve ever seen That was probably one of the most evocative things in the whole show and really got the money rolling in Live Aid promoter Harvey Goldsmith on Bowie picking out the CBC news piece for the concert a video Bowie introduced on the big screen at Wembley after his set 19 The transatlantic broadcast from Wembley suffered technical problems and failed during the Who s performance of their opening song My Generation immediately after Roger Daltrey sang Why don t you all fade the last word away was cut off when a blown fuse caused the Wembley stage TV feed to temporarily fail 3 The broadcast returned as the last verse of Pinball Wizard was played John Entwistle s bass wouldn t work at the start causing an awkward delay of over a minute before they could start playing The band played with Kenney Jones on drums and it was their first performance since disbanding after a 1982 farewell tour The Who s performance was described as rough but right by Rolling Stone but they would not perform together again for another three years 45 At 32 minutes Elton John had the longest set on the day 46 his setlist included the first performance of Don t Let the Sun Go Down on Me with George Michael 47 While performing Let It Be near the end of the Wembley show the microphone mounted to Paul McCartney s piano failed for the first two minutes of the song making it difficult for television viewers and the stadium audience to hear him 3 During this performance the TV audience were better off audio wise than the stadium audience as the TV sound was picked up from other microphones near McCartney The stadium audience who could obviously not hear the electronic sound feed from these mics unless they had portable TV sets and radios drowned out what little sound from McCartney could be heard during this part of his performance As a result organiser and performer Bob Geldof accompanied by earlier performers David Bowie Alison Moyet and Pete Townshend returned to the stage to sing with him and back him up as did the stadium audience despite not being able to hear much by which time McCartney s microphone had been repaired 48 At the conclusion of the Wembley performances Geldof was raised onto the shoulders of the Who s guitarist Pete Townshend and Paul McCartney 49 Geldof stated that he hadn t slept in weeks in the lead up to the concert and when asked what his plans were post Live Aid he told an interviewer I m going to go home and sleep 50 The Wembley speaker system was provided by Hill Pro Audio It consisted primarily of the Hill J Series Mixing Consoles Hill M3 Speaker System powered by the Hill 3000 amplifiers 51 In an interview with Studio Sound in December 1985 Malcolm Hill described the concept for the system in detail 52 John F Kennedy Stadium edit nbsp Stage view of Live Aid at John F Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia nbsp Live Aid under the lights at John F Kennedy StadiumThe host of the televised portion of the concert in Philadelphia was actor Jack Nicholson The opening artist Joan Baez announced to the crowd this is your Woodstock and it s long overdue before leading the crowd in singing Amazing Grace and We Are the World 53 Despite the 95 F 35 C ambient temperature Madonna proclaimed I ain t taking shit off today during her set referring to the recent release of early nude photos of her in Playboy and Penthouse magazines 54 During his opening number American Girl Tom Petty flipped the middle finger to somebody off stage about one minute into the song citation needed Petty stated the song was a last minute addition when the band realised that they would be the first act to play the American side of the concert after the London finale and since this is after all JFK Stadium 55 When Bob Dylan broke a guitar string while playing with the Rolling Stones members Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood Wood took off his own guitar and gave it to Dylan Wood was left standing on stage guitarless After shrugging to the audience he played air guitar even mimicking the Who s Pete Townshend by swinging his arm in wide circles until a stagehand brought him a replacement The performance was included in the DVD including the guitar switch and Wood talking to stage hands but much of the footage used was close ups of either Dylan or Richards During their duet on the reprise of It s Only Rock n Roll Mick Jagger ripped away part of Tina Turner s dress leaving her to finish the song in what was effectively a leotard 56 The JFK portion included reunions of Crosby Stills Nash amp Young the original Black Sabbath with Ozzy Osbourne the Beach Boys with Brian Wilson and surviving members of Led Zeppelin with Phil Collins and the Power Station and former Chic member Tony Thompson sharing duties on drums in place of the band s late drummer John Bonham although they were not officially announced by their group name from the stage but were announced as Led Zeppelin on the VH1 10th Anniversary re broadcast in 1995 57 Teddy Pendergrass made his first public appearance since his near fatal car accident in 1982 which paralysed him Pendergrass along with Ashford amp Simpson performed Reach Out and Touch 58 Bryan Adams who came on after Judas Priest recalled it was bedlam backstage before performing a four song set including Summer of 69 19 Duran Duran performed a four song set which was the final time the five original band members would publicly perform together until 2003 Their set saw a weak off key falsetto note hit by frontman Simon Le Bon during A View to a Kill The error was dubbed The Bum Note Heard Round the World by various media outlets 34 59 in contrast to Freddie Mercury s Note Heard Round the World at Wembley 34 Le Bon later recalled it was the most embarrassing moment of his career 59 The UK TV feed from Philadelphia was dogged by an intermittent buzzing on the sound during Bryan Adams turn on stage and continued less frequently throughout the rest of the UK reception of the American concert and both the audio and video feed failed entirely during that performance and during Simple Minds performance Phil Collins who had performed in London earlier in the day began his solo set with the quip I was in England this afternoon Funny old world innit to cheers from the Philadelphia crowd 25 Collins played drums during Eric Clapton s 17 minute set which included well received performances of Layla and White Room 60 Fundraising editThroughout the concerts viewers were urged to donate money to the Live Aid cause The BBC operated three hundred phone lines so that members of the public could make donations using their credit cards The phone number and an address that viewers could send cheques to were repeated every twenty minutes Nearly seven hours into the concert in London Bob Geldof enquired how much money had been raised so far he was told about 1 2 million He is said to have been sorely disappointed by the amount and marched to the BBC commentary position Pumped up further by a performance by Queen which he later called absolutely amazing Geldof gave an interview in which BBC presenter David Hepworth had attempted to provide a postal address to which potential donations could be sent Geldof interrupted him in mid flow and shouted Fuck the address let s get the numbers Although the phrase give us your fucking money has passed into