Live Aid was a multi-venue rock music concert held
on .
The
event was organized by Bob Geldof and
Midge Ure to raise funds for famine relief
in Ethiopia
.
Billed as
the 'global jukebox', the event was held simultaneously in Wembley
Stadium
, London
(attended by
82,000 people) and JFK Stadium
, Philadelphia
(attended by about 99,000 people).
On the
same day, concerts inspired by the initiative happened in other
countries, such as Australia and Germany
. It
was one of the largest-scale satellite link-ups and television
broadcasts of all time: an estimated 400 million viewers, across 60
countries, watched the live broadcast.
Origins
The
concert was conceived as a follow-on to another Geldof/Ure project,
the successful charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?",
performed by a collection of British
and Irish
music acts billed as 'Band Aid' and released the previous
winter.
The concert grew in scope, as more acts were added on both sides of
the Atlantic. As a charity fundraiser, the concert far exceeded its
goals: on a television programme in 2001, one of the organisers
stated that while initially it had been hoped that Live Aid would
raise £1 million with the help of Wembley tickets costing £25.00
each, the final figure was £150 million (approx. $283.6 million).
Partly in recognition of the Live Aid effort, Geldof received an
honorary
knighthood. Music
promoter
Harvey Goldsmith was also
instrumental in bringing the plans of Geldof and Ure to
fruition.
Collaborative effort
The
concert began at 12:00 BST (7:00, EST) at Wembley
Stadium
, England
.
It
continued at JFK
Stadium
, U.S.
, starting at
13:51 BST (8:51, EST). The UK's Wembley performances ended
at 22:00 BST (17:00 or 5:00 PM, EST). The JFK performances and
whole concert in the US ended at 04:05 BST July 14 (23:05 or 11:05
PM, EST). (See the full schedule of the concert
here). Thus, the concert continued for 16
hours, but since many artists' performances were conducted
simultaneously in Wembley and JFK, the total concert's length was
much longer.
It was the original intention for
Mick
Jagger and
David Bowie to perform an
intercontinental duet, with Bowie in London and Jagger in
Philadelphia. Problems of synchronization meant that the only
remotely 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. Veteran
music engineer David Richards (
Pink Floyd
and
Queen) was brought in to create
footage and sound mixes that Jagger and Bowie could perform to in
their respective venues. The BBC would then have had to ensure that
those footage and sound mixes were in synch 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 would be no practical way
for Jagger to be able to hear or see Bowie's performance, meaning
there could be no interaction between the artists, which would
defeat the whole point of the exercise. On top of this both
artists objected to the idea of miming at what was perceived as an
historic event. Instead, Jagger and Bowie worked with Richards to
create a video clip for the song they would have performed, a cover
of "
Dancing in the Street".
The video was shown on the screens of both stadiums and also
broadcast as part of many TV networks coverage.
Each of the two main portions 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 day's proceedings).
Concert organizers have subsequently said that they were
particularly keen to ensure that 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 that it was "the management" — his
children — that 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 was turned off 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. He later jokingly thought about changing the
lyrics to "There will be some feedback, let it be".
Phil Collins performed at both Wembley
Stadium and JFK, utilising
Concorde to get
him from London to Philadelphia.
UK TV personality Noel Edmonds piloted the helicopter that took
Collins to Heathrow
Airport
to catch his flight. Aside from his own set
at both venues, he also provided drums for
Eric Clapton and the reunion of the surviving
members of
Led Zeppelin at JFK. On the
Concorde flight, Collins encountered actress and singer
Cher, who later claimed not to know anything about the
Live Aid concerts. Upon reaching the USA however she did attend the
Philadelphia concert and can be seen performing as part of that
concert's
We Are the World
finale.
An official book was produced by Bob Geldof in collaboration with
photographer
Denis O'Regan.
The broadcasts
The concert was the most ambitious international satellite
television venture that had ever been attempted at the time.
In Europe, the feed was supplied by the
BBC,
whose broadcast was opened by
Richard Skinner, co-hosted by
Andy Kershaw, and included numerous
interviews and chats in between the various acts. The
BBC's television sound feed was mono, but the
BBC Radio 1 feed was stereo and was
simulcast in sync with the TV pictures. 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 special
receivers of the time, as there were very few stereo sets in the
summer of 1985, and few television stations were able to broadcast
in stereo. While the BBC telecast was run commercial-free (as it is
a public broadcaster), 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 such times.
