The concert, which also includes Dave Matthews, Katy Perry, Stevie Nicks and more, will take place on Jan. 30 at the Kia Forum and Intuit Dome in Los Angeles.
A benefit concert will be held in Los Angeles and streamed live on Thursday, Jan. 30, to support communities impacted by the wildfires. FireAid, which will take place in tandem at both Intuit Dome and the Kia Forum, will feature performances from artists including Billie Eilish and Finneas, Green Day, Lady Gaga and Stevie Nicks .
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter A wide-range of performers across all musical genres have signed on to perform at the upcoming FireAid benefit concerts, taking place on Jan. 30 at the Inuit Dome an
Dave Matthews and former Berklee School of Music student John Mayer will perform live together for the first time at FireAid.
For those who can’t make it in person, both shows will stream live on Apple Music, Apple TV, Max, iHeartRadio, KTLA+, Netflix/Tudom, Paramount+, Prime Video, the Amazon Music Channel on Twitch, SiriusXM, Spotify, SoundCloud, Veeps, and YouTube. It’ll also be broadcast at select AMC Theatre locations.
LOS ANGELES >> Musicians Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, Joni Mitchell and Jelly Roll will take the stage with other big names at wildfire relief concerts in Los Angeles this month, organizers said on Thursday.
Among the artists who are performing at the concert are native Angelenos Billie Eilish, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Gracie Abrams, along with Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Pink, Gwen S
Katy Perry, Lil Baby, Pink, Sting, Gracie Abrams, and more stars are slated to perform at the benefit show scheduled for Jan. 30.
Nearly a year after No Doubt’s triumphant Coachella return, the Orange County band will reunite once again at the upcoming FireAid benefit concert.
FireAid announced on Instagram that rock band No Doubt — which consists of Gwen Stefani, Tom Dumont, Tony Kanal and Adrian Young — will reunite to perform at its benefit concert on Jan. 30 to raise money and awareness for Los Angeles wildfire relief.
Los Angeles has fought several surging wildfires that have scorched tens of thousands of acres, destroyed over 12,000 structures and