folklore Geldof has stated that it was never uttered 61 Private Eye magazine made great humorous capital out of this outburst emphasising Geldof s Irish accent which meant the profanities were heard as fock or focking After the outburst donations increased to 300 per second 62 Later in the evening following David Bowie s set a video shot by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation was shown to the audiences in London and Philadelphia as well as on televisions around the world though neither US feed showed the film showing starving and diseased Ethiopian children set to Drive by The Cars This would also be shown at the London Live 8 concert in 2005 63 The rate of donations became faster in the aftermath of the video Geldof had previously refused to allow the video to be shown due to time constraints and had only relented when Bowie offered to drop the song Five Years from his set as a trade off 64 Geldof mentioned during the concert that the Republic of Ireland gave the most donations per capita despite being in the midst of a serious economic recession The largest donation came from Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum who was part of the ruling family of Dubai who donated 1m in a phone conversation with Geldof The next day news reports stated that between 40 and 50 million had been raised It is now estimated that around 150 million in total has been raised for famine relief as a direct result of the concerts Criticisms and controversies editBob Dylan s performance generated controversy prior to performing When the Ship Comes In he said I hope that some of the money that s raised for the people in Africa maybe they can just take a little bit of it maybe one or two million maybe and use it say to pay the mortgages on some of the farms and the farmers here owe to the banks 3 He is often misquoted as on the Farm Aid website 65 as saying Wouldn t it be great if we did something for our own farmers right here in America In his autobiography Is That It published in 1986 Geldof was critical of the remark saying He displayed a complete lack of understanding of the issues raised by Live Aid Live Aid was about people losing their lives There is a radical difference between losing your livelihood and losing your life It did instigate Farm Aid which was a good thing in itself but it was a crass stupid and nationalistic thing to say 66 Although Dylan s comments were criticised his remark inspired fellow musicians Willie Nelson Neil Young and John Mellencamp to organise the Farm Aid charity which held its first concert in September 1985 67 68 The concert raised over 9 million for America s family farmers and became an annual event 69 Geldof was not happy about the Hooters being added as the opening band in Philadelphia He felt pressured into it by Graham and local promoter Larry Magid Magid promoting the concert through Electric Factory Concerts argued that the band was popular in Philadelphia their first major label album Nervous Night had been released almost three months earlier and had been a hit In an interview for Rolling Stone Geldof asked Who the fuck are the Hooters 70 Ironically in December 2004 Geldof appeared on the bill with the Hooters in Germany as their opening act 70 Adam Ant subsequently criticised the event and expressed regrets about playing it saying I was asked by Sir Bob sic to promote this concert They had no idea they could sell it out Then in Bob s book he said Adam was over the hill so I let him have one number Doing that show was the biggest fucking mistake in the world Knighthoods were made Bono got it made and it was a waste of fucking time It was the end of rock n roll 71 Geldof stated in his autobiography that Miles Copeland manager of Adam Ant and Sting asked Geldof if he had thought of asking Ant after Geldof contacted him to get Sting to appear I hadn t I thought he was a bit passe But then so were the Boomtown Rats and each represented a certain piece of pop history so I agreed I also thought that might entice him to encourage Sting or perhaps all three of the Police 72 BBC coverage co host Andy Kershaw was heavily critical of the event in his autobiography No Off Switch stating Musically Live Aid was to be entirely predictable and boring As they were wheeled out or rather bullied by Geldof into playing it became clear that this was another parade of the same old rock aristocracy in a concert for Africa organised by someone who while advertising his concern for and sympathy with the continent didn t see fit to celebrate or dignify the place by including on the Live Aid bill a single African performer Kershaw also described the event as irritating shallow sanctimonious and self satisfied for failing to confront the fundamental causes of the famine and being smug in its assumption that a bunch of largely lamentable rock and pop floozies was capable of making a difference without tackling simultaneously underlying problems 73 Led Zeppelin reunion edit I thought it was just going to be low key and we d all get together and have a play But something happened between that conversation and the day it became a Led Zeppelin reunion Phil Collins on the Led Zeppelin performance 74 Led Zeppelin performed for the first time since the death of their drummer John Bonham in 1980 Two drummers filled in for Bonham Phil Collins who had played on singer Robert Plant s first two solo albums and Tony Thompson The performance was criticised for Plant s hoarse vocals Jimmy Page s intoxication and out of tune guitar a lack of rehearsal and poorly functioning monitors Plant described the performance as a fucking atrocity for us It made us look like loonies 75 Page later criticised Collins performance saying Robert told me Phil Collins wanted to play with us I told him that was all right if he knows the numbers But at the end of the day he didn t know anything We played Whole Lotta Love and he was just there bashing away cluelessly and grinning I thought that was really a joke 76 Collins responded It wasn t my fault it was crap If I could have walked off I would have But then we d all be talking about why Phil Collins walked off Live Aid so I just stuck it out I turned up and I was a square peg in a round hole Robert was happy to see me but Jimmy wasn t 74 Led Zeppelin have blocked broadcasts of the performance and withheld permission for it to be included on the DVD release 77 Philadelphia named it one of the worst rock and roll reunions of all time with Victor Fiorillo writing I d like to be able to blame all of the awfulness on anaemic Phil Collins who sat in on drums and Page himself later fingered the Genesis drummer for screwing up the set But Collins was just the beginning of the bad Go ahead Watch and remember It really was that terrible 78 Fund use in Ethiopia edit In 1986 Spin published an expose on Live Aid s actions in Ethiopia They claimed that Geldof deliberately ignored warnings from Medecins Sans Frontieres who had complained directly to Geldof even before Live Aid about the role of the Ethiopian government under Derg leader Mengistu Haile Mariam in causing the famine and that by working with Mengistu directly much of the relief funds intended for victims were in fact siphoned off to purchase arms from the Soviet Union thereby exacerbating the situation 79 Geldof responded by deriding both