The biggest caveat 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.
The
ABC Radio Network broadcast
the American domestic feed of the concert, and later broadcast many
of the acts that were missing from the original live radio
broadcast.
At one point midway through the concert,
Billy Connolly announced he had just been
informed that 95% of the television sets in the world were tuned to
the event, though this can of course not be verified.
In 1995,
VH1 and MuchMusic
aired a re-edited ten-hour re-broadcast of the
concert for its 10th Anniversary.
Inspiration
- The success of Live Aid inspired Roger
Waters' song "The Tide Is
Turning."
- Similarly, the band Queen recorded
the song "One Vision" in response to the
Live Aid concerts. Both lead singer Freddie Mercury and guitarist
Brian May wore Live Aid shirts during the recording.
Memorable moments at Wembley Stadium
The
Coldstream Guards band opened
with the "Royal Salute", "
God Save
the Queen".
Status Quo started their
set with "
Rockin' All Over
the World", also playing "Caroline" and fan favourite "Don't
Waste My Time". This was to be the last appearance by the band to
feature bassist and founder member
Alan
Lancaster, and drummer
Pete Kircher
who had joined the band three years earlier.
Bob Geldof himself performed with the
rest of the Boomtown Rats, singing
I Don't Like Mondayshe stopped just
after the line: "The lesson today is how to die" to loud applause
with the lyrics taking on a whole other meaning. He finished the
song and left the crowd to say the final words.
Queen opening to massive cheers with
"
Bohemian Rhapsody", and the
antics of lead singer
Freddie
Mercury who got the entire Wembley crowd clapping in unison to
"
Radio Ga Ga" and "
Crazy Little Thing Called
Love" before singing along, word-for-word, to "
We Will Rock You" and "
We Are the Champions". The band's
performance, also including "
Hammer to
Fall", led to Queen's slot being voted in a 2005 poll as the
'Greatest Live Gig Ever'.
Elvis Costello appeared singing a
simple but touching 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".
Another moment that garnered a huge crowd response was when
David Bowie performed "Heroes" and
dedicated it to his young son, as well as "all our children, and
the children of the world".
U2's performance established them as a
pre-eminent live group for the first time — something for which
they would eventually become superstars. The band played a
14-minute rendition of "
Bad", during
which lead vocalist
Bono jumped off the stage
to join the crowd and dance with a girl. The length of their
performance of "Band" limited them to playing just two songs; the
third, "
Pride ", had to
be ditched. In July 2005, the girl with whom he danced revealed
that he actually saved her life at the time. She was being crushed
by the throngs of people pushing forwards; Bono saw this, and
gestured frantically at the ushers to help her. They didn't
understand what he was saying, and so he jumped down to help her
himself.
The
transatlantic broadcast from Wembley
Stadium
suffered technical problems and failed during
The Who's performance of their song
"My Generation", immediately after
Roger Daltrey sang "Why don't you all
fade..." (the last word was cut off when a blown fuse caused
the Wembley stage TV feed to temporarily fail). The Who were
playing with
Kenney Jones on drums, who
was still an official member of The Who at this time, although this
was their first performance since they'd officially disbanded after
their 1982 'farewell' tour.
The Who's performance included an at times
shambolic, but still blistering version of "Won't Get Fooled Again", which was
extremely popular with the audience in Wembley
Stadium
. The band's performance was described as
"rough but right" by
Rolling
Stone magazine, but they would not perform together again
until the 1988
BPI Awards.
At the conclusion of the Wembley performances,
Bob Geldof was raised heroically onto the
shoulders of The Who's guitarist
Pete
Townshend and McCartney — symbolising his great achievement in
unifying the world for one day, in the spirit of music and
charity.
Memorable moments at JFK Stadium

Stage view of Live Aid at JFK Stadium
in Philadelphia
At the
very beginning of the televised portion of the Philadelphia
concert, Joan Baez announced to the
assembled crowd (and the viewing audience) that "this is your
Woodstock
, and it's long overdue", before leading the crowd
in "Amazing Grace" (paired with a
couple of verses of "We Are the World").
