Billie Eilish, Lil Baby, and more are set to participate in FireAid concerts in LA to raise money for those affected by the wildfires.
Billie Eilish, Katy Perry and Lady Gaga are among the artists headlining the FireAid concert to help those affected by the California wildfires.
Raising money to help rebuild communities devastated by fire, a line-up of stars will be appearing live in LA later this month
Many artists are banding together for a Los Angeles wildfire relief concert. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Billie Eilish and Finneas, Earth, Wind & Fire, Gracie Abrams, Green Day, Gwen Stefani,
UPDATE, with official line-ups: FireAid has announced the official line-ups for January 30 with Billie Eilish, Earth, Wind & Fire, Gracie Abrams, Jelly Roll, Katy Perry, Lady Gaga, Lil Baby ...
FireAid, a fundraising event for victims of the L.A. wildfires, will take place on January 30 and will include appearances from Lady Gaga, Lil Baby, Gracie Abrams, Lady Gaga, and more. See the full line-up and get details on how to watch from home.
The first of two concerts collectively being referred to as FireAid will soon kick off at the Kia Forum in the Los Angeles city of Inglewood, to support relief efforts in the wake of the deadly wildfires that ignited earlier this month in the LA area,
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,
A lineup of A-list artists is set to perform in the FireAid concert on Thursday, Jan. 30, benefiting the victims of the deadly Los Angeles wildfires . Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo, Lady Gaga, Jelly Roll, and Stevie Wonder are some of the mega stars slated to take the stage.
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.
From must-see concerts to upcoming music releases and more, we’re breaking down the hottest music news and events happening from Los Angeles to New York.
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