the articles and Medecins Sans Frontieres who had been expelled from the country and reportedly saying I ll shake hands with the Devil on my left and on my right to get to the people we are meant to help 79 80 According to the BBC World Service a certain proportion of the funds were siphoned off to buy arms for the Tigrayan People s Liberation Front 81 This coalition battled at the time against Derg The Band Aid Trust complained to the BBC Editorial Complaints Unit regarding the specific allegations in the BBC World Service documentary and their complaint was upheld 82 In 2010 the BBC issued an apology to the Trust and stated there was no evidence money had been diverted 9 while the former British Ambassador to Ethiopia Brian Barder states the diversion of aid related only to the tiny proportion that was supplied by some NGOs to rebel held areas 10 Although a professed admirer of Geldof s generosity and concern American television commentator Bill O Reilly was critical of the Live Aid s oversight of the use of the funds raised O Reilly believed that charity organizations operating in aid receiving countries should control donations rather than chaotic nations 83 Arguing that Live Aid accomplished good ends while inadvertently causing harm at the same time David Rieff gave a presentation of similar concerns in The Guardian at the time of Live 8 84 Tim Russert in an interview on Meet the Press shortly after O Reilly s comments addressed these concerns to Bono Bono responded that corruption not disease or famine was the greatest threat to Africa agreeing with the belief that foreign relief organisations should decide how the money is spent On the other hand Bono said that it was better to spill some funds into nefarious quarters for the sake of those who needed it than to stifle aid because of possible theft 85 Performances editLondon Wembley Stadium edit Time Performer s Performed song s 12 00 Coldstream Guards Royal Salute God Save the Queen First six bars only 12 01 Status Quo Rockin All Over the World Caroline Don t Waste My Time 12 19 The Style Council You re the Best Thing Big Boss Groove Internationalists Walls Come Tumbling Down 12 44 The Boomtown Rats I Don t Like Mondays Drag Me Down Rat Trap 13 01 Adam Ant Vive Le Rock 13 17 Ultravox Reap the Wild Wind Dancing with Tears in My Eyes One Small Day Vienna 13 46 Spandau Ballet Only When You Leave Virgin True 14 07 Elvis Costello All You Need Is Love 14 22 Nik Kershaw Wide Boy Don Quixote The Riddle Wouldn t It Be Good 14 53 Sade Why Can t We Live Together Your Love Is King Is It a Crime 15 18 StingPhil CollinsBranford Marsalis Roxanne Sting Driven to Tears Sting Against All Odds Take a Look at Me Now Phil Collins Message in a Bottle Sting In the Air Tonight Phil Collins Long Long Way to Go both Every Breath You Take both 15 49 Howard Jones Hide and Seek 16 08 Bryan Ferry w David Gilmour as backing guitarist Sensation Boys and Girls Slave to Love Jealous Guy 16 40 Paul Young Do They Know It s Christmas intro Come Back and Stay That s the Way Love Is with Alison Moyet Everytime You Go Away 17 19 U2 Sunday Bloody Sunday Bad w snippets of Satellite of Love Ruby Tuesday Sympathy for the Devil and Walk on the Wild Side 18 00 Dire Straits Money for Nothing with Sting Sultans of Swing 18 41 Queen Bohemian Rhapsody first part Radio Ga Ga Hammer to Fall Crazy Little Thing Called Love We Will Rock You We Are the Champions 19 23 David Bowie TVC 15 Rebel Rebel Modern Love Heroes 19 59 The Who My Generation Pinball Wizard Love Reign o er Me Won t Get Fooled Again 20 50 Elton John I m Still Standing Bennie and the Jets Rocket Man Don t Go Breaking My Heart with Kiki Dee Don t Let the Sun Go Down on Me with Wham Can I Get a Witness 21 48 Freddie MercuryBrian May Is This the World We Created 21 51 Paul McCartney w David Bowie Bob Geldof Alison Moyet and Pete Townshend Let It Be 21 57 Band Aid Do They Know It s Christmas Presenters Richard Skinner opened the show and introduced Charles Prince of Wales and Diana Princess of Wales Tommy Vance introduced Coldstream Guards Status Quo The Style Council The Boomtown Rats Nik Kershaw and Dire Straits Harvey Goldsmith introduced Adam Ant Andy Peebles introduced Spandau Ballet Elvis Costello Noel Edmonds Howard Jones Bryan Ferry Paul Young Griff Rhys Jones with Mel Smith and David Bowie Noel Edmonds introduced Sting with Phil Collins Griff Rhys Jones and Mel Smith introduced Queen Jack Nicholson and Tommy Vance introduced U2 and The Who Billy Connolly introduced Elton John John Hurt introduced Freddie Mercury and Brian MayPhiladelphia John F Kennedy Stadium edit Time Performer s Performed song s 8 51 Bernard Watson All I Really Want to Do Interview 9 01 Joan Baez Amazing Grace We Are the World 9 10 The Hooters And We Danced All You Zombies 9 32 Four Tops Shake Me Wake Me When It s Over Bernadette It s the Same Old Song Reach Out I ll Be There I Can t Help Myself Sugar Pie Honey Bunch 9 45 Billy Ocean Caribbean Queen Loverboy 9 55 Black Sabbath Children of the Grave Iron Man Paranoid 10 12 Run D M C Jam Master Jay King of Rock 10 27 Rick Springfield Love Somebody State of the Heart Human Touch 10 47 REO Speedwagon Can t Fight This Feeling Roll with the Changes 11 12 Crosby Stills and Nash Southern Cross Teach Your Children Suite Judy Blue Eyes 11 29 Judas Priest Living After Midnight The Green Manalishi With the Two Pronged Crown You ve Got Another Thing Comin 12 01 Bryan Adams Kids Wanna Rock Summer of 69 Tears Are Not Enough Cuts Like a Knife 12 39 The Beach Boys California Girls Help Me Rhonda Wouldn t It Be Nice Good Vibrations Surfin U S A 13 26 George Thorogood and the Destroyers w Bo Diddley and Albert Collins Who Do You Love w Bo Diddley The Sky Is Crying Madison Blues w Albert Collins 14 05 Simple Minds Ghost Dancing Don t You Forget About Me Promised You a Miracle 14 41 Pretenders Time the Avenger Message of Love Stop Your Sobbing Back on the Chain Gang Middle of the Road 15 21 Santana w Pat Metheny Brotherhood Primera Invasion Open Invitation By the Pool Right Now 15 57 Ashford amp Simpson w Teddy Pendergrass Solid Reach Out and Touch Somebody s Hand w Teddy Pendergrass 16 27 Madonna w Thompson Twins and Nile Rodgers Holiday Into the Groove Love Makes the World Go Round w Thompson Twins and Nile Rodgers 17 02 Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers American Girl The Waiting Rebels Refugee 17 30 Kenny Loggins Footloose 17 39 The Cars You Might Think Drive Just What I Needed Heartbeat City 18 06 Neil Young Sugar Mountain The Needle and the Damage Done Helpless Nothing Is Perfect In God s Perfect Plan Powderfinger 18 42 The Power Station Murderess Get It On 19 21 Thompson Twins w Madonna Steve Stevens and Nile Rodgers Hold Me Now Revolution w Madonna Steve Stevens and Nile Rodgers 19 38 Eric Clapton w Phil Collins White Room She s Waiting Layla 20 00 Phil Collins Against All Odds Take a Look at Me Now In the Air Tonight 20 10 Led Zeppelin w Phil Collins Rock and Roll Whole Lotta Love Stairway to Heaven 20 39 Crosby Stills Nash amp Young Only Love Can Break Your Heart Daylight Again Find the Cost of Freedom 20 46 Duran Duran A View to a Kill Union of the Snake Save a Prayer The Reflex 21 20 Patti LaBelle New Attitude Imagine Forever Young Stir It Up Over the Rainbow Why Can t I Get It Over 21 50 Hall amp Oates w Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin Out of Touch Maneater Get Ready w Eddie Kendricks Ain t Too Proud to Beg w David Ruffin The Way You Do the Things You Do My Girl w Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin 22 15 Mick Jagger w Tina Turner Lonely at the Top Just Another Night Miss You State of Shock w Tina Turner It s Only Rock n Roll But I Like It Reprise w Tina Turner 22 39 Bob DylanKeith RichardsRonnie Wood Ballad of Hollis Brown When the Ship Comes In Blowin in the Wind 22 55 USA for Africa We Are the World Presenters Bill Graham introduced Jack Nicholson before his first and last appearance Chevy Chase w Joe Piscopo Marilyn McCoo Dire Straits Santana Bette Midler Don Johnson Eric Clapton and Dionne Warwick Jack Nicholson introduced Joan Baez U2 Bryan Adams The Who and Bob Dylan Chevy Chase and Joe Piscopo introduced The Hooters Chevy Chase introduced Four Tops Billy Ocean Black Sabbath REO Speedwagon Judas Priest David Bowie Kenny Loggins and Duran Duran Joe Piscopo introduced Run D M C Rick Springfield Simple Minds and Neil Young Marilyn McCoo introduced The Beach Boys George Segal introduced George Thorogood and the Destroyers Grace Slick introduced Pretenders Bette Midler introduced Madonna Thompson Twins Patti LaBelle Mick Jagger and The Cars Don Johnson introduced Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and The Power Station Jack Nicholson amp Bette Midler introduced Phil Collins Phil Collins introduced Led Zeppelin Dionne Warwick introduced Hall amp OatesOthers edit Time Location Performer s Performed song s 13 05 nbsp Sydney Oz for Africa various depends on the broadcaster 13 34 studio nbsp performers from Japan Loudness Gotta Fight Off Course Endless Night Takako Shirai Foolish War Eikichi Yazawa Take It Time Motoharu Sano Shame Meiko Nakahara Ro Ro Ro Russian Roulette from the anime Dirty Pair 14 12 nbsp Vienna Austria Austria fur Afrika de Warum 14 40 nbsp The Hague Netherlands from the North Sea Jazz Festival B B King When It All Comes Down Why I Sing the Blues Don t Answer the Door Rock Me Baby 15 10 nbsp Belgrade Yugoslavia YU Rock Misija Za milion godina 15 55 nbsp Moscow Soviet Union Autograph Golovokruzhenie Nam nuzhen mir 16 27 nbsp Cologne West Germany Band fur Afrika de Nackt Im Wind Ein Jahr Es geht voran 20 44 nbsp Norway Stavanger for Africa All of Us Forente Artister Sammen for Livet 21 19 studio Kool amp the Gang Stand Up and Sing Cherish 2 11 nbsp London United Kingdom Cliff Richard A World of Difference Presenters Molly Meldrum introduced Oz for Africa Mladen Popovic introduced YU Rock Misija Vladimir Posner introduced Autograph and made a speech between their performances Evelyn Selbert and Ken Janz introduced Band fur Afrika Udo Lindenberg made a speech between the Band fur Afrika performances Andy Kershaw introduced Cliff RichardNotable absences edit Bruce Springsteen decided not to appear at Live Aid despite his huge global popularity in 1985 Geldof had originally scheduled the event for 6 July but moved the date to the 13th especially to accommodate Springsteen Springsteen later expressed regret at turning down Geldof s invitation stating that he simply did not realise how big the whole thing was going to be 86 and regretted not performing an acoustic set 87 During the MTV broadcast VJ Martha Quinn repeatedly and erroneously claimed that Springsteen would in fact make an appearance 88 Michael Jackson declined to appear His press agent Norman Winter released a statement at the time saying that Jackson was working around the clock in the studio on a project that he s made a major commitment to and consequently could not free up sufficient time to rehearse and perform at Live Aid Winter added Michael is just about living in the studio rehearsing and recording I know what could be more major than Live Aid but Michael couldn t turn his back on his responsibility to the people he s working with This affected employment for a lot of people 89 Prince also declined to appear in person but sent a pre taped video of an acoustic version of 4 the Tears in Your Eyes which was played during the concert in Philadelphia The original version appears on the We Are the World album 90 while the video version was released in 1993 on Prince s compilation The Hits The B Sides 91 Culture Club leader Boy George decided not to take part in the concert He feared that Culture Club would fail to measure up performing for two billion people and he disliked what he viewed as self important posturing on the part of other participants In his memoir Take It Like a Man he said his band members were angry with him because he had ruined their chance of a part in history 92 Huey Lewis and the News were scheduled to play the Philadelphia leg and were in some of the promotional material but decided on 28 June to pull out over concerns that the money raised by relief efforts thus far had not been reaching those it was intended to help It was a very tough decision Lewis told Rolling Stone We felt having done the USA for Africa thing that we should wait and watch that The prudent thing to do is to see how that money translates into food for the people before we do another one Harry Belafonte who had organised USA for Africa responded harshly calling Lewis s scepticism disruptive and divisive He had himself recently returned from a trip to Africa to see how the money had so far been spent and suggested that Lewis do the same For him to sit back here and send out information based on hearsay is unfair to his colleagues and very unfair to the victims 93 Annie Lennox whose hits as the vocalist of Eurythmics included 1983 s Sweet Dreams Are Made of This was forced to pull out of performing at Live Aid due to a serious throat infection she appeared at Live 8 held in Hyde Park London in 2005 94 Cliff Richard later stated he had been unable to perform as he was already committed to a gospel charity concert in Birmingham the same day 95 A reunited Deep Purple were also due to appear from Switzerland via satellite but pulled out after guitarist Ritchie Blackmore refused to take part 96 Deep Purple minus Blackmore who left the band in 1993 appeared at Geldof s Live 8 sequel 20 years later performing at the Toronto leg of the event Bill Graham is said to have turned down Foreigner and Yes because there was no free space on the bill for them 96 Marillion riding high in the UK charts that summer with their Misplaced Childhood album and Kayleigh single missed out on an invitation to perform at Wembley because their manager had deemed it not worthwhile for singer Fish to participate in the Do They Know It s Christmas single Fish was quoted When it came to the bill for the concert we were passed over 97 UB40 lead singer Ali Campbell admitted that his band was also ignored by Geldof while planning the list of musical acts of the British leg of the event We weren t asked to do Live Aid because Uncle Bob didn t like our music much It was a great gig but I thought it was a bit dodgy not having any black acts on the bill when it was raising money for Africa 98 Thin Lizzy keyboard player Darren Wharton expressed regrets about the band not being asked to perform That was a tragic tragic decision It could ve been and it should ve been the turning point for Phil Lynott And I think that really did Phil in quite a lot that we were never asked to