When
Madonna got on stage,
despite the 95°F ambient temperature, she proclaimed "I'm not
taking shit off today!" referring to the recent release of early
nude photos of her in
Playboy and
Penthouse magazines.
During his opening number,
American
Girl,
Tom Petty flipped the
middle finger to somebody off stage about one
minute into song. 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".
[22088]
When
Bob Dylan broke a guitar string,
Ronnie 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. Although
this moment was left off the DVD, the performance itself was
included, featuring footage focusing solely on
Keith Richards.
During their duet on "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.
The JFK portion included reunions of
Crosby, Stills, Nash &
Young, the original
Black Sabbath
with
Ozzy Osbourne, and surviving
members of
Led Zeppelin, with Phil
Collins and
Chic member
Tony Thompson sharing duties on drums
(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).
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".
Also,
Duran Duran performed a four-song
set. The five original band members would not perform together
publicly again until 2003. Their set is also memorable for an
inadvertent falsetto note hit by frontman
Simon Le Bon during "
A View to a Kill", an error
trumpeted by some media outlets as "The Bum Note Heard Round The
World". Simon later recalled that it was the most embarrassing
moment of his career.

Live Aid under the lights at JFK
Stadium
Raising money
Throughout the concerts, viewers were urged to donate money to the
Live Aid cause. Three hundred phone lines were manned by the BBC,
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; he was told £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 that he later called 'absolutely amazing', Geldof gave an
infamous interview in which he used the word
fuck. The BBC presenter
David
Hepworth, conducting the interview, had attempted to provide a
list of addresses to which potential donations should be sent;
Geldof interrupted him in mid-flow and shouted: "Fuck the address,
let's get the numbers!" (not as is commonly misquoted "Give us your
fucking money").
Private Eye
made great capital out of these outbursts,
emphasising Geldof's accent which meant the profanities were heard
as "fock" and "focking". After the outburst, giving
increased to £300 per second.
Later in the evening, following David Bowie's set, a video (Edited
by Colin Dean) shot by
CBC, was shown to the
audiences in London and Philadelphia, as well as on televisions
around the world (though notably neither USA feed,
ABC or
MTV
chose to show the film), showing starving and diseased Ethiopian
children set to the song "
Drive" by
The
Cars. (This would also be shown at the London Live 8 concert in
2005.) The rate of giving became faster in the immediate aftermath
of the moving video. Ironically, 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.
As Geldof
mentioned during the concert, the Republic of Ireland
gave the most donations per
capita, despite being in the throes of a serious economic
depression at the time. The single largest donation came from the
ruling family of Dubai
. They
donated £1m in a phone conversation with Geldof.
The next day, news reports stated that between £40 and £50 million
had been raised. Now, it is estimated that around £150m has been
raised for famine relief as a direct result of the concerts.
Notable absences
Bruce Springsteen declined an
invitation to play at Live Aid despite his huge popularity in 1985,
later stating that he "simply did not realize how big the whole
thing was going to be". He has since expressed regret at turning
down Geldof's invitation to appear at Live Aid stating that he
could have played a couple of acoustic songs had there been no slot
available for a full band performance. If he had appeared he would
have been the only American artist on an otherwise UK-centric
bill.
Michael Jackson and Prince also did not play (although Prince did
send a pre-taped video of an acoustic version of "4 the Tears in
Your Eyes", which was played during the concert. The original
version appears on the
We
Are the World album, while the video version was released
in 1993 on Prince's compilation
The Hits/The B-Sides.)
Billy Joel,
Boy
George,
Waylon Jennings,
Kris Kristofferson,
Tears for Fears, and
Stevie Wonder, along with
Huey Lewis and the News and
Paul Simon, were all included in the initial
promotional material for the Philadelphia concert, but failed to
appear at the show itself. The final poster for the Philadelphia
show features the acts
Peter, Paul
and Mary and
Rod Stewart, neither of
whom actually appeared (though Peter, Paul and Mary can be spotted
in taking part in the concert's finale).
Tears for Fears did not appear at
the Philadelphia leg of the concert, though listed on the bill.
According to band member
Roland
Orzabal, Bob Geldof "gave us so much gip for not turning up at
Live Aid. All those millions of people dying, it was our fault. I
felt terrible. I tell you, I know how Hitler must have felt." The
group made up for the absence by contributing a re-recording of
"
Everybody Wants to
Rule the World" (entitled "
Everybody Wants to Run the
World") for Geldof's
Sport Aid charity
event in 1986.
