
Music fans recall watching Live Aid concert at Wembley Stadium 40 years on
The late Diana, Princess of Wales and the King, then Prince of Wales, attended the gig in London, which included performances from Sir Paul McCartney, David Bowie, Queen, Sir Mick Jagger and Tina Turner.
LIVE AID AT 40 🎸
'So Bowie came over and said roll over and I will give you a massage.'
Bob Geldof explains what went on behind the scenes at Live Aid 🏟️ pic.twitter.com/nQImzF8KSb
— Wembley Stadium (@wembleystadium) July 10, 2025
Lucy Swanson, daughter of the late BBC Radio 1 DJ Annie Nightingale, was 17 when she went to the gig with her friend Kate Wolfe.
'I was 17. It was a time in our lives where everyone listened to the same radio stations, the same bands,' she said.
'Everyone watched Top Of The Pops. We had to go to Live Aid. As soon as it was announced it was the must-have ticket.
'Thankfully my mum was Annie Nightingale, a DJ on Radio 1 and out presenting Live Aid in Philadelphia on the same day.
'She bought us tickets to go – because everyone had to buy them. There were no freebies.
'There was a sense that every band was all singing for the same purpose.
'The crowd was amazing and everyone was present, no mobile phones, no selfies, no photos, it was better, just living in the moment of looking at the stage, wondering who was next.'
Vivien Harvey, who was a special constable on the day, only found out when she arrived that she would be given the task of looking after performers as they came on to the stage.
'We were on the coach on the way to the stadium when we were told where we would be situated for Live Aid,' she said.
'Some were told they'd be outside the stadium and some would be inside. I got the long straw, and got allocated to stand on the stage door.
'The crescendo, atmosphere, the buzz – very special. I saw lots of stars coming through the stage door including George Michael. But Freddie Mercury was the star of the show.'
Vivien Harvey was a special constable on the day (Wembley Stadium/PA)
Also recalling the event were Debbie Baxter, Henry Munro and Ann Sargeant, all of whom worked at the concert.
Ms Baxter, who was on the hospitality reception desk, said: 'I have so much pride knowing I was part of such an iconic event. I don't think it really resonated with me until years later.
'It wasn't until the film premiere of Bohemian Rhapsody took place in 2018 that I noticed younger staff members saying 'I wished I worked on Live Aid.'
'When I said that I had, they were amazed and were so excited to know what it was like. I realise now how lucky I was to have been part of such a historic event.'
Live Aid 40 Memories also features a video interview with Geldof, who recalls getting a back massage from Bowie just moments before he went on stage.
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Time Out
a day ago
- Time Out
5 things we learned from the new Yungblud documentary
Say what you want about Dominic Harrison, but you have to admit the guy's not had an easy ride. Performing as Yungblud, he created an alias designed to provoke Gen-Xers with outspoken lyrics on politics, social commentary and LGBTQ+ rights. Sure, the music might not have been to everyone's taste, but the online backlash he received was extreme. When I met Yungblud last year, he explained how it had affected him: 'People think I'm lying all the time, or they just hate me,' he said. 'Being hated is so exhausting when all you want to do is spread love.' At the time, it felt like a shift was happening. The usually bratty, outspoken Doncaster native had mellowed, as if he were ready to start a new chapter. In that same interview, he revealed he was working on a rock opera, describing it as 'very much in the style of The Verve or U2 or Bowie'. Yungblud: Are You Ready, Boy? is the story of how he approached making his fourth album, Idols, told through a full live rendition, interspersed with confessional interviews from the artist and his team. Directed by Grammy-nominated filmmaker Paul Dugdale (Adele: One Night Only), it offers a glimpse into the mind of an artist trying to break free from a persona that's followed him around for better and worse. It's no coincidence that the film was shot at Berlin's Hansa Studios, where Bowie recorded Heroes, a record that also marked a definitive shift in sound for a rock great. Can Yungblud match the greatness of his predecessors? Here are five things we learned watching him try. 1. He's moving like Jagger 'When you watch this film, you are looking at musicians battling against space, time, and the fucking universe,' Harrison says, opening the film in black-and-white, twirling a microphone and arching his back like a power-chord-possessed rock frontman. 'Every time I'm in that room, looking at that microphone in front of my face, I have to look at the universe and say fuck you, let's 'ave it.' This sets the tone for a new Yungblud alter ego. Harrison struts and pouts like he's channelling Freddie Mercury, Steven Tyler or Mick Jagger, and it's quickly apparent that his bratty teenage Dennis the Menace character has been dropped for good. Every time I'm looking at that microphone, I have to look at the universe and say fuck you, let's 'ave it Flitting between gritty 16mm film, black-and-white and vibrant colour, the director Paul Dugdale is clearly leaning into the aesthetic of '70s rock legends. This is matched by his new wardrobe choices. The tartan skinny trousers, mohair knits and bright pink socks have been ditched for fitted suits, silk shirts, leather trousers, and an all-black palette, occasionally broken up by a splash of leopard print. Oh, and his top is off a hell of a lot as well – a common thing now if you've been following him on Instagram. His vibe is a lot more mellow, too. His demeanour is less in-your-face, and he seems more poised. Maybe it's the effect of the space's legacy. Speaking about the making of the film, he said: 'You can feel the history in Hansa; it's in the silence between takes, the ceiling looming over you. You're standing in the shadows of all these legends and asking yourself 'Who the fuck am I? And what am I gonna leave behind?'' 