Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo and more are set to perform at Fire Aid benefit concerts in Inglewood, meant to help victims and communities affected by the Eaton and Palisades fire.
John Fogerty, Black Crowes, Graham Nash, Peso Pluma, Dawes, and Anderson .Paak have also been added to the bill now.
The FireAid benefit concerts are simultaneously happening in Inglewood next week at the two venues with slightly different start times. At Kia Forum the event starts at 6 p.m. and at Intuit Dome, the concert begins at 7:30 p.m.
They join a lineup that already included Billie Eilish and Finneas; Dave Matthews and John Mayer; Earth, Wind & Fire; Gracie Abrams; Green Day; Gwen Stefani; Jelly Roll; Joni Mitchell; Katy Perry; Lady Gaga; Lil Baby; Pink; Red Hot Chili Peppers; Rod Stewart; Sting; Stephen Stills; Stevie Nicks; and Tate McRae.
Among the headline acts for the show at the Kia Forum is No Doubt, led by Gwen Stefani, which formed in Anaheim in 1986. Before FireAid, the band has only performed once — a reunion at Coachella in April 2024 — since going on hiatus in 2015.
Tate McRae, No Doubt, Katy Perry, Alanis Morissette, Anderson .Paak, Dawes, Graham Nash, John Fogerty, Peso Pluma, Stevie Wonder and the Black Crowes are also set to take the stage for the benefit show,
The Intuit Dome and Kia Forum in Inglewood will host some of the biggest names in music for the FireAid benefit concert on Thursday evening.
The concert, featuring Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo and so many stars that it will fill two arenas, will be carried on major streaming platforms.
Inglewood venues the Kia Forum and Intuit Dome are holding twin benefit concerts on Thursday, January 30, featuring a lineup of more than 20 top artists.
On Thursday, some of Hollywood’s biggest names will host a benefit concert at two Inglewood, California, venues to support those affected by the recent LA fires. The event will be available for streaming,
More than two dozen artists will take over stages in two arenas in the Los Angeles area on Thursday night to raise money to help people affected by wildfires and, the organizers say, "prevent future fire disasters throughout Southern California.
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.