Cat Stevens wrote a song for the Live
Aid concert, which he never got to perform — had he done so, he
would have made his first public concert appearance since
converting to
Islam and changing his name to
Yusuf Islam. Though he had written a
song especially for the occasion, his appearance was skipped when
Elton John's set ran too long.
A
reunited Deep Purple were also due to
appear from Switzerland
via satellite, but pulled out after guitarist
Ritchie Blackmore refused to take
part in the event. Eurythmics were
slated to play Wembley but cancelled after
Annie Lennox suffered serious throat problems.
Huey Lewis and the News and
Paul Simon both accepted requests to play
the Philadelphia concert but later issued press statements stating
they had chosen not to appear after all, citing disagreements with
promoter
Bill Graham. Deep
Purple appeared at Geldof's Live 8 sequel 20 years later,
performing at the Toronto leg of the event.
It was also rumoured at the time that
George Harrison,
Paul McCartney and
Ringo Starr would reunite as
The Beatles; making it the first time the trio
had performed together in over 15 years.
The rumours at the
time also were based around the possibility that Julian Lennon would join the Liverpudlian
trio, taking over his late father John Lennon's role. In the end only
McCartney appeared at the event.
Bob Geldof also invited
Def Leppard to
perform at the event, but due to Rick Allen's car accident and
uncertain future of the next album, they turned it down.
Criticisms and controversies
Bob Dylan's performance generated
controversy for his comment:
"I hope that some of the money…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…"
He is often misquoted, as on the
Farm Aid
website, as saying:
"Wouldn't it be great if we did something for our own
farmers right here in America?"
In his best-selling autobiography,
Is That It? (published
in 1986), Geldof was extremely critical of the remark; he states:
"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."
Although a professed admirer of Geldof's generosity and concern,
Fox News television host
Bill O'Reilly has been critical
of the Live Aid producer's oversight of the money raised for
starving Ethiopian people, claiming (in June 2005) that much of the
funds were siphoned off by
Mengistu Haile Mariam and his army.
O'Reilly believes that charity organizations, operating in
aid-receiving countries, should control donations, rather than
possibly corrupt governments..
Tim
Russert, when interviewing
Bono on
Meet the Press shortly after
O'Reilly's comments, addressed this concern of O'Reilly and others
to the singer. Bono responded that corruption, not disease or
famine, was the greatest threat to Africa, agreeing with the belief
that foreign relief organizations should decide how the money is
spent. On the other hand, the singer 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. Other
critics have likewise argued that donations to charity
organisations often end up being used by corrupt governments.
Much of
the money raised by Live Aid went to NGOs in
Ethiopia
, some of which were under the influence or control
of the Derg military junta. Some journalists have
suggested that the Derg was able to use Live Aid and
Oxfam money to fund its enforced resettlement and
"villagification" programmes, under which at least 3 million people
are said to have been displaced and between 50,000 and 100,000
killed.
The Live Aid concert in London was also the first time that the BBC
outdoor broadcast sound equipment had been used for an event of
such a scale. In stark contrast to the mirrored sounds systems
commonly used by the rock band touring engineers, with two 40
channel mixing consoles at the front of the 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.
Geldof was apparently not happy about
The
Hooters being tacked onto the bill 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 hugely popular in Philadelphia, despite their first major
label album
Nervous Night being
released less than three months beforehand. Geldof let his feelings
be known during an interview for
Rolling
Stone saying: "Who the fuck are The Hooters?"
[22089] The Hooters did get their revenge in
December, 2004, when Geldof appeared on the bill with the Hooters
in Germany as
theiropening act.
