Gracie Abrams is not pleased that a fan started a petition to replace Dora Jar, her opening act on tour, calling it “so wildly uncool and bizarre.” After Jar was announced as the tour opener for Abrams’ upcoming European and U.
Billie Eilish, Katy Perry, and Gracie Abrams join a star-studded roster of musicians performing at the FireAid relief concert for victims of the LA wildfires.
British stars Sir Rod Stewart and Sting were among the singers slated to ... the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Gracie Abrams, Green Day, Jelly Roll, Earth, Wind & Fire, Lil Baby, Stephen Stills and Tate McRae. Two-time Oscar-winning musician Eilish will perform ...
Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, Jelly Roll and Rod Stewart are among the musical acts who will appear Thursday evening at a two-venue concert event to raise money for wildfire recovery efforts. The FireAid benefit concert will begin at 6 p.
The one-off event, named FireAid, is scheduled for January 30 at the Intuit Dome and the neighbouring Kia Forum in Los Angeles, with live broadcasts and streaming
Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga and Sir Rod Stewart are among a list of artists set to take to the stage for a charity concert to raise funds for wildfire relief in Los Angeles.
Viewers around the world will be able to watch, stream and make contributions to FireAid on platforms including Apple Music, Apple TV, Max, Peacock, KTLA+, Netflix/Tudum, Paramount+, Prime Video and more, beginning at 6 p.m. PT/ 9 p.m. ET on Thursday. The concert will also be broadcast on 860 iHeartRadio radio stations.
Some of the biggest names in music are coming together to support Southern California with the FireAir benefit concert. Here’s how you can watch.
Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, Olivia Rodrigo and other stars will perform Thursday at FireAid, a benefit concert to raise funds for those impacted by the Los Angeles-area wildfires.
Some of the biggest names in music will come together Thursday for the FireAid benefit concert that is raising money for Los Angeles-area<a class="excerpt-read-more" href=" More
Dave Matthews, who was part of a star-studded lineup of performers at a Los Angeles concert to raise money for wildfire relief, said on Wednesday he would not be able to perform.
The event, called FireAid, will take place at the same time in two separate venues on 30 January, and will feature a host of performers who all have ties to California, which continues to battle powerful and deadly wildfires.