3. He's prone to a meltdown Anyone who's seen his live rendition of ' Changes ' at the Sabbath farewell show will know he can actually sing. But dreaming of sounding like Freddie Mercury and actually pulling it off are two very different things. In the film, we see Harrison pushing his vocals to the limit, breaking down emotionally when his voice cracks or gives out during 'The Greatest Parade'. At one point, it escalates into a full-blown meltdown, where things get thrown and broken behind a closed door, as he yells: 'I'm letting everyone down.' 4. The rock star lifestyle has changed since the '70s Even though Harrison is channelling a '70s rock star (and he's in Berlin, one of the world's most notorious party cities), there's a lot less hedonism than one would hope. No, he's not lobbing TVs out of windows or locking groupies in wardrobes; instead, he's going to the gym and eating takeaways with his band members. There's one 'night out' sequence, but even that seems restrained. Perhaps this is because Yungblud is taking this whole new pivot very seriously. So seriously, in fact, that he left his three-year relationship with fellow rocker Jesse Jo Stark for it. 'I just needed to make sure I gave everything to it, and I've sacrificed everything for it,' he confesses. 5. He doesn't give a shit if you don't like him 'The biggest problem for me is that people think I'm fake,' Yungblud told me last year. 'I try and try and try and try and try [to do good]. Then every six weeks or so, I have a breakdown.' That struggle is laid bare in Yungblud: Are You Ready, Boy?, as his manager, Adam Wood, explains how the two would sit together reading the comments on his posts; many accusing him of being inauthentic, questioning his sexuality, his upbringing and his legitimacy as an artist. 'Emotionally, I really did hit rock bottom,' Harrison admits in the film. Now, it feels like he's looking at that era in a rearview mirror. Idols marks a reclamation of his early influences and channels a sound that's more in line with who Harrison really wants to be. There's still an on-stage persona, sure, but the caricature doesn't bleed into who he is offstage anymore. There's a sense of… legitimacy? The film's final moments are shot in what looks like a local tavern, shortly after the live album is finished. He's asked by Dugdale if he feels pressure or freedom. 'The pressure's gone,' he grins. '[It feels] fucking awesome.'


Scotsman
2 days ago
- Scotsman
Covermounts: How a simple marketing tool led to the soundtracks of our lives
This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a small commission on items purchased through this article, but that does not affect our editorial judgement. Whatever happened to those CDs we used to get on the front of magazines, and why did the marketing tool die out? Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... They were the means by which many music fans discovered what would become their favourite acts. The covermount, the CD on the front of magazines, saw a golden age in the '90s, yet digital technology once again affected a physical format. Benjamin Jackson looks back the the history of the marketing tool, and offers his 'holy bible' CD he's kept for nearly 30 years. It was the foremost way before digital technology that we ended up discovering our favourite new acts without sitting through commercial breaks on the radio and television. And for those of us who used to grab old cassette tapes and cover the holes at the top, it was one of the ways we could have our favourite songs without the start or end being interjected by a radio host. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Yeah, home taping was killing music, but having a DJ ask you to 'sing along' live on air before the drop to 'Bohemian Rhapsody' was a worse crime in our minds. The irony being you're piecing together a Queen album to replace the one you copied over with Bone Thugs -n-Harmony and Skee-Lo. That probably is just me on that occasion. Sorry, mum – didn't want you to find out this way. But I digress; covermounts are those CDs that you would find on the front of, well, every magazine in the '90s and early '00s, be it the best that the metal world had to offer or retrospectives on 'Cool Britannia' and the artists that influenced a newer generation of artists. They, ultimately, were a promotion tool, though in hindsight, at the time, some of us felt it was altruistic in our young age that record labels would give us music, for free, without commercial interruptions. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad They were a means to discover new music before file sharing came around; so what happened to the covermount CD and how popular was the format at its peak? | Canva/Discogs But it worked – those acts that graced the covers of the CDs on the covers of magazines did end up getting a lot more attention than, say, those within the back pages of the NME and the like. Some of us still own those very CDs that became a formative experience in a world of musical discovery, something cranks like me complain doesn't feel like that experience really exists anymore. Excuse me while I shake my fist at the sky. Now I'm in my 40s. So, how did the covermount first come to fruition? Why did it die out, and Benjii – what is the CD sampler that you still own from way back in 1998 that you considered your 'holy bible' when it came to the metal scene? Join me as we wade through the excessive amount of plastic and revisit the halcyon days of the covermount. That is, unless you had it taken from the front of the