[22090]
Live Aid performers and setlists
(In order of appearance, times given are
British Summer Time and indicate the
start time of the performance. Key: W - London Wembley Stadium, JFK
- Philadelphia JFK Stadium)
London Wembley Stadium
- Coldstream
Guards - "Royal Salute", "God Save the Queen" (W 12:00);
- Status Quo -
"Rockin' All Over the
World", "Caroline", "Don't Waste My Time" (W 12:02);
- The Style
Council - "You're The Best Thing", "Big Boss Groove",
"Internationalists", "Walls Come Tumbling Down" (W 12:19);
- The Boomtown
Rats - "I Don't
Like Mondays", "Drag Me Down", "Rat
Trap", "For He's A
Jolly Good Fellow" (sung by the audience) (W 12:44);
- Adam Ant - "Vive Le
Rock" (W 13:00);
- Ultravox -
"Reap the Wild Wind",
"Dancing with Tears in My
Eyes", "One Small Day", "Vienna" (W 13:16);
- Spandau Ballet -
"Only When You Leave", "Virgin", "True" (W 13:47);
- Elvis Costello -
"All You Need Is Love" (W
14:07);
- Nik Kershaw - "Wide
Boy", "Don Quixote", "The
Riddle", "Wouldn't It Be
Good" (W 14:22);
- Sade - "Why Can't We Live Together",
"Your Love Is King", "Is It A
Crime" (W 14:55);
- Sting and
Phil Collins (with
Branford
Marsalis) - "Roxanne",
"Driven To Tears", "Against All Odds ",
"Message in a Bottle",
"In the Air Tonight", "Long Long
Way To Go", "Every Breath You
Take" (W 15:18);
- Howard
Jones - "Hide and Seek" (W
15:50)
- Bryan Ferry (with
Pink Floyd's
David Gilmour on
guitar) - "Sensation", "Boys And Girls", "Slave To Love", "Jealous Guy" (W 16:07);
- Paul Young -
"Do They Know It's
Christmas?" (intro), "Come Back And Stay", "That's the Way Love Is" (with
Alison Moyet),
"Every Time You Go Away" (W
16:38);
- U2 - "Sunday Bloody Sunday", "Bad" (with snippets of "Satellite Of Love", "Ruby Tuesday", "Sympathy for the Devil" and "Walk On The Wild
Side") (W 17:20);
- Dire Straits -
"Money for Nothing" (with
Sting), "Sultans of
Swing" (W 18:00);
- Queen (introduced
by comedians Mel Smith
and Griff Rhys
Jones) - "Bohemian
Rhapsody"/"Radio Ga Ga", "Hammer to Fall", "Crazy Little Thing Called
Love", "We Will Rock
You"/"We Are the Champions"
(W 18:44);
- David Bowie (with
Thomas Dolby on
keyboards) - "TVC 15", "Rebel Rebel", "Modern Love", "Heroes" (W 19:22);
- The Who - "My Generation"/"Pinball Wizard", "Love, Reign o'er Me", "Won't Get Fooled Again" (W
20:00);
- Elton John
(introduced by Billy
Connolly) - "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 George
Michael and backing vocals by Andrew Ridgeley), "Can I Get a Witness" (W 20:50);
- Finale at Wembley Stadium:
a) Freddie Mercury
and Brian May
(Queen) - "Is
This The World We Created?"
(W 21:48),
b) Paul McCartney -
"Let It Be" (W 21:51),
c) Band Aid (led by
Bob Geldof) - "Do They Know It's
Christmas?"
