Express & Star

FireAid mixes music and stories of loss to raise money for LA wildfire relief

After their set, Green Day frontman Billy Joe Armstrong hugged Billy Crystal, who was there to welcome the crowd.

By contributor By Associated Press Reporters
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FireAid Benefit Concert – Show
Billie Eilish, left, performs with Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day during the FireAid benefit concert (AP/Chris Pizzello)

Green Day kicked off the massive FireAid benefit concert on Thursday night, a two-venue concert extravaganza that is raising money for Los Angeles-area wildfire relief efforts.

They launched into Last Night on Earth at the Kia Forum and were soon joined by Billie Eilish for the first surprise of the night.

The lyrics are surprisingly astute: “If I lose everything in the fire / I’m sending all my love to you.”

After their set, Green Day frontman Billy Joe Armstrong hugged Billy Crystal, who was there to welcome the crowd at the Kia Forum.

FireAid Benefit Concert – Show
Anderson .Paak, left, and Sheila E perform during the FireAid benefit concert (AP/Chris Pizzello)

“Our goal is simple tonight, to spend more money than the Dodgers spent on free agents,” he joked.

He told the audience U2 offered the first big donation of the night – one million US dollars (£804,600).

Crystal said he was wearing the clothes he had on when he evacuated. He lost his home in the Pacific Palisades neighbourhood where he had lived for 46 years.

The first true-blue Los Angeles moment came from a surprise performance by Dr Dre.

The progenitor of West Coast hip-hop tackled Still D.R.E. with Anderson .Paak and Sheila E, before pivoting to Tupac and Dre’s classic hit California Love.

It was followed by the figurehead of Laurel Canyon folk, a moving set of Both Sides Now by Joni Mitchell.

An hour and a half after Green Day, the show launched at the nearby Intuit Dome with presenter Samuel L Jackson, an Altadena firefighter who lost his home while fighting to save others, and Rod Stewart.

“Here’s a new song. Not!” joked Stewart before launching into Maggie May.

Pink did a stripped-down version of What About Us, Melissa Etheridge’s Me and Bobby McGee and Led Zeppelin’s Babe I’m Gonna Leave You.

FireAid Benefit Concert – Show
Stephen Stills, left, and Graham Nash perform during the FireAid benefit concert (AP/Chris Pizzello)

Behind the performers, images of firefighters and the devastation brought forth by the fires appeared on screen.

Between sets, survivors telling the stories of losing their homes were broadcast throughout the arena — both in person and in video packages.

Non-celebrities brought heart.

The Williams family – four daughters and their mother – took the stage and discussed losing four homes in Altadena, California. They then introduced the folk-rock band Dawes, who were also directly affected by the Eaton fire.

Dawes’ Taylor Goldsmith lost a portion of the Altadena house he shares with actor-singer Mandy Moore, and his home recording studio and instruments were destroyed. Goldsmith’s brother and bandmate, Griffin Goldsmith, and his pregnant wife also lost their home in the fire.

FireAid Benefit Concert – Arrivals
Penny Lancaster, left, and Rod Stewart arrive at the FireAid benefit concert  (Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)

They were joined by Stephen Stills and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers’ Mike Campbell for Buffalo Springfield’s For What It’s Worth, one of Stills’ groups. It made for a perfect transition for Graham Nash, who described his Crosby, Stills & Nash collaborator as his “partner of many years”.

Spirits were high.

“We’re appreciative of this moment. I hope people remember this concert forever,” said Scott Jones, 54, who brought his daughter to the concert at the Kia Forum.

The Los Angeles resident and his daughter wore black T-shirts with First Responders written across their chests.

“I hope some of the firefighters who are able to attend can come and decompress a little,” Jones said.

“They needed it. I’m supportive of what they have done for this city.”

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