When organiser Bob Geldof was persuading artists to take part in the concert, he promised them that it would be a one-off event, never to be seen again. Hence, the concert was never recorded in its complete original form, and only secondary television broadcasts were recorded. Following Geldof's request, ABC erased its own broadcast tapes. However, before the syndicated/ABC footage was erased, copies of it were donated to the
Smithsonian Institution and have now been presumed lost. The ABC feed of the USA for Africa/"We Are The World" finale does exist in its entirety, complete with the network end credits, and can be found as a supplemental feature on the
We Are The World: The Story Behind The Song DVD. Meanwhile, MTV decided to keep recordings of its broadcast and eventually located more than 100 tapes of Live Aid in its archives, but many songs in these tapes were cut short by MTV's ad breaks and presenters (according to the BBC). Many performances from the US were not shown on the BBC, and recordings of these performances are missing. There were four separate Audio Trucks in Philadelphia provided by David Hewitt of Remote Recording Services. ABC had taken the decision that no multi track tape recordings would be allowed, so no remixing of the Philadelphia show was possible.
Official Live Aid DVD An official four-disc DVD set of the Live Aid concerts was released on 8 November 2004. A
premiere to launch the new DVD was held on 7 November and shown in
DTS surround sound featuring a short compilation of the four-disc set. The screening was held at the
Odeon Cinema in
Kensington, London and included guests such as
Brian May,
Anita Dobson,
Roger Taylor, Bob Geldof and partner Jean Marie, Annie Lennox, Midge Ure,
Michael Buerk,
Gary Kemp and
The Darkness. Other theatrical premieres were held in
Zürich, Milan,
Rome, Vienna, Hamburg and
Berlin. A 52-minute compilation was later released as a limited edition DVD in July 2005 titled
20 Years Ago Today: Live Aid. The box set contains 10-hour partial footage of the 16-hour length concert. The DVD was produced by Geldof's company, Woodcharm Ltd., and distributed by
Warner Music Vision. The DVD has since been
out of print and is no longer available in stores. The decision to finally release it was taken by Bob Geldof nearly 20 years after the original concerts after he found a number of unlicensed copies of the concert on the Internet. The most complete footage that exists is used from the
BBC source, and this was the main source of the DVD. During production of the official DVD,
MTV lent Woodcharm Ltd. their B-roll and alternate camera footage where MTV provided extra footage of the Philadelphia concert (where ABC had erased the tapes from the command of Bob Geldof). Songs that were not originally interrupted with advertisements were also used on the official DVD. Working from the BBC and MTV footage, several degrees of dramatic licence were taken to release the concert on DVD. Many songs had their soundtracks altered for the DVD release, mainly in sequences where there were originally microphone problems. In one of those instances, Paul McCartney had re-recorded his failed vocals for "Let It Be" in a studio the day after the concert (14 July 1985). Beatles' biographer Keith Badman explains: "because of what happened, he decided to re-record his vocals for any future film of the concert. That's the version you'll hear when the DVD comes out." Also, in the US finale, the original USA for Africa studio track for "We Are the World" was overlaid in places where the microphone was absent (consequently, it includes the vocals of
Kenny Rogers and
James Ingram, two artists who did not even take part in Live Aid). Some artists did not want their performances to be featured on the DVD. At their own request,
Led Zeppelin and
Santana were omitted. The former defended their decision not to be included on the grounds that their performance was "sub-standard", but to lend their support,
Jimmy Page and
Robert Plant pledged to donate proceeds from the DVD release of
Page & Plant: No Quarter to the campaign, and
John Paul Jones pledged proceeds from his American tour with
Mutual Admiration Society. Judicious decisions were also made on which acts would be included and which ones would not due to either technical difficulties in the original performances, the absence of original footage, or music rights reasons.
Rick Springfield,
the Four Tops,
the Hooters,
the Power Station,
Billy Ocean and
Kool and the Gang were among those acts that were left off the DVD. Several artists who did feature on the DVD also had songs that were performed omitted.
Madonna performed three solo songs in the concert, but only two were included on the DVD ("Love Makes the World Go Round" was omitted). Phil Collins played "Against All Odds" and "In the Air Tonight" at both Wembley and JFK, but only the London performance of the former and the Philadelphia performance of the latter were included on the DVD. The JFK performance of "Against All Odds" was later included in Collins'
Finally ... The First Farewell Tour DVD.
Tom Petty performed four songs, and only two were included on DVD. Patti LaBelle played six songs, but only two songs were included. In 2007,
Queen released a special edition of
Queen Rock Montreal on
Blu-ray and DVD formats containing their 1981 concert from
The Forum in Montreal, Canada, and their complete Live Aid performance, alongside Freddie Mercury and Brian May performing "
Is This the World We Created...?" from the UK Live Aid finale, all re-mixed in DTS 5.1 sound by Justin Shirley-Smith. Also included is their Live Aid rehearsal and an interview with the band from earlier in the week. On its release, the then British
Chancellor of the Exchequer,
Gordon Brown, decided the
VAT collected on sales of the Live Aid DVD would be given back to the charity, which would raise an extra £5 for every DVD sold. On 14 November 2004, the DVD entered the UK Official
Music Video Chart at number one and stayed in the top position for twelve consecutive weeks.
Charts Certifications Official Live Aid audio An audio copy of Live Aid was officially released by the
Band Aid Trust label on 7 September 2018 on digital download. When first released in 2018, the
Queen performance was excluded. The band's set was, however, later included as a part of the digital download in May 2019. It has a total of ninety-three audio tracks.
Live Aid channel On 12 September 2018, YouTube launched the Official Live Aid channel with a total of 87 videos from the Live Aid 1985 concert. According to the channel, all earnings from viewings go to the Band Aid Trust. As with the digital download release, a few notable performances are not included for unknown reasons, although Queen's set was uploaded to the channel with its inclusion on the digital download.
Unofficial recordings Because the Live Aid broadcast was watched by 1.5 billion people, most of the footage was recorded on home consumer video recorders all around the world, in various qualities. Many of these recordings were in mono because, in the mid-1980s, most home video machines could record only mono sound and also because the European
BBC TV broadcast was in mono. The US MTV broadcast, the
ABC Radio Network and
BBC Radio 1 simulcasts were stereo. These recordings circulated among collectors and, in recent years, have also appeared on the Internet in
file sharing networks. Since the official DVD release of Live Aid includes only partial footage of this event, unofficial distribution sources continue to be the only source of the most complete recordings. The official DVD is the only authorised video release in which proceeds go directly to famine relief, the cause that the concert was originally intended to help. == Legacy ==