(W 21:54);
Philadelphia JFK Stadium
- Bernard Watson -
"All I Really Want to
Do", "Interview" (JFK 13:51);
- Joan Baez (introduced
by Jack Nicholson) -
"Amazing Grace"/"We Are the World" (JFK 14:02);
- The Hooters - "And
We Danced", "All You Zombies"
(JFK 14:12);
- The Four Tops -
"Shake Me, Wake
Me ", "Bernadette", "It's The Same Old Song", "Reach Out I'll Be There", "I Can't Help
Myself " (JFK 14:33);
- Billy Ocean -
"Caribbean Queen", "Loverboy" (JFK 14:45);
- Black Sabbath
(introduced by Chevy
Chase) - "Children of the
Grave", "Iron Man", "Paranoid" (JFK 14:52);
- Run-D.M.C. - "Jam
Master Jay", "King Of Rock" (JFK
15:12);
- Rick
Springfield - "Love Somebody", "State Of The Heart", "Human Touch" (JFK
15:30);
- REO Speedwagon -
"Can't Fight This Feeling",
"Roll With The Changes" (JFK 15:47);
- Crosby,
Stills and Nash - "Southern
Cross", "Teach Your
Children", "Suite: Judy Blue
Eyes" (JFK 16:15);
- Judas Priest -
"Living After Midnight",
"The
Green Manalishi ", "You've Got Another Thing
Comin'" (JFK 16:26);
- Bryan Adams
(introduced by Jack
Nicholson) - "Kids Wanna Rock", "Summer of '69", "Tears Are Not Enough", "Cuts Like a Knife" (JFK
17:02);
- The Beach Boys
(introduced by Marilyn
McCoo) - "California
Girls", "Help Me, Rhonda",
"Wouldn't It Be Nice", "Good Vibrations", "Surfin' USA" (JFK 17:40);
- George Thorogood and the
Destroyers - "Who Do You
Love" (with Bo
Diddley), "The Sky
Is Crying", "Madison Blues" (with Albert Collins) (JFK 18:26);
- Simple Minds -
"Ghost Dancing", "Don't
You ", "Promised You a Miracle" (JFK 19:07);
- The Pretenders -
"Time The Avenger", "Message of Love", "Stop Your Sobbing",
"Back on the Chain Gang",
"Middle of the Road" (JFK
19:41);
- Santana and
Pat Metheny -
"Brotherhood", "Primera Invasion", "Open Invitation", "By The
Pool"/"Right Now" (JFK 20:21);
- Ashford &
Simpson - "Solid",
"Reach Out and
Touch " (with Teddy
Pendergrass) (JFK 20:57);
- Madonna
(introduced by Bette
Midler) - "Holiday", "Into the Groove", "Love Makes The World Go
Round" (JFK 21:27);
- Tom Petty
and the Heartbreakers - "American Girl", "The Waiting", "Rebels", "Refugee" (JFK 22:14);
- Kenny Loggins -
"Footloose" (JFK 22:30);
- The Cars - "You Might Think", "Drive", "Just What I Needed", "Heartbeat City"
(JFK 22:49);
- Neil Young -
"Sugar Mountain", "The Needle and the Damage
Done", "Helpless", "Nothing Is
Perfect", "Powderfinger" (JFK
23:07);
- Power
Station - "Murderess", "Get It On" (JFK 23:43);
- Thompson Twins -
"Hold Me Now",
"Revolution" (with
Madonna, Steve
Stevens and Nile
Rodgers) (JFK 00:21);
- Eric Clapton (with
Phil Collins) - "White
Room", "She's Waiting", "Layla" (JFK
00:39);
- Phil Collins
(having taken Concorde from UK to USA) - "Against All Odds ",
"In the Air Tonight" (JFK
01:04);
- Led Zeppelin (with
Tony Thompson,
Paul Martinez, and Phil Collins)
- "Rock and Roll",
"Whole Lotta Love", "Stairway to Heaven" (JFK 01:10);
- Crosby,
Stills, Nash & Young - "Only Love Can Break Your
Heart", "Daylight Again"/"Find the Cost of Freedom" (JFK
01:40);
- Duran Duran -
"A View to a Kill",
"Union of the Snake", "Save a Prayer", "The
Reflex" (JFK 01:45);
- Patti LaBelle -
"New Attitude", "Imagine", "Forever Young", "Stir It Up", "Over The Rainbow", "Why Can't I Get It
Over" (JFK 02:20);
- Hall &
Oates (with G. E. Smith of Saturday Night Live fame on guitar)
- "Out of Touch", "Maneater", "Get Ready" (with
Eddie Kendricks),
"Ain't Too Proud to Beg"
(with David Ruffin),
"The Way You Do the
Things You Do", "My
Girl" (with Eddie
Kendricks and David
Ruffin) (JFK 02:50);
- Mick Jagger (with
Hall & Oates /
Eddie Kendricks /
David Ruffin) -
"Lonely At The Top", "Just Another Night", "Miss You", "State of Shock"/"It's Only Rock 'n
Roll " (with Tina
Turner) (JFK 03:15);
- Finale at JFK Stadium:
a) Bob Dylan,
Keith Richards and
Ronnie Wood - "Ballad of Hollis Brown", "When the Ship Comes In", Blowin' in the Wind" (JFK 03:39),
b) USA for Africa
(led by Lionel
Richie) - "We Are the
World" (JFK 3:55)
Sydney Live Aid
Kian Geferyui
Cologne, Germany
The German counterpart was
Band für
Afrika.
