Here’s another review from my archives,
written for inclusion in a sheet music songbook that compiled many of the songs
performed on the day.
Before a worldwide TV audience estimated at
three billion, Live 8 entered history books on July 2 by becoming the most
watched pop event ever. The charismatic Bob Geldof once again managed to
harness the power of pop to put across his powerful message to world leaders:
we, the people, demand that something be done about the perpetual crisis in
Africa.
The
inspiration for the event came from Bono and screenwriter Richard Curtis, and
it wasn’t until the U2 front man came up with the idea of opening the show with
‘Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’, to be sung by Paul McCartney with the
Dublin superstar quartet as his backing band, that Geldof was convinced of the
viability of trying to top Live Aid. It wasn’t exactly ‘twenty years ago today’
but near enough for Geldof to get on board, open his black book and begin
recruiting.
So
it was that at 2pm the former Beatle found himself singing the opening line of
the opening song of what many consider to be the greatest album of all time –
backed up by the biggest band in the world who promptly followed him, with Bono
singing a few lines from McCartney’s ‘Blackbird’ in ‘Beautiful Day’ and closing
their set with ‘One’. Normally, this would be the sort of extravaganza that
would close any show and in any other circumstances Coldplay’s Chris Martin
would have been shaking in his trainers at the thought of following it, but the
audience warmed to his obvious sincerity, especially when he inserted a few
lines from ‘Rockin’ All Over The World’ – the song with which Status Quo opened
Live Aid – into ‘In My Place’.
There
followed a parade of superstars, the likes of which certainly hadn’t been seen
since Live Aid, among them Elton John ,
R.E.M., Annie Lennox, Madonna, Robbie Williams, The Who and Pink Floyd. Amid
the many highlights was Geldof’s own unplanned appearance with the inevitable
‘I Don’t Like Mondays’, and Dido’s pairing with Youssou N’Dour, the only
African artist to appear. Enfant terrible Pete Docherty joined Elton John for a
stab at T. Rex’s ‘Children Of The Revolution’, and R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe
appeared with an unsettling blue stripe daubed across his eyes. Madonna was characteristically
ambitious, backed by the London Community Choir, while Robbie Williams,
introduced by England football captain David Beckham, covered Queen’s ‘We Will
Rock You’ before singing ‘Let Me Entertain You’ and ‘Angels’.
But
the day didn’t belong only to established superstars. After Keane and
Razorlight, The Killers brought a touch of aggressive rock’n’roll mayhem to the
stage, and were joined on guitar by Slash, the top-hatted guitar hero of
Guns’n’Roses. The quirky Scissor Sisters performed a powerful, crowd-pleasing
set while Joss Stone, whose soulful style belies her age, must have gained many
new admirers.
As
at Live Aid The Who somehow failed to live up to their reputation, choosing to
perform two long, synthesiser-based songs, ‘Who Are You’ and ‘Won’t Get Fooled
Again’, where three or four shorter, snappier songs that relied more on Pete
Townshend’s guitar chords might have been more advisable. They were certainly
full of energy but the highlight of the night, emotionally as well as
musically, was without doubt the penultimate act, Pink Floyd. Somehow Bob Geldof
had managed to persuade the classic Floyd line-up of Rogers Waters, David
Gilmour, Rick Wright and Nick Mason to set aside their differences for the sake
of the cause, and the audience was serenaded by this most ethereal of bands
performing ‘Speak To Me’/‘Breathe’, ‘Money’, ‘Wish You Were Here’ and
‘Comfortably Numb’. Bereft of their usual crowd-pleasing props and light show,
Floyd’s music, clearly well-rehearsed, seemed to take on an added warmth as the
night drew in. The moving sight of this much loved British band together again for
the first time in 24 years was made all the more poignant when Waters dedicated
‘Wish You Were Here’ to Syd Barrett, their founding genius.
In the end it was left to Paul McCartney, nowadays
rock’s senior figure, to close out the day with a Beatles medley of ‘Get Back’,
‘Drive My Car’, on which he was joined
by George Michael, ‘Birthday’ and ‘The Long And Winding Road’ which
segued into the coda of ‘Hey Jude’, the ideal climactic sing-along.
Whether
the world leaders who met at Gleneagles the following week got the message
remains to be seen, but the day’s events proved yet again the potency of our
popular music as a unifying force in this divided world.
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