FireAid, featuring Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, Sting, Red Hot Chili Peppers and others in a fundraiser for Los Angeles-area wildfire relief efforts, is the latest event to combine music and philanthropy
FireAid, featuring Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, Sting, Red Hot Chili Peppers and others in a fundraiser for Los Angeles-area wildfire relief efforts, is the latest event to combine music and philanthropy.
In a wide-ranging conversation, the 11-time Grammy nominee speaks with Vanity Fair about her collaborators, her famous family members, and the idea of “global music.”
The story is about perhaps the most famous female painter of the 17th century, but whose name largely had been consigned to the dustbin of history.
Beatles guitarist George Harrison married his first wife, model Pattie Boyd, on this day (January 21) in 1966. The couple, who had dated a little less than two years, were wed in a ceremony at a register office in the London suburb of Epsom, U.K.
George Harrison's 1974 tour didn't go over well with critics. John Lennon also wasn't impressed with what he saw from his former bandmate.
George Harrison was born in a neighbourhood which, as he once recalled, looked like Coronation Street, but saw out his days in homes which would have been beyond his wildest childhood dreams.
George Harrison, The Beatles' legendary guitarist and songwriter of Here Comes the Sun and Taxman, had been opposed to playing in the group's final performance at Abbey Road studios
Sting and Olivia were two of many stars who performed at FireAid’s benefit concert last night, helping to raise money for the Southern Californian communities devastated by recent wildfires, and to raise funds for future efforts to prevent similar fires in the future.
FireAid, featuring Billie Eilish, Lady Gaga, Sting, Red Hot Chili Peppers and others in a fundraiser for Los Angeles-area wildfire relief efforts, is the latest event to combine music and
American buddy cop action film Lethal Weapon 3 brought Sting and Eric Clapton together for a slick, soulful duet.
The Beatles built their entire career on their ability to sound like no one else, but the album opener that Paul McCartney used to emulate American rock ‘n’ roller Jimi Hendrix is one notable exception.