Katy Perry is coming home. Well, sort of. Nearly eight years ago, when Perry put a cap on her “Witness” tour, the singer unintentionally left the stage as a traveling headliner for the last time. A global pandemic,
Tate McRae's “It’s Ok I’m Ok” is the first No. 1 on Billboard's newest chart, the Hot Dance/Pop Songs ranking. She beats Katy Perry, Ariana Grande, and Billie Eilish.
Raising money to help rebuild communities devastated by fire, a line-up of stars will be appearing live in LA later this month
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Some of the biggest names in music will come together Thursday for the FireAid benefit concert that is raising money for Los Angeles-area wildfire relief efforts. FireAid will take over two Inglewood, California, venues — the the Kia Forum starting at 6:00pm PST and the Intuit Dome starting at 7:30pm PST.
There’s a bit of a paradox to these. The sort of people who follow music — say, by reading pop music columns — have probably known about many featured artists for a while. The sort of people who don’t follow music probably aren’t following early awards-show announcements or internet music roundups.
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.
Dave Matthews will no longer be performing at the FireAid benefit concert on Thursday.According to a statement
The event, set to take place on January 30, will also stream live on Apple TV, Netflix, Paramount, Prime Video, Spotify, SoundCloud and YouTube
Dozens of artists, many of whom have ties to Los Angeles, are lending their talents to wildfire relief. The event will take place January 30 at both the Intuit Dome and Kia Forum, with tickets on sale January 22 at noon PST.
After a tiny two-week breakneck period of prep, tonight is the big night for FireAid, the star-studded live music event aimed at raising money to help LA recover from the largest and most destructive fires in the city’s history.
Billie Eilish, Katy Perry and Lady Gaga are among the artists headlining the FireAid concert to help those affected by the California wildfires.
Matthews had been set to take the stage at the Jan. 30 benefit concert in the wake of the devastating Los Angeles wildfires.