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Live Aid's historic 1985 concerts at Wembley and JFK stadiums featured icons like Queen and Madonna while raising funds for Ethiopian famine relief, reaching 1.9 billion viewers.
Queen were the undoubted stars of Live Aid, stealing the show at Wembley Stadium in 1985, but they did have a little help?
The threat of inclement weather forced the Festival of the Bells committee to rearrange the schedule Saturday night, but it ...
NEW YORK (AP) — Aaron Judge made a pair of outstanding catches in right field two pitches apart, robbing Pete Crow-Armstrong ...
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Mid-Day on MSNThey Were The World: Revisiting the historic 1985 Live Aid concertsFans also remember Live Aid for two special songs. In London, the concert concluded with Do They Know It’s Christmas? put ...
Four decades ago today, Wembley Stadium rocked to the sound of some of the biggest acts in the world. Lesley-Ann Jones ...
Forty years after Live Aid rocked the world, Evelyn O'Rourke looks at ten ways the music event of a lifetime made musical history.
Freddie Mercury's legendary performance at Live Aid wasn't just about singing. He had a clever way to win over the crowd ...
'Live Aid at 40' viewers called out 'boring' Oasis as they asked to 'go back' to the old days of music concerts. The 40th ...
Activist, composer, and lead singer of the Boomtown Rats, Bob Geldof, teamed up with Ultravox’s Midge Ure to create the ...
The monumental Rock of Ages is easily one of Def Leppard’s defining heights of song — but it’s also a nice way to describe ...
Simulcast from Philadelphia and London on July 13, 1985, Live Aid was the most ambitious global television event of its time: 16 hours of live music in two different continents.
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