play I mean Phil he had a few problems at the time but at the end of the day if he would ve been asked to play Live Aid that would ve been a goal for him to clean himself up to do that gig We were all very upset of the fact that we weren t asked to do it because Phil knew Geldof and Midge Ure very well indeed I was surprised that we weren t asked to do that I don t think Phil ever forgave Bob 99 Lynott died less than five months after the concert from complications associated with his drug and alcohol addictions nbsp Roger Waters right rejoined his former bandmates Pink Floyd at Live 8 in Hyde Park London on 2 July 2005 I tried to pitch into Live Aid recalled Roger Waters They asked me to put Pink Floyd back together for it and I said no but I d bring my new band to play They didn t want that But that s alright I went along on my own 100 Waters appeared backstage at the Wembley Stadium leg of Live Aid where he was interviewed and the classic Pink Floyd lineup reunited for the follow up to Live Aid Live 8 in 2005 101 Neil Peart drummer of Canadian rock band Rush said Geddy was involved with the Northern Lights charity record here in Canada although Rush weren t invited to participate in the Live Aid event mainly because if you look at the guest list it was very much an in crowd situation We were out by then We didn t refuse to take part because of any principles Mind you I wouldn t have been happy being part of this scenario Those stars should have shut up and just given over their money if they were genuine I recall that Tears for Fears who made a musical and artistic decision to pull out of the concert were subsequently accused by Geldof of killing children in Africa what a shockingly irresponsible and stupid attitude to take But I have nothing bad whatsoever to say about Bob Geldof he sacrificed his health his career everything for something he believed in But others around him got involved for their own reasons Some of those involved in Northern Lights were actually quoted as saying that their managers told them to get down to the recording sessions because it would be a good career move 102 Live Aid recordings editWhen organiser Bob Geldof was persuading artists to take part in the concert he promised them that it would be a one off event never to be seen again Hence the concert was never recorded in its complete original form and only secondary television broadcasts were recorded Following Geldof s request ABC erased its own broadcast tapes 103 However before the syndicated ABC footage was erased copies of it were donated to the Smithsonian Institution and have now been presumed lost The ABC feed of the USA for Africa We Are The World finale does exist in its entirety complete with the network end credits and can be found as a supplemental feature on the We Are The World The Story Behind The Song DVD Meanwhile MTV decided to keep recordings of its broadcast and eventually located more than 100 tapes of Live Aid in its archives but many songs in these tapes were cut short by MTV s ad breaks and presenters according to the BBC 104 Many performances from the US were not shown on the BBC and recordings of these performances are missing There were four separate Audio Trucks in Philadelphia provided by David Hewitt of Remote Recording Services ABC had taken the decision that no multi track tape recordings would be allowed so no remixing of the Philadelphia show was possible Official Live Aid DVD edit An official four disc DVD set of the Live Aid concerts was released on 8 November 2004 A premiere to launch the new DVD was held on 7 November and shown in DTS surround sound featuring a short compilation of the four disc set The screening was held at the Odeon Cinema in Kensington London and included guests such as Brian May Anita Dobson Roger Taylor Bob Geldof and partner Jean Marie Annie Lennox Midge Ure Michael Buerk Gary Kemp and The Darkness 105 Other theatrical premieres were held in Zurich Milan Rome Vienna Hamburg and Berlin 106 A 52 minute compilation was later released as a limited edition DVD in July 2005 titled 20 Years Ago Today Live Aid 107 The box set contains 10 hour partial footage of the 16 hour length concert The DVD was produced by Geldof s company Woodcharm Ltd and distributed by Warner Music Vision The DVD has since been out of print and no longer available in stores The decision to finally release it was taken by Bob Geldof nearly 20 years after the original concerts after he found a number of unlicensed copies of the concert on the Internet 108 The most complete footage that exists is used from the BBC source and this was the main source of the DVD During production on the official DVD MTV lent Woodcharm Ltd their B roll and alternate camera footage where MTV provided extra footage of the Philadelphia concert where ABC had erased the tapes from the command of Bob Geldof Songs that were not originally interrupted with advertisements were also used on the official DVD Working from the BBC and MTV footage several degrees of dramatic licence were taken to release the concert on DVD Many songs had their soundtracks altered for the DVD release mainly in sequences where there were originally microphone problems In one of those instances Paul McCartney had re recorded his failed vocals for Let It Be in a studio the day after the concert 14 July 1985 Beatles biographer Keith Badman explains because of what happened he decided to re record his vocals for any future film of the concert That s the version you ll hear when the DVD comes out 109 Also in the US finale the original USA for Africa studio track for We Are the World was overlaid in places where the microphone was absent consequently it includes the vocals of Kenny Rogers and James Ingram two artists who did not even take part in Live Aid Some artists did not want their performances to be featured on the DVD At their own request Led Zeppelin and Santana were omitted The former defended their decision not to be included on the grounds that their performance was sub standard but to lend their support Jimmy Page and Robert Plant pledged to donate proceeds from the DVD release of Page amp Plant No Quarter to the campaign and John Paul Jones pledged proceeds from his American tour with Mutual Admiration Society 110 Judicious decisions were also made on which acts would be included and which ones would not due to either technical difficulties in the original performances the absence of original footage or for music rights reasons Rick Springfield the Four Tops the Hooters the Power Station Billy Ocean and Kool and the Gang were among those acts that were left off the DVD Several artists who did feature on the DVD also had songs that were performed omitted Madonna performed three solo songs in the concert but only two were included on the DVD Love Makes the World Go Round was omitted Phil Collins played Against All Odds and In the Air Tonight at both Wembley and JFK but only the London performance of the former and the Philadelphia performance of the latter were included on the DVD The JFK performance of Against All Odds was later included on Collins Finally The First Farewell Tour DVD Tom Petty performed four songs and only two were included on DVD Patti LaBelle played six songs but only two songs were included In 2007 Queen released a special edition of Queen Rock Montreal