(CNN) — Paul McCartney hadn’t taken the stage in over five years when he sat down at his piano to sing “Let It Be” for Live Aid on July 13, 1985, in a performance that was almost totally derailed by a ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Steve Rapport/Getty Images It might have been Queen who stole the show at Live Aid - ...
A music fan said he made his first ever concert experience 40 years ago at Live Aid as he wanted to see his "hero" Paul McCartney. Aimed at raising funds for Ethiopian famine relief, the star-studded ...
BOB GELDOF No, Bobsy is just something Freddie Mercury used to call me. He’d get on the phone and go, “Well, Bobsy darling…” ...
Midge Ure does not think Live Aid could happen today. The former Ultravox frontman, who co-organized the supersized charity concert event with Bob Geldof in 1985, told Good Morning Britain that ...
NEW YORK -- Forty years ago, the legendary Live Aid concerts aimed to do a lot of good - helping to raise over $100 million for famine relief in Ethiopia and inspiring worldwide awareness for a cause ...
Forty years ago this weekend, two concurrent concerts were held in London and Philadelphia in aid of relieving a brutal famine that had taken hold of Ethiopia. The legend of Live Aid has grown ...