Live Aid (Queen) Full Concert [1985, London, Wembley Stadium]

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Published 2020-12-23
Queen performing at Live Aid in front of 72,000 people in Wembley Stadium, London on the 13th July, 1985. The event was organised by Sir Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to raise funds for the Ethiopian famine disaster. Broadcast across the world via one of the largest satellite link-ups of all time, the concerts were seen by around 40% of the global population.

2:04 Bohemian Rhapsody
4:26 Radio Ga Ga
8:30 Ay - Oh
9:15 Hammer To Fall
14:01 Crazy Little Thing Called Love
17:40 We Will Rock You
18:58 We Are The Champions

All Comments (21)
  • @Euphonious.
    "For 21 minutes England was ruled by a different Queen."
  • @kattlady1
    For all the young people who don't know, this band was and is 1 of the greatest ever. RIP Freddie, you are a legend forever..
  • @rafaelluz6752
    Listening to this work of art in 2024, anyone else? timeless music
  • @crocodile1313
    No lasers, no fancy sponsors, NO Auto Tune, just pure and wonderful talent. The late 60's and all of the '70s and '80s...the best 25 years in music history!
  • @am291067
    This is the gold standard of live performance ever.
  • @ghostlover951
    My mom always tells me about this concert, she was only 17 years old when she attended, she said all the performance did a amazing show but the one that stood out the most for her was Queen ... especially when they sung "we will rock you" she said she thought the stadium was going to collapse with all the people stomping their feet on the floor... she said she wasn't a big fan of queen but after that day she became one of this biggest fan... she was heart broken when he passed 💔 😢
  • @user-sj5fw8il1o
    I'm not sure I've ever seen a performer have the entire audience eating out of the palm of their hands like that. Truly incredible.
  • I lost my brother before freddy died. AIDS was a for me was a knife in my heart I watch now longing to tell me brother over 35 years ago I love him. I’m old school and he new it, he until his last days only told me he was dying . My regret was was never being able to hold him again. I was the big brother and it’s the one thing I could never save him from. I’m now 64yrs and I wish I could say one last time I love you. And that was the 80’s kids
  • @marikwdor
    I'm 33. I was born after this. I grew up in a family who loves rock. I grew up believing this was one of the greatest rock performances ever. I grew up, I still believe. This is still my favorite performance ever.
  • @axelclauberg
    This must be considered the greatest live performance of all times.
  • @bushbasher85
    My favorite story about this performance is that the first thing Freddie heard when he stepped off stage was his good friend Elton John, paying him a compliment by telling him “Thanks a lot you just fucked it up for the rest of us!”
  • @seonwoohwang
    no internet, no phones, and no socials… definitely better than todays I didn't live in the 80s, but I'm sure the world was as NORMAL
  • I don't believe I have ever in my life saw a "beautiful "performance as "beautiful" as Freddie did .🎉❤
  • @KMacFNP
    I was a teenager when Queen was super popular. I listened to their music even when studying for our exams.😊 The greatest band of all in that generation. I'm still listening in 2024. Who's with me? 🤣
  • @marywilson5578
    This concert was so amazing. No cell phones, no auto tune, no selfies Just pure talent & everyone being in the moment
  • @slincoh
    I think this world today's need those concerts more then ever.