on Blu ray and DVD formats containing their 1981 concert from The Forum in Montreal Canada and their complete Live Aid performance along with Freddie Mercury and Brian May performing Is This the World We Created from the UK Live Aid finale all re mixed in DTS 5 1 sound by Justin Shirley Smith Also included is their Live Aid rehearsal and an interview with the band from earlier in the week On its release the then British Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown decided the VAT collected on sales of the Live Aid DVD would be given back to the charity which would raise an extra 5 for every DVD sold 111 On 14 November 2004 the DVD entered the UK Official Music Video Chart at number one and stayed in the top position for twelve consecutive weeks 112 Charts edit Charts 2004 Peakposition Ref s Dutch Music DVDs Chart 2 113 Spanish Music DVD Chart Promusicae 8 114 UK Music Video Chart OCC 1 112 US Top Music Video Billboard 2 115 Certifications edit Region Certification Certified units salesAustralia ARIA 116 2 Platinum 30 000 Austria IFPI Austria 117 Gold 5 000 Canada Music Canada 118 2 Diamond 200 000 France SNEP 119 Platinum 15 000 Switzerland IFPI Switzerland 120 Platinum 6 000 United Kingdom BPI 121 6 Platinum 300 000 United Kingdom BPI 122 20 Years Ago Todayversion Gold 25 000 United States RIAA 123 10 Platinum 1 000 000 Sales figures based on certification alone Shipments figures based on certification alone Official Live Aid audio edit An audio copy of Live Aid was officially released by the Band Aid Trust label on 7 September 2018 on digital download When first released in 2018 the Queen performance was excluded The band s set was however later included as a part of the digital download in May 2019 It has a total of ninety three audio tracks 124 Live Aid channel edit On 12 September 2018 YouTube launched the Official Live Aid channel with a total of 87 videos from the Live Aid 1985 concert According to the channel all earnings from viewings go to the Band Aid Trust 125 As with the digital download release a few notable performances are not included for unknown reasons although Queen s set was uploaded to the channel with its inclusion on the digital download Unofficial recordings edit Because the Live Aid broadcast was watched by 1 5 billion people 126 most of the footage was recorded on home consumer video recorders all around the world in various qualities Many of these recordings were in mono because in the mid 1980s most home video machines could only record mono sound and also because the European BBC TV broadcast was in mono The US MTV broadcast the ABC Radio Network and BBC Radio 1 simulcasts were stereo These recordings circulated among collectors and in recent years have also appeared on the Internet in file sharing networks Since the official DVD release of Live Aid includes only partial footage of this event unofficial distribution sources continue to be the only source of the most complete recordings of this event The official DVD is the only authorised video release in which proceeds go directly to famine relief the cause that the concert was originally intended to help Legacy edit Everyone has a common experience of it everyone remembers where they were and what they felt about it It s one of those little pegs that you hang all your other memories on Harry Potter author J K Rowling speaking on the BBC s Live Aid Rockin All Over the World in 2005 127 Live Aid eventually raised 127 million 350 million in 2022 terms in famine relief for African nations and the publicity it generated encouraged Western nations to make available enough surplus grain to end the immediate hunger crisis in Africa 128 According to one aid worker a larger impact than the money raised for the Ethiopian famine is that humanitarian concern is now at the centre of foreign policy for the west 5 Regarding Buerk s landmark BBC News report as a watershed moment in crisis reporting that influenced modern coverage one that was broadcast in its entirety with Buerk s narration on a major US channel Suzanne Franks in The Guardian states the nexus of politics media and aid are influenced by the coverage of a famine 30 years ago 15 Many artists and performers at Live Aid gained prominence and positive commercial influence For all the cultural charitable and technological significance of 1985 s Live Aid its most immediate impact was on the charts In the UK for example No Jacket Required by Phil Collins and Madonna s Like a Virgin leapt back into the top ten Queen s three year old Greatest Hits rose fifty five places into the top twenty followed by Freddie Mercury s Mr Bad Guy Every U2 album available at the time also returned to the chart 129 In 1986 Geldof received an honorary knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II for his efforts 128 Claire Bertschinger the nurse who featured in Buerk s news reports that sparked the aid relief movement received the Florence Nightingale Medal in 1991 for her work in nursing and was made a Dame by Queen Elizabeth II in 2010 for services to Nursing and to International Humanitarian Aid 130 Queen s performance at Live Aid was later recreated in the band s biographical film Bohemian Rhapsody in 2018 131 Footage from the original performance can be seen to match very accurately with the movie performance 131 In 2020 Queen Adam Lambert reprised the original Queen setlist from Live Aid for the Fire Fight Australia charity concert in Sydney Australia 132 The background to the staging of the concert as a whole was dramatised in the 2010 television drama When Harvey Met Bob 133 In November 2023 Geldof stated that a six part miniseries about Live Aid was being produced by Disney as well as an IMAX format theatrical documentary from Geldof himself 134 A jukebox musical based on the day Just For One Day named after a line in Bowie s song Heroes which he performed at the event will have its world premiere at The Old Vic in London in February 2024 135 136 See also edit nbsp 1980s portal nbsp Rock music portal1983 1985 famine in Ethiopia Band Aid Farm Aid a Live Aid inspired relief event for American farms instigated by Bob Dylan Live 8 Geldof s 2005 series of concerts aimed at increasing poverty awareness Hear n Aid similar joint effort from the heavy metal scene of the 1980s List of historic rock festivals Self Aid a 1986 Live Aid inspired concert highlighting severe unemployment in Ireland promoted by Jim Aiken Sport Aid another famine relief event organised by Geldof Together at Home When Harvey Met Bob a 2010 television film dramatising the events leading up to and including the concert YU Rock Misija YU Rock Mission Yugoslav contribution to Band Aid campaignReferences edit Live Aid on Bob Geldof s official site Archived 5 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Billboard Boxscore Billboard 27 July 1985 Retrieved 6 March 2020 a b c d e f g Live Aid 1985 A day of magic CNN Retrieved 22 May 2011 World Population Prospects The 2017 Revision Archived 19 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Retrieved 7 June 2018 a b c d Cruel to be kind The Guardian Retrieved 31 March 2019 Live Aid index Bob Geldof The Guardian Retrieved 14 June 2019 Margaret Thatcher demanded UK find ways to destabilise Ethiopian regime in power during 1984 famine The Independent Retrieved 10 April 2019 Live