Lady Gaga closed the FireAid concert in Los Angeles with a live performance of her hit "Shallow" and a brand new song written for the occasion.
After almost six hours of FireAid, Lady Gaga ended the historic Los Angeles event by debuting a new song co-written with her fiance Michael Polansky, an upbeat number that she said was “just for tonight.”
Lady Gaga is ramping up to the release of new album Mayhem, and she’s popping up all over the place, from December’s A Carpool Karaoke Christmas to next month’s SNL 50th anniversary concert. Also on her schedule as FireAid,
The FireAid concert in Los Angeles featured over two dozen artists, including Lady Gaga, raising funds for wildfire victims.
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.
Here are some of FireAid's outstanding moments: Crystal appeared as the first host in the same clothes he was wearing when he fled his family home, which was lost in the Palisades Fire. Then, with his trademark humor and heart, he recalled another national spasm of pain.
Green Day, Billie Eilish, Joni Mitchell and other artistes performed at the concert. Read more at straitstimes.com.
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.
Some of the biggest names in music will come together on Thursday to raise money for Los Angeles-area wildfire relief efforts.
Less than three weeks after a series of historic wildfires killed 29 people and destroyed more than 16,000 structures in the Los Angeles area, more than two dozen of music’s biggest names gathered for the FireAid benefit concert — “an evening of music and solidarity,
Billie Eilish sang with Green Day and Stevie Nicks thanked the firefighters who saved her home at two star-studded concerts on Thursday to raise money for wildfire relief in Los Angeles. The FireAid benefit featured surprise pairings and generation-spanning acts,