The Hague, The Netherlands
YU Rock Mission
Moscow, USSR
Autograph
- "Golovokruzhenie", "Nam nuzhen mir". (15:55)
Live Aid recordings/releases
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. That was the reason why the concert was
never recorded in its complete original form, and only secondary
television broadcasts were recorded. Following Geldof's request,
ABC even erased its own broadcast tapes.
However, before the
syndicated/ABC footage was erased, copies of it were donated to the
Smithsonian
Institution
and have now been presumed lost. MTV decided
to keep recordings of its broadcast and recently 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). The BBC also decided to keep its broadcast recordings,
but many performances from the US were not shown on the BBC, and
recordings of these performances are missing.
Official Live Aid DVD
An official four-disc DVD set of the Live Aid concerts was released
on November 8, 2004. It 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 Group.
The decision to finally release it was taken by Bob Geldof nearly
20 years after the original concerts, after he found a number of
pirate copies of the concert on the Internet (see full story
here). There has been controversy over the DVD
release because a decision had been taken for a substantial number
of tracks not to be included in this edited version.
The most complete footage that exists is from the
BBC, and it was the main source of the DVD. During
production on the official DVD,
MTV lent
Woodcharm Ltd. their B-roll and alternate camera footage; this was
an additional source of the US footage that appears on the official
DVD.
Working from the BBC and MTV footage, several degrees of dramatic
license were taken, in order to release the concert on DVD. For
example, many songs on the official DVD had their soundtracks
altered, 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) but it was never used until the release of
the DVD. Also, in the USA finale, the original 'USA for Africa'
studio track for "We Are the World" was overlaid in places where
the microphone was absent (in fact, if you listen closely, you can
hear the vocals of
Kenny Rogers and
James Ingram, two artists who did not
even take part in Live Aid).
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. For example,
Rick
Springfield,
The Four Tops,
The Hooters,
Power Station, and
Crosby, Stills, Nash &
Young were among those acts that were left off the DVD. Many of
the artists' songs that were performed were also omitted. For
example,
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" at both Wembley and JFK but only the
london performance of the song was included and the JFK performance
was included on Phil Collins'
Finally...The First Farewell
Tour DVD
There were also issues with the artists themselves. Two such
performers were left off at their own request:
Led Zeppelin and
Santana. 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 have pledged to donate proceeds from an upcoming DVD
release of Led Zeppelin to the campaign, and
John Paul Jones has pledged
proceeds from his current American tour with
Mutual Admiration
Society.
In 2007,
Queen released a special
two-disc DVD set
Queen Rock
Montreal. Disc one is their 1981 concert from The Forum in
Montreal, Canada, and disc two is their complete Live Aid
performance, along with Freddie Mercury and Brian May performing
Is
This The World We Created...? from the UK finale, all of
which is mixed into DTS 5.1 by
Justin Shirley-Smith. Also on the disc
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 the DVD would be given back to the
charity, which would raise an extra £5 for every DVD sold.
Unofficial recordings
Because the Live Aid broadcast was watched by billions of people,
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. (As mentioned previously, the US MTV
broadcast, the
ABC Radio Network
and
BBC Radio One simulcasts were
stereo). These recordings started to circulate among collectors 20
years ago, 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
stay the one and only source of the most complete recordings of
this important historical music event.
The official DVD is the only authorized video release in which
proceeds go directly to famine relief, the cause that the concert
was originally intended to help.
See also
External links
References
- Queen win greatest live gig poll, BBC News, 9 November 2005
- How Bono Saved Me | U2 news article from
@U2
-
http://www.farmaid.org/site/PageServer?pagename=aboutus_history
- FOXNews.com - Giving Money To Poor Africans... -
Bill O’Reilly | The O’Reilly Factor
- Transcript for June 26 - Meet the Press, online at MSNBC -
MSNBC.com
- David Rieff: Did Live Aid do more harm than good? |
World news | The Guardian
- [1]
- /bbc/index.html Minute by minute review of the BBC "Live
Aid" broadcast on July 13th, 1985
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/music/3604680.stm BBC
News: How Live Aid was saved for history
- " Zeppelin defend Live Aid opt out", BBC
News, 4 August 2004
- 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.