Aid The Terrible Truth Spin 13 July 2015 Retrieved 30 March 2019 a b BBC apologises over Band Aid money reports BBC Retrieved 19 July 2020 a b Ethiopia famine relief aid misinterpreted allegations out of control Barder com Retrieved 18 July 2020 a b c d e f g h Live Aid The show that rocked the world BBC Retrieved 15 September 2011 Higgins marvels at change in Ethiopia s Tigray province The Irish Times 7 January 2018 a b c d The nurse who inspired Live Aid BBC Retrieved 28 September 2020 Live Aid Against All Odds Episode 1 BBC 7 January 2018 a b Ethiopian famine how landmark BBC report influenced modern coverage The Guardian Retrieved 28 September 2020 The 20th anniversary of Band Aid BBC Retrieved 15 December 2011 Billboard 8 Dec 1984 Billboard Retrieved 15 December 2011 a b Band Aid On Stage Melody Maker London England 12 January 1985 p 3 a b c d e f g Live aid in their own words The Guardian Retrieved 6 June 2020 Bob Geldof Harvey Goldsmith and the truth about Live Aid The Telegraph 5 May 2018 Archived from the original on 18 October 2014 a b c West Aaron J 2015 Sting and The Police Walking in Their Footsteps Rowman amp Littlefield p 92 a b c Watch David Bowie s iconic performance of Heroes at Live Aid in 1985 Far Out Magazine Retrieved 14 July 2021 Detailed list of all the artist having performed at the Live Aid concert Live Aid Retrieved 4 April 2013 The Beatles Let It Be Lyrics Spin Retrieved 9 June 2020 a b c Zaleski Annie 13 July 2015 How Phil Collins Became Live Aid s Transcontinental MVP Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved 8 June 2020 Billy Joel 1985 Interview part 2 of 2 archived from the original on 10 September 2019 retrieved 4 October 2019 Ellen Mark 2014 Rock Stars Stole my Life A Big Bad Love Affair with Music Hachette UK Lessons learned since Live Aid the challenge of bringing high quality audio to live television audiences continues to change Kevin Hilton considers how technology has moved on in the 20 years since Live Aid AllBusiness com 1 March 2005 Archived from the original on 6 January 2007 Retrieved 6 March 2011 Hillmore Peter 1985 Live Aid the greatest show on earth p 60 Sidgwick amp Jackson Ling Dave January 2002 Again again again Classic Rock 36 p 73 Hann Michael 31 March 2014 Status Quo Britain s most underrated rock band The Guardian Retrieved 20 November 2017 LIVE AID 1985 Memories of that famous day BBC Retrieved 22 May 2011 Queen win greatest live gig poll BBC News 9 November 2005 a b c McKee Briony 13 July 2015 30 fun facts for the 30th birthday of Live Aid Digital Spy Retrieved 15 February 2016 Minchin Ryan dir 2005 The World s Greatest Gigs Initial Film amp Television Retrieved 21 May 2011 Beaumont Mark Aaaaaay o Aaaaaay o Why Live Aid was the greatest show of all The Independent Retrieved 13 July 2020 Thomas Holly 6 November 2018 33 years later Queen s Live Aid performance is still pure magic CNN Retrieved 18 November 2018 Flashback Queen Steal the Show at Live Aid Rolling Stone Retrieved 4 April 2013 a b Queen Live Aid Ultimate Queen Retrieved 21 May 2011 Hepworth David 25 May 2011 God Save The Queen by David Hepworth Radio Times Queen Online Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 8 October 2015 Paphides Pete 12 June 2011 U2 become stars after Live Aid The Guardian Retrieved 7 November 2016 a b Edwards Gavin 10 July 2014 U2 s Bad Break 12 Minutes at Live Aid That Made the Band s Career Rolling Stone Retrieved 13 July 2020 Greene Andy 26 January 2016 Flashback David Bowie Triumphs at Live Aid in 1985 Rolling Stone Retrieved 7 November 2016 Hughes Rob 10 February 2023 The Story Behind The Song Sultans Of Swing by Dire Straits Louder Sound Retrieved 10 July 2023 Wilkerson Mark 2006 Amazing Journey The Life of Pete Townshend p 408 Retrieved 22 May 2011 Live Aid The Global Jukebox Plugs In amp Lineup Times This Day in Music Retrieved 8 June 2020 George Michael 20 Essential Songs Rolling Stone 7 January 2018 Live Aid Galleries The Guardian London Retrieved 22 May 2011 Geldof Townshend and McCartney The Guardian London Retrieved 22 May 2011 How Bob Geldof s 1985 Live Aid concert changed celebrity fundraising forever London Evening Standard Retrieved 19 June 2020 Studio Sound and Broadcast Engineering Live aid Loudspeakers and Monitor PDF American Radio History 1985 Retrieved 23 November 2018 Studio Sound and Broadcast Engineering Digital in Audio mixing Consoles PDF American Radio History 1985 Retrieved 23 November 2018 Live Aid Jack Nicholson amp Joan Baez 1985 pukenshette Archived from the original on 29 October 2021 Retrieved 22 November 2015 via YouTube Lynch Joe 13 July 2015 Watch Bette Midler Introduce Madonna at Live Aid 30 Years Ago Today Billboard Retrieved 17 March 2022 Memorable quotes for Live Aid IMDb Retrieved 21 May 2011 When Mick Jagger and Tina Turner Performed Together at Live Aid Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved 9 June 2020 Collins recalls Led Zep disaster Classic Rock 2 November 2014 Piner Mary Louise Return to Stage a Personal Triumph for Teddy Pendergrass disability marketing com Archived from the original on 24 July 2008 Retrieved 3 August 2008 a b Jones Dylan 26 July 2010 The Eighties One Day One Decade Random House p 357 ISBN 978 1 4090 5225 8 The Duran Duran set was memorable for Simon Le Bon s off key falsetto note that he hit during A View to a Kill a blunder that echoed throughout the media as The Bum Note Heard Round the World The singer later said it was the most embarrassing moment of his career 10 Live Aid acts we ll never forget Reader s Digest Retrieved 9 June 2020 Geldof Bob Live Aid DVD Fred Kruger 2015 Cultures and Disasters Understanding Cultural Framings in Disaster Risk Reduction p 190 Routledge Petridis Alexis 4 July 2005 Berated by Madonna rocked by Robbie stunned into silence by images of famine The Guardian Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Sharp Keith 2014 Music Express The Rise Fall amp Resurrection of Canada s Music Magazine Dundurn Press p 131 ISBN 978 1459721951 28 Years of Amazing Concerts Farm Aid website Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Retrieved 31 August 2013 Geldof Bob 1986 Is That It p 390 Sidgwick amp Jackson Daniel Durchholz Gary Graff 6 May 2010 Neil Young Long May You Run Voyageur Press 2010 p 134 ISBN 9781610604536 Retrieved 24 May 2011 Past Concerts Farm Aid Archived from the original on 23 May 2011 Retrieved 24 May 2011 Farm Aid 1985 Champaign IL The Concert Stage Retrieved 15 February 2011 a b Harris Will 25 February 2008 Eric Bazilian interview Popdose com Retrieved 6 March 2011 Adam Ant brands Live Aid a mistake and a waste of time and the end of rock n roll Louder Than War 26 August 2011 Retrieved 18 March 2013 Geldof Bob 1986 Is That It London Penguin Books p 333 ISBN 9780330442923 Kershaw Andy 2014 No Off Switch Buster Press pp 192 193 ISBN 978 0992769604 a b Deriso Nick 2 November 2014 Phil Collins Considered Walking Out of Led Zeppelin s Live Aid Reunion Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved 30 April 2015 Williamson Nigel 2007 The Rough Guide to Led Zeppelin Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 84353 841 7 Mark Beaumont 11 July 2020 Aaaaaay o Aaaaaay o Why Live Aid was the greatest show of all The Independent Retrieved 10 August 2020 Zeppelin defend Live Aid opt out BBC News 4 August 2004 Retrieved 28 August 