Live 8 concert, Philadelphia

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Live 8
Location Museum of Art, Philadelphia, USA
Founded by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure
Date July 2, 2005
Genre(s) Pop and Rock music
Website Official Site

On 2 July 2005, a Live 8 concert was held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States in front of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, with a densely packed audience stretched out for one mile along the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. The event was organized by the ONE Campaign.

It was one of the first Live 8 concerts announced, as the city had played host to its Live Aid predecessor in 1985, and, until the inclusion of a concert outside Toronto, was the only city in North America to represent Live 8. It did, however, remain the only United States city to participate in the event.

The event is also referred to as "Live 8 Philadelphia", "Live 8 Philly", or "Live 8 USA"

Unlike other venues, no tickets were issued to control access, and Philadelphia police declined to give a crowd estimate. Presenters stated several times on stage that over one million people were at the concert. Non-organizer estimates have ranged from 600,000 to 800,000 [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] and one million to 1.5 million [6] [7]. Some estimates are of the number of people at the concert at any one time, while other estimates are of the total number of people on the Parkway over the course of the 7-hour long event.

Contents

[edit] Lineup

In order of appearance:

[edit] Performance notes

The Live 8 concert in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. On stage is Keith Urban
The Live 8 concert in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. On stage is Keith Urban

The concert began at 11:40 am local time. It ended, still in daylight, a little after 7 pm, in real time a little before the London concert did.

Several artists mentioned or dedicated performances to Luther Vandross, who had died the day before.

The show managed to expose fault in the SEPTA Regional Rail system, which is the commuter rail portion of the city's mass transit system, SEPTA. Trains to and from the concert were overcrowded and many had to ignore departure times in order to accommodate the unprecedented influx of passengers using the system at one time.

Two days after the concert, on July 4, artist Elton John gave a free concert on the same stage used for Live 8, as part of the city's Independence Day celebrations. Interestingly, he had come directly from his performance in London's Live 8.

[edit] Pre-show news and rumours

Live 8 producer/promoter Russell Simmons was the man responsible for adding more African American artists to the Live 8 Philadelphia bill, including some Def Poetry Jam poets.

After noticing the lack of hip-hop artists on the bill, Bono called Jay-Z personally and asked him if he would perform in Philadelphia. 50 Cent, Justin Timberlake, Usher, and Sean Combs were also originally scheduled to perform but cancelled due to scheduling conflicts.

Despite suspicions that the show's finale would consist of a new rendition of the USA for Africa hit "We Are the World", which was performed at the Philadelphia show twenty years ago at Live Aid, it did not.

Also, rumors circulated in the crowd that Bruce Springsteen would close the show.

[edit] Coverage

In the U.S., MTV and VH1 provided intermittent and incomplete live and taped coverage, frequently breaking away mid-song for commercials or commentary by their veejays. ABC provided a short highlights program that evening, and BBC One in the UK showed highlights after the full coverage of the London show. Clair Brothers Audio Systems and Franklin Simon Productions were responsible for providing the live sound reinforcement for Live 8 Philadelphia. Electric Factory Concerts was also involved in the production. Clair Brothers Audio also provided the live sound reinforcment for Live 8 London. The remaining venues were handled by local sound reinforcement companies.

AOL also provided a webcast of the entire show as it happened and carried webcasts of almost all of the Live 8 shows.

[edit] References

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