Live 8 tuning up for big day

Doomsday101

Well-Known Member
Messages
107,762
Reaction score
39,034
CNN) -- Twenty years ago, dozens of musicians gathered for fund-raising concerts to combat starvation in Africa.
Live Aid, it was called.

Saturday, it's happening again -- but on a much bigger scale.
Live 8, put together by Live Aid organizer Bob Geldof, will feature shows in 10 cities on four continents, with 150 artists participating. The name of the benefit refers to next week's Group of Eight summit, a gathering of the world's wealthiest nations in Gleneagles, Scotland.

Geldof said Thursday that the concerts will be the "final push" in getting the world's richest leaders to come to the aid of impoverished Africa.
In an interview with CNN, Geldof said the goal of doubling aid for Africa by 2010 to $25 billion -- laid out by the Commission for Africa, which British Prime Minister Tony Blair is spearheading -- almost has been met.

Geldof said he hopes G8 leaders will pledge the funds at next week's summit.
"We're almost there," he said. "We're within $2 billion. I think we can knock that off in Gleneagles.

"I've been on the phone with [U2's] Bono, and we're going, 'Is this happening?' Live 8 ... is actually the final push now. It's no longer the startup engine."

The cities where the 10 concerts will be include London, England; Edinburgh, Scotland; Paris, France; Berlin, Germany; Rome, Italy; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Barrie, Ontario; Tokyo, Japan; Johannesburg, South Africa; and Moscow, Russia.

Also on Saturday, organizers are urging millions to gather in the streets of London, Washington, Berlin, Paris, Rome and Edinburgh as part of "The Long Walk to Justice."

Music buffs are most excited about the London concert, which will reunite Pink Floyd's Roger Waters and David Gilmour for the first time in decades.
"Any squabble Roger and the band have had in the past are so petty in this context, and if re-forming for this concert will help focus attention, then it's got to be worthwhile," Gilmour said in a statement on the band's Web site.
Waters added he was excited to "be given the opportunity to put the band back together, even if it's only for a few numbers."

"It's great to be asked to help Bob raise public awareness about Third World debt and poverty."

'Saint Bob'
Geldof didn't set out to be a concert organizer and spokesman for charitable causes. The founder of the Boomtown Rats, one of Britain's most popular punk-New Wave bands (best known in the United States for the song "I Don't Like Mondays"), once said he went into music "to get famous, to get rich and to get laid," according to The Associated Press.

The British press highlighted his uncompromising, often sarcastic personality with the nickname "Bob the Gob."

Still, Geldof had a social conscience; indeed, the name Boomtown Rats came from a Woody Guthrie song. In 1984, he saw a report on the Ethiopian famine and decided to help fight it.

With Ultravox's Midge Ure, he wrote the charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?" and managed to draft many of the biggest names in British rock to sing it, including Bono, Sting, Duran Duran, George Michael (then with Wham!), Frankie Goes to Hollywood and Paul Young. David Bowie and Paul McCartney contributed spoken messages to the single, which sold 3 million copies.

"Do They Know It's Christmas?" was followed by an American all-star gathering put together by Harry Belafonte and manager Ken Kragen, USA for Africa, and its song, "We Are the World." That song, which was written by Lionel Richie and Michael Jackson and produced by Quincy Jones, featured vocal contributions from Richie, Jackson, Bruce Springsteen, Ray Charles, Cyndi Lauper, Bob Dylan, Hall and Oates, Billy Joel, Paul Simon, Tina Turner and Stevie Wonder, among others.

Live Aid spawned a variety of charitable concerts, including the long-running Farm Aid series for farmers organized by Willie Nelson, Neil Young and John Mellencamp.

Despite vowing he'd never undertake a Live Aid effort again after the strain of organizing the 1985 shows, Geldof -- who has been knighted for his efforts, and is now called "Saint Bob" by the British tabloids -- said the need to bring aid to Africa is a cause too important to ignore.

"The only constant in economic decline is Africa," he said. "And we can get to the root of that, and we can stop people dying live on our screens every night on CNN if we really solve this."

He said organizers won't be able to "stop the dying immediately, but we are dealing with the roots of that poverty."

Geldof also praised President Bush, who announced Thursday he was proposing to double U.S. aid to Africa by 2010 -- an estimated $8.6 billion, up from $4.3 billion in 2004.

"This is the first time we have heard this sort of language," Geldof said. "This is very, very positive indeed."

U2 lead singer Bono said this year's event differs greatly in focus from Live Aid, which focused on charitable contributions from the public.
"This is not about charity. This is about justice," Bono said. "This is about people getting out on the streets, tuning in, being educated about what their tax dollars can achieve in the impoverished continent of Africa and elsewhere."

Bono also took on critics who have charged that he and Geldof are being used by the powerful G8 leaders.

"Is there some degree of being used here? Yes," Bono said. "But I am not a cheap date, and neither is Bob Geldof."

Referring to Blair's leadership on the Commission for Africa, he added, "We've got to get out there and applaud them when they do the right thing and then boo them and hiss them when they do the wrong thing."

Live 8 has been criticized in some quarters. Blur's Damon Albarn noted the lack of black artists participating, and Oasis' Noel Gallagher reportedly said he doesn't think the show will have much of an effect on the G8 leaders it's supposed to influence.