2014 Fiorillo Victor 15 June 2012 The 10 Most Painful Band Reunions Philadelphia Philadelphia Retrieved 4 August 2015 a b Live Aid The Terrible Truth Spin 13 July 2015 Live Aid Bob Geldof s Original Response to SPIN s 1986 Expose Spin 15 July 2015 BBC The Editors Bob Band Aid and how the rebels bought their arms 1 October 2014 Archived from the original on 1 October 2014 Retrieved 13 September 2021 Use of funds generated by Live Aid Band Aid Complaint BBC News Retrieved 17 November 2015 O Reilly Bill 14 June 2005 Sharing the Wealth Houston Chronicle Retrieved 7 August 2020 Rieff David 24 June 2005 Did Live Aid do more harm than good The Guardian London Retrieved 6 March 2011 Transcript for June 26 Meet the Press NBC News 26 June 2005 Retrieved 6 March 2011 Jones Dylan 6 June 2013 The Eighties One Day One Decade Random House pp 150 151 ISBN 978 1 4090 5225 8 Kent Lucinda 13 July 2015 Live Aid 30th anniversary Seven things you may not know about Bob Geldof s charity concert ABC Online Retrieved 1 September 2020 Edwards Gavin 2013 VJ The Unplugged Adventures of MTV s First Wave Atria Books pp 247 248 ISBN 978 1 4516 7812 3 Michael Jackson Project Kept Him from Concert The New York Times 17 July 1985 Retrieved 22 September 2017 Wall Mick 28 July 2016 Prince Purple Reign Hachette UK p 70 ISBN 978 1 4091 6923 9 Lizie Arthur 15 June 2020 Prince FAQ All That s Left to Know About the Purple Reign Rowman amp Littlefield p 122 ISBN 978 1 4930 5143 4 George Boy 2012 Take It Like a Man Reissue ed It Books pp 317 318 ISBN 978 0062117786 Goldberg Michael 16 August 1985 Live Aid 1985 The Day the World Rocked Rolling Stone Retrieved 13 July 2019 Annie Lennox career timeline The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 14 March 2022 McKee Briony 13 July 2015 30 fun facts for the 30th birthday of Live Aid Digital Spy Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Live Aid F A Q Liveaid free fr 13 July 1985 Retrieved 31 March 2014 Early Stages sleeve notes 5 Fish TheCompany Com Official Site September 2008 Retrieved 4 August 2015 Chalmers Graham 15 May 2014 Interview Ali s battle for heart and soul of UB40 The North Yorkshire News Retrieved 9 July 2017 Kadzielawa Mark Thin Lizzy 69 Faces of Rock Archived from the original on 3 February 2015 Retrieved 16 November 2014 Turner Steve Roger Waters The Wall in Berlin Radio Times 25 May 1990 reprinted in Classic Rock No 148 August 2010 p 81 Roger Waters Backstage Interview Live Aid 1985 Live Aid YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 29 April 2021 Peart Neil 25 April 1988 All Fired Up Metal Hammer Interview Interviewed by Malcolm Dome Retrieved 13 December 2015 Live Aid 30th anniversary 30 things you never knew about the 1985 concert Daily Mirror Retrieved 11 July 2020 Youngs Ian 27 August 2004 How Live Aid was saved for history BBC News Retrieved 6 March 2011 Live Aid DVD Launch Brianmay com 8 November 2004 Archived from the original on 25 October 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2019 Live Aid DVD Premiere at European Cinemas in DTS Surround Sound Exclusive Cinema Screenings of the Landmark 1985 Concert Recording Played in 5 1 DTS Digital Surround 12 November 2004 20 Years Ago Today July 2005 Youngs Ian 3 March 2004 Geldof thwarts Live Aid pirate BBC News Retrieved 6 March 2011 Perfectionist McCartney Re records Live Aid contactmusic com 4 August 2004 Zeppelin defend Live Aid opt out BBC News 4 August 2004 Retrieved 29 July 2019 New Live Aid DVD to get VAT cash BBC News 7 November 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2021 a b Official Music Video Chart Top 50 14 November 2004 20 November 2004 Dutch Music DVDs Chart Week commencing 27 November 2004 Promusicae Music DVDs Chart Lista de los titulos mas vendidos del 08 11 04 al 14 11 04 Music Video Sales as compiled by Nielsen 4 December 2004 ARIA Charts Accreditations 2005 DVDs PDF Australian Recording Industry Association Austrian video certifications Diverse Live Aid DVD in German IFPI Austria Canadian video certifications Various Artists Live Aid Music Canada French video certifications COMPILATION LIVE 8 in French Syndicat National de l Edition Phonographique The Official Swiss Charts and Music Community Awards Live Aid IFPI Switzerland Hung Medien British video certifications Various Artists Live Aid British Phonographic Industry British video certifications Various Artists Live Aid 20 Years Ago Today British Phonographic Industry American video certifications VARIOUS LIVE AID Recording Industry Association of America Live Aid Live 13 July 1985 Various artists 7 September 2018 Official Live Aid channel YouTube Stages set for Live 8 Reuters 2 July 2005 Retrieved 14 January 2013 Live Aid Rockin All Over The World BBC Retrieved 9 June 2020 a b Live Aid concert Jul 13 1985 History com Retrieved 1 May 2018 Macdonald Bruno 2010 Six Degrees of Rock Connections The Complete Road Map of Rock N Roll Sweet Water Press p 214 ISBN 978 1532 510373 No 59282 The London Gazette Supplement 31 December 2009 p 6 a b Sandwell Ian 23 October 2018 How Bohemian Rhapsody recreated that incredible Queen performance at Live Aid Digital Spy Retrieved 24 October 2018 Dye Josh 16 February 2020 Queen reprises famous 1985 Live Aid set at Fire Fight Australia concert The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 17 February 2020 When Harvey Met Bob BBC 31 December 2010 Retrieved 7 January 2018 Giardina Carolyn 17 November 2023 Bob Geldof Reveals Plans For a Live Aid Imax Doc and Reflects on Making The Wall I Don t Like the Film The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 24 December 2023 Bamigboye Baz 2 October 2023 Breaking Baz Bob Geldof Collaborates On Live Aid Musical With Broadway amp West End Director Luke Sheppard Show Will World Premiere At London s Old Vic Deadline Retrieved 2 October 2023 Sherwood Harriet Arts Harriet Sherwood correspondent culture 2 October 2023 Bob Geldof gives nod of approval to the Old Vic s Live Aid musical The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2 October 2023 Bibliography editDavis H Louise Feeding the world a line Celebrity activism and ethical consumer practices from Live Aid to Product Red Nordic Journal of English Studies 9 3 2010 89 118 Westley Frances Bob Geldof and Live Aid the affective side of global social innovation Human Relations 44 10 1991 1011 1036 Live Aid Rockin All Over the World BBC2 documentary recalling the build up to the day and the day itself viewed 18 June 2005 Live Aid World Wide Concert Book Peter Hillmore with Introduction by Bob Geldof ISBN 0 88101 024 3 Copyright 1985 The Unicorn Publishing House New Jersey External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Live Aid 1985 Live Aid at IMDb nbsp BBC news stories about the Live Aid DVD Twenty Five Years on memories from Herald UK How Live Aid was saved for history BBC News Geldof thwarts Live Aid pirate BBC News Philly com Live Aid Philadelphia Photo Gallery In depth interview between Hal Uplinger producer of the Live Aid Concert the United States event and the National Museum of American History part of the Smithsonian Institution Full set list including Philadelphia JFK Stadium Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Live Aid amp oldid 1191714607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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