The members of No Doubt -- Gwen Stefani, Tom Dumont, Tony Kanal and Adrian Young -- reunited at FireAid Thursday night and sang some of their biggest hits, including "Just a Girl," "Spiderwebs" and "Don't Speak."
St. Vincent, Joan Jett and Kim Gordon joined Pat Smear and original Nirvana members Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic onstage for a reunion of sorts at FireAid Thursday. Violet, Jett, and Gordon each subbed in for the late Kurt Cobain.
Highlights from the nearly six-hour Fire Aid included Lady Gaga, Billie Eilish, a female-fronted Nirvana reunion and an Anderson .Paak/Dr. Dre collab.
Donations can be made at fireaidla.org. Start the day smarter. Get all the news you need in your inbox each morning. So many musicians wanted to bring their spotlight to the cause, that what was initially set as a single event turned into dual concerts at the newly opened Intuit Dome and local landmark Kia Forum,
Billie Eilish, Dr. Dre, Stevie Wonder, Green Day, Joni Mitchell, No Doubt and the remaining members of Nirvana all performed.
In the past few weeks, people have been planning many, many benefits for the victims of the recent Los Angeles wildfires. The biggest of those shows went down last night: FireAid, a gigantic all-star spectacular that took over both the Intuit Dome and the Kia Forum.
A trio of singers filled in for Kurt Cobain as Dave Grohl, Pat Smear and Krist Novoselic performed "Breed," "School" and "Territorial Pissings.”
FireAid, a star-studded benefit concert raised millions for LA wildfire victims. The event featured emotional performances, including a surprise Nirvana reunion, Lady Gaga debuting a new song, and Billy Crystal hosting with humor.
Fans, fire victims and first responders gathered at the Intuit Dome and Kia Forum to raise funds and celebrate the resilience of Los Angeles The post Inside the FireAid Benefit Concert as Victims Find Joy in Music: ‘We’ll Laugh,
FireAid had some surprises in store, but none bigger than the first reunion from Nirvana's surviving members in over a decade.
Between performances, survivors of the LA wildfire, which has killed 28 people, shared their experiences of losing their homes.