publication before even purchasing said item… Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad C86 and the dawn of covermount stars Though the boom of the covermount occurred much later, its roots can be traced back to the late '70s and early '80s, but at that stage, they weren't used for music. Instead, during the dawn of the home computer, magazines such as Your Sinclair or Amstrad Action would regularly provide covermounts that were vital for hobbyists and programmers. Though they were not compact discs, they were instead in the form of cassette tapes (remember loading those up on the Commodore 64?) and then later floppy disks. Unlike record labels, which often gave away samplers, publishers would offer full versions of games, applications, and utilities. Considering that learning programming like BASIC was often a tedious, trial-and-error approach, these covermounts served as a kind of guaranteed 'day-one' working version, a far cry from the patches and updates gamers expect today. The success of the early computer covermounts didn't go unnoticed, as the music press saw the potential in using a similar model to promote new and often obscure artists directly to their readers. The first iconic example of this was the C86 cassette, released by the British music magazine NME in 1986 - hence the 'punny' name. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad What started as a simple compilation of independent British bands became an accidental landmark; featuring 22 tracks including the likes of Primal Scream and The Wedding Present, it was meant to be a snapshot of the emerging underground guitar pop scene. Instead, it was a massive success, and the collection of jangly guitars, melodic hooks, and a distinctly DIY aesthetic became a defining moment for a new sound. It inadvertently gave a name to an entire subgenre: 'C86 indie pop'. However, unlike those found on the front of magazines in the future, readers instead had to order the cassette by mail, sending in a coupon and a small fee. But the idea was a hit, and it proved that a magazine could not just write about a musical movement, but actively create and define it by putting the music directly into the hands of the fans. The Golden Age of the Covermount The success of C86 proved that the covermount was a powerful tool, but it was the arrival of the compact disc that truly ushered in its golden age. In the late '90s and early 2000s, the CD was the dominant music format, and magazines seized the opportunity, plastering them onto the front of nearly every publication imaginable. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Magazines like NME, Q, and Mojo were the pioneers, turning the free CD into an art form. These weren't just collections of random tracks; they were often meticulously curated compilations that served as a musical education. They could be a tribute to an iconic artist, a "best of the year" roundup, or an introduction to a new wave of bands, giving readers a tangible snapshot of a moment in music history. For a generation of fans, a covermount CD from a trusted magazine was the fastest and most efficient way to discover a new favourite band or genre. This was a win-win for everyone involved. For publishers, a covermount could instantly boost sales—a Sunday newspaper once sold an extra half a million copies with a single Beach Boys compilation. For record labels, it was a low-cost, high-impact way to promote new acts and sell albums. And for us, the readers, it was a gateway to new musical worlds, a physical object that became a cherished part of our collections and, ultimately, the soundtrack to our lives. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad But the concept was not without its detractors; one of the biggest concerns was, as we all became environmentally conscious, the sheer volume of single-use plastic was seen as a wasteful burden, with the production of the CDs and their non-recyclable elements becoming difficult for consumers - and therefore publishers - to ignore. Some arguments giving away music merely 'devalued' it, and by bundling the hottest hits to come our way, music became 'throwaway' rather than the piece of art people paid for. This sentiment grew especially fierce as artists were hit by a double blow; while covermounts offered little in the way of royalties, the dawn of digital piracy in the late '00s was seen by some as an even greater threat than the practice of giving away music had only helped enable. In an age where people craved something new and shiny, covermounts just weren't cutting it anymore. The thrill of having a new album on a disc was quickly replaced by the even greater excitement of album leaks, which became more and more prominent. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad These weren't just new; they were incredibly "shiny"—unpolished files not yet fit for human consumption, a form of contraband that felt more valuable than the perfectly curated CD. The digital age and the decline of the Covermount The final nails in the covermount's coffin were logistical and technological. The production and distribution of millions of CDs became an increasingly expensive and cumbersome burden for publishers. As the convenience of digital downloads and eventually streaming services like Spotify took over, the sheer volume of single-use plastic became an unsustainable and wasteful burden that was difficult for both publishers and consumers to ignore. Magazines that would regularly feature covermounts, such as NME or Q Magazine, eventually stopped giving them away in the early 2010s. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Publishers, seeing that CDs had become a simple expense no longer tenable in a digital landscape, decided to shift their focus more toward digital platforms than print. After all, where would you mount a CD on a newsletter in your inbox? Answers on a postcard, please. While the golden age of the covermount is now a distant memory for most, it never truly died. For some, like those who still buy Classic Rock magazine, the practice lives on as a nostalgic nod to a bygone era, and there are still publications out there that offer covermounts, be it to celebrate a musical occasion or as part of a special edition of a publication. But for everyone else, it remains a memory of a time when the music you loved was delivered to your door or from a corner shop once a month, a physical object that served as a gateway to the soundtracks of our lives. What was on that covermount CD that made you keep it, Benjii? Thanks for making it all this way, and glad that you asked – though I'd have mentioned it anyway. Chekhov's covermount, am I right? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The CD in question, though, would be Kerrang! 1998, from issue #728, which featured System of a Down, Limp Bizkit, Korn, and Garbage... pretty much, all the bands I still listen to and love today. Check out the Deezer playlist above to get a feel for just how important that covermount was for me and other like-minded metalheads of the time Did you have a favourite sampler CD or covermount that influenced the music that you would end up still listening to years later? Drop the writer of this article an email to share your experiences and maybe collaborate on a great 'Now That's What I Call A Covermount CD' in the near future.


Scotsman
3 days ago
- Scotsman
Covermounts: How a simple marketing tool led to the soundtracks of our lives
This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a small commission on items purchased through this article, but that does not affect our editorial judgement. Whatever happened to those CDs we used to get on the front of magazines, and why did the marketing tool die out? Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... They were the means by which many music fans discovered what would become their favourite acts. The covermount, the CD on the front of magazines, saw a golden age in the '90s, yet digital technology once again affected a physical format. Benjamin Jackson looks back the the history of the marketing tool, and offers his 'holy bible' CD he's kept for nearly 30 years. It was the foremost way before digital technology that we ended up discovering our favourite new acts without sitting through commercial breaks on the radio and television. And for those of us who used to grab old cassette tapes and cover the holes at the top, it was one of the ways we could have our favourite songs without the start or end being interjected by a radio host. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Yeah, home taping was killing music, but having a DJ ask you to 'sing along' live on air before the drop to 'Bohemian Rhapsody' was a worse crime in our minds. The irony being you're piecing together a Queen album to replace the one you copied over with Bone Thugs -n-Harmony and Skee-Lo. That probably is just me on that occasion. Sorry, mum – didn't want you to find out this way. But I digress; covermounts are those CDs that you would find on the front of, well, every magazine in the '90s and early '00s, be it the best that the metal world had to offer or retrospectives on 'Cool Britannia' and the artists that influenced a newer generation of artists. They, ultimately, were a promotion tool, though in hindsight, at the time, some of us felt it was altruistic in our young age that record labels would give us music, for free, without commercial interruptions. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad They were a means to discover new music before file sharing came around; so what happened to the covermount CD and how popular was the format at its peak? | Canva/Discogs But it worked – those acts that graced the covers of the CDs on the covers of magazines did end up getting a lot more attention than, say, those within the back pages of the NME and the like. Some of us still own those very CDs that became a formative experience in a world of musical discovery, something cranks like me complain doesn't feel like that experience really exists anymore. Excuse me while I shake my fist at the sky. Now I'm in my 40s. So, how did the covermount first come to fruition? Why did it die out, and Benjii – what is the CD sampler that you still own from way back in 1998 that you considered your 'holy bible' when it came to the metal scene? Join me as we wade through the excessive amount of plastic and revisit the halcyon days of the covermount. That is, unless you had it taken from the front of the publication before even purchasing said item… Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad C86 and the dawn of covermount stars Though the boom of the covermount occurred much later, its roots can be traced back to the late '70s and early '80s, but at that stage, they weren't used for music. Instead, during the dawn of the home computer, magazines such as Your Sinclair or Amstrad Action would regularly provide covermounts that were vital for hobbyists and programmers. Though they were not compact discs, they were instead in the form of cassette tapes (remember loading those up on the Commodore 64?) and then later floppy disks. Unlike record labels, which often gave away samplers, publishers would offer full versions of games, applications, and utilities. Considering that learning programming like BASIC was often a tedious, trial-and-error approach, these covermounts served as a kind of guaranteed 'day-one' working version, a far cry from the patches and updates gamers expect today. The success of the early computer covermounts didn't go unnoticed, as the music press saw the potential in using a similar model to promote new and often obscure artists directly to their readers. The first iconic example of this was the C86 cassette, released by the British music magazine NME in 1986 - hence the 'punny' name. