Rod Stewart, Katy Perry and Lady Gaga were just some of the famous faces who performed at FireAid on Thursday, a benefit concert raising money for those affected by the devastating Los Angeles wildfires.
Sting, Billie Eilish, Rod Stewart, Stevie Wonder and Lady Gaga are among the stars performing at a huge benefit concert in Los Angeles to help the area recover from recent devastating wildfires.
Green Day and Billie Eilish kicked off the FireAid benefit concert, a two-venue concert extravaganza that is raising money for Los Angeles-area wildfire relief efforts.
Sting, Billie Eilish, Rod Stewart, Stevie Wonder and Lady Gaga were among a host of A-list headliners taking part in a benefit concert for victims of the recent devastating LA wildfires on Thursday.
Billie Eilish delivered matchless performance with Green Day in LA FireAid concert.On Thursday night, Billie and Green Day sang Last Night on Earth at an arena in Inglewood, California.Earlier this month,
The two-venue FireAid Benefit Concert was held in Los Angeles on Thursday night to help raise money for the Southern California communities affected by the devastating fires that ignited earlier this month.
After their set, Green Day frontman Billy Joe Armstrong hugged Billy Crystal, who was there to welcome the crowd.
Follow live updates on the FireAid benefit concert, which will feature performances from Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga and more, as they raise money for Los Angeles-area wildfire victims.
The FireAid benefit was fueled by some of music’s best performers to raise money for Los Angeles-area wildfire relief efforts.
Some of the biggest names in music, including Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, and Green Day, played FireAid at the Kia Forum and Intuit Dome on Jan 30.
Musician Alanis Morissette and rock singer Rod Stewart took to the stage with other big names like Green Day, Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, Joni Mitchell and Jelly Roll at the FireAid benefit concert on Thursday (January 30) to raise funds for people affected by deadly wildfires in California this month, Reuters reports.