"[I doubt] one of these guys from the G8 is on a quick 15-minute break at Gleneagles and sees Annie Lennox singing 'Sweet Dreams' and thinks ... 'She might have a point there, you know?' " Gallagher said, according to the AP.
According to Live 8's Web site, it hopes to have "the largest ever TV audience; the busiest Web site in the world; the largest ever online petition -- the Live 8 list; the largest ever text petition; the largest ever response to a TV show."
 

Duane

Well-Known Member
Messages
7,060
Reaction score
410
It's a really nice idea and I hope it accomplishes it's goals but I'm looking forward to watching it on TV. It promises a lot of great performances.
 

Doomsday101

Well-Known Member
Messages
107,762
Reaction score
39,034
Duane said:
It's a really nice idea and I hope it accomplishes it's goals but I'm looking forward to watching it on TV. It promises a lot of great performances.

I agree. Myself I'm a big Pink Floyd fan so seeing Waters and Gilmore back together again is worth watching it for me
 

WoodysGirl

U.N.I.T.Y
Staff member
Messages
78,789
Reaction score
43,733
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
Anybody watching it. I'm watching it on MTV. I'm enjoying most of performances. Luv the Linkin Park/Jay-Z mash performance
 

NickZepp

Well-Known Member
Messages
4,851
Reaction score
2,082
The best place to watch Live 8 was online. You could see any band on at the time whenever you wanted to. Pink Floyd was by far the best act of all the ones I saw. No disrespect to any of them but Floyd sounded like they've been together for years when it's been 25 years since they all preformed as Pink Floyd and over 10 years since they were live as even part of Pink Floyd.

Run DMC was pretty good, so was Velvot Revolver. London had the best lineup. Green Day was good. U2 was as good as always. McCartney was a good last act but he just got upstaged by Pink Floyd IMO. Sir Paul did okay but the energy of Floyd just left me too depleated to really care about his preformance. Stevie Wonder was good too but I really couldn't get as excited about anything after Floyd. Okay that's enough on Pink Floyd I guess. LOL
 

Doomsday101

Well-Known Member
Messages
107,762
Reaction score
39,034
NickZepp said:
The best place to watch Live 8 was online. You could see any band on at the time whenever you wanted to. Pink Floyd was by far the best act of all the ones I saw. No disrespect to any of them but Floyd sounded like they've been together for years when it's been 25 years since they all preformed as Pink Floyd and over 10 years since they were live as even part of Pink Floyd.

Run DMC was pretty good, so was Velvot Revolver. London had the best lineup. Green Day was good. U2 was as good as always. McCartney was a good last act but he just got upstaged by Pink Floyd IMO. Sir Paul did okay but the energy of Floyd just left me too depleated to really care about his preformance. Stevie Wonder was good too but I really couldn't get as excited about anything after Floyd. Okay that's enough on Pink Floyd I guess. LOL

Pink Floyd was the main reason I tuned in and was not disappointed at all, they sounded great
 

dallasblue05

New Member
Messages
1,286
Reaction score
0
you know this is a great concept, but all they are doing is raising awareness. That is very noble, however, do they not realize that holding a free concert does really nothing for the cause. If they were to charge just 1 dollar admission, they could still raise a lot of money!! Think of how many people will go to these concerts......not only could they raise awareness that really needs to be there(which they are doing), that could ut their money where their microphones are and provide some "mula" to benifit the cause as well.
 

BrAinPaiNt

Mike Smith aka Backwoods Sexy
Staff member
Messages
77,918
Reaction score
40,985
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
dallasblue05 said:
you know this is a great concept, but all they are doing is raising awareness. That is very noble, however, do they not realize that holding a free concert does really nothing for the cause. If they were to charge just 1 dollar admission, they could still raise a lot of money!! Think of how many people will go to these concerts......not only could they raise awareness that really needs to be there(which they are doing), that could ut their money where their microphones are and provide some "mula" to benifit the cause as well.


I have no clue if this is the case or not....but although they may not be charging people to enter to concert.....I would have to imagine they are charging for parking, consessions (food and drink), T-Shirts/merchandise and I would not doubt that they are charging MTV (or possible other music stations) to show the concert on Television.
 

dallasblue05

New Member
Messages
1,286
Reaction score
0
BrAinPaiNt said:
I have no clue if this is the case or not....but although they may not be charging people to enter to concert.....I would have to imagine they are charging for parking, consessions (food and drink), T-Shirts/merchandise and I would not doubt that they are charging MTV (or possible other music stations) to show the concert on Television.


Very good point BP. That is something I didnt think about. Thanks for the insight.
 

BrAinPaiNt

Mike Smith aka Backwoods Sexy
Staff member
Messages
77,918
Reaction score
40,985
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
dallasblue05 said:
Very good point BP. That is something I didnt think about. Thanks for the insight.


Your welcome and even with my points I can see your idea as a good one as well. :cool:

A dollar or two (our Euro lol) would not hurt people in the wallet and would be an easy amount to give up to see a great concert.

I have no clue on english tax laws and such but I am wondering if they did not do it this way in order to not have to pay taxes on money or have other special considerations if they charged an entrance fee.
 

Zaxor

Virtus Mille Scuta
Messages
8,406
Reaction score
38
Hoov said:
Wow, i read that and it makes a lot of sense, the guy being interviewed sounds like he has a good handle on this and really understands what is going on. Sounds like the aid to africa is not beneficial to africa at all.

I wonder if he is right..it sure sounds plausable
 
Top