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad What started as a simple compilation of independent British bands became an accidental landmark; featuring 22 tracks including the likes of Primal Scream and The Wedding Present, it was meant to be a snapshot of the emerging underground guitar pop scene. Instead, it was a massive success, and the collection of jangly guitars, melodic hooks, and a distinctly DIY aesthetic became a defining moment for a new sound. It inadvertently gave a name to an entire subgenre: 'C86 indie pop'. However, unlike those found on the front of magazines in the future, readers instead had to order the cassette by mail, sending in a coupon and a small fee. But the idea was a hit, and it proved that a magazine could not just write about a musical movement, but actively create and define it by putting the music directly into the hands of the fans. The Golden Age of the Covermount The success of C86 proved that the covermount was a powerful tool, but it was the arrival of the compact disc that truly ushered in its golden age. In the late '90s and early 2000s, the CD was the dominant music format, and magazines seized the opportunity, plastering them onto the front of nearly every publication imaginable. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Magazines like NME, Q, and Mojo were the pioneers, turning the free CD into an art form. These weren't just collections of random tracks; they were often meticulously curated compilations that served as a musical education. They could be a tribute to an iconic artist, a "best of the year" roundup, or an introduction to a new wave of bands, giving readers a tangible snapshot of a moment in music history. For a generation of fans, a covermount CD from a trusted magazine was the fastest and most efficient way to discover a new favourite band or genre. This was a win-win for everyone involved. For publishers, a covermount could instantly boost sales—a Sunday newspaper once sold an extra half a million copies with a single Beach Boys compilation. For record labels, it was a low-cost, high-impact way to promote new acts and sell albums. And for us, the readers, it was a gateway to new musical worlds, a physical object that became a cherished part of our collections and, ultimately, the soundtrack to our lives. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad But the concept was not without its detractors; one of the biggest concerns was, as we all became environmentally conscious, the sheer volume of single-use plastic was seen as a wasteful burden, with the production of the CDs and their non-recyclable elements becoming difficult for consumers - and therefore publishers - to ignore. Some arguments giving away music merely 'devalued' it, and by bundling the hottest hits to come our way, music became 'throwaway' rather than the piece of art people paid for. This sentiment grew especially fierce as artists were hit by a double blow; while covermounts offered little in the way of royalties, the dawn of digital piracy in the late '00s was seen by some as an even greater threat than the practice of giving away music had only helped enable. In an age where people craved something new and shiny, covermounts just weren't cutting it anymore. The thrill of having a new album on a disc was quickly replaced by the even greater excitement of album leaks, which became more and more prominent. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad These weren't just new; they were incredibly "shiny"—unpolished files not yet fit for human consumption, a form of contraband that felt more valuable than the perfectly curated CD. The digital age and the decline of the Covermount The final nails in the covermount's coffin were logistical and technological. The production and distribution of millions of CDs became an increasingly expensive and cumbersome burden for publishers. As the convenience of digital downloads and eventually streaming services like Spotify took over, the sheer volume of single-use plastic became an unsustainable and wasteful burden that was difficult for both publishers and consumers to ignore. Magazines that would regularly feature covermounts, such as NME or Q Magazine, eventually stopped giving them away in the early 2010s. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Publishers, seeing that CDs had become a simple expense no longer tenable in a digital landscape, decided to shift their focus more toward digital platforms than print. After all, where would you mount a CD on a newsletter in your inbox? Answers on a postcard, please. While the golden age of the covermount is now a distant memory for most, it never truly died. For some, like those who still buy Classic Rock magazine, the practice lives on as a nostalgic nod to a bygone era, and there are still publications out there that offer covermounts, be it to celebrate a musical occasion or as part of a special edition of a publication. But for everyone else, it remains a memory of a time when the music you loved was delivered to your door or from a corner shop once a month, a physical object that served as a gateway to the soundtracks of our lives. What was on that covermount CD that made you keep it, Benjii? Thanks for making it all this way, and glad that you asked – though I'd have mentioned it anyway. Chekhov's covermount, am I right? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The CD in question, though, would be Kerrang! 1998, from issue #728, which featured System of a Down, Limp Bizkit, Korn, and Garbage... pretty much, all the bands I still listen to and love today. Check out the Deezer playlist above to get a feel for just how important that covermount was for me and other like-minded metalheads of the time