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Lady Gaga, Billie Eilish, boost Los Angeles at FireAid benefit

The concert featured surprise pairings and funds raised will support wildfire recovery efforts

Lady Gaga, Billie Eilish, boost Los Angeles at FireAid benefit

Fire Aid Concert

Instagram - FireAidLA

  • Big names performed at star-studded events in Los Angeles to raise funds for wildfire relief
  • Stevie Nicks thanked firefighters who saved her home, while other artists shared emotional moments

Billie Eilish sang with Green Day, and Stevie Nicks thanked the firefighters who saved her home at two star-studded concerts on Thursday to raise money for wildfire relief in Los Angeles.

The FireAid benefit featured surprise pairings and generation-spanning acts, many with connections to the devastated communities of Pacific Palisades and Altadena.

Artists at two venues in Inglewood, near Los Angeles, offered thanks to first responders between soft ballads, poignant moments, and rousing rock and pop performances.

Nicks, the Fleetwood Mac singer and solo artist, dedicated "Landslide" to the firefighters who kept the fast-moving Palisades blaze away from her longtime home in early January.

"They never gave up," she said. "Until you see it, you can't believe the bravery of these men."

In one of several surprises, Eilish joined Green Day to open the FireAid shows with a duet of the band's song "Last Night on Earth."

"It's one of the most important gigs we've ever played," Billie Joe Armstrong, Green Day's lead singer, said in an interview before the show. The Bay Area punk-rock group has recorded several albums in Hollywood, he said and regarded Los Angeles as a second home.

"It's just really important for us to sort of do our part in a small way," Armstrong said.

Eilish, a Los Angeles native, later teamed with her brother Finneas for a "quiet and chill" acoustic set featuring "The Greatest" and "Birds of a Feather."

Lady Gaga, the night's closing performer, sat at a piano and sang a "hopeful" song she wrote with her fiance, businessman Michael Polansky, specifically for the FireAid show.

"All I need is time," she sang in an upbeat chorus, "to heal my broken wings, and then I'll soar."

Country singer Jelly Roll started his set with his recent hit "I Am Not OK."

"It's not OK, but we're all gonna be alright," he sang before picking up the tempo with a cover of Bob Seger's classic "Hollywood Nights," joined by Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker.

In the crowd, men and women in "First Responder" T-shirts danced as Sting joined Stevie Wonder to sing Wonder's hit "Superstition."

Among other performances, drummer Dave Grohl was joined by his daughter, Violet Grohl, who sang the Nirvana hit "All Apologies."

The Red Hot Chili Peppers blasted "Californication," with bassist Flea nearly naked in a hat, shoes, socks, and underwear. Katy Perry waved a state flag as she danced across the stage to "California Gurls."

Comedian Billy Crystal appeared in the navy hoodie, jeans, and knit cap he had worn when he evacuated his home of 46 years in the Palisades. Crystal said he wept when he saw the burned-out remains but was moved by the community's support.

"A young girl said she understood my pain because she had lost TikTok for a day," Crystal quipped.

Videos of fire survivors were interspersed between musical performances. On television screens, viewers were given instructions on how to donate via text or a website.

"It's all about the love for me tonight," West Coast hip-hop pioneer Dr. Dre said before leading the crowd in a sing-along of "California Love."

Another Los Angeles icon, folk singer Joni Mitchell, delivered her ballad "Both Sides Now," moving some audience members to tears.

Gracie Abrams, who grew up in the Palisades, sang an acoustic version of the Counting Crows song "A Long December," which she called "a love letter to LA."

The organizers said that money raised through FireAid will go to short-term and long-term recovery efforts. Funds will be distributed with advice from the Annenberg Foundation.

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