On July 13, the world marked the 40th anniversary of Live Aid, the groundbreaking 1985 charity concert held simultaneously at Wembley Stadium in London and John F. Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia. Among the many legendary performances that day, Queen’s electrifying 20-minute set at Wembley remains etched as one of rock history’s most unforgettable moments. Yet, as Queen guitarist Brian May recently revealed, that iconic performance nearly didn’t happen — and Freddie Mercury needed a little convincing to take the stage.

In an interview with San Antonio TV station WOAI, May opened up about the band’s mindset before and after their historic Live Aid show. “I didn’t start off thinking it was the most incredible thing the world had ever seen,” he recalled. “I remember coming off and being very aware of the things which we hadn’t quite got right. … If someone had asked me as I came off stage, ‘Was that the greatest performance of your life?’ I would’ve said, ‘Hm, probably not.’”

But with hindsight, May sees the set in a much brighter light. “Looking back, I can kind of see that everything was the way it was meant to be. And I think it was one of our finest hours, definitely one of Freddie’s finest hours. The planets were aligned, and … the connection was incredible. The magic happened.”

Freddie Mercury: Reluctant at First, Then All In

Perhaps most surprising is May’s admission that Freddie Mercury wasn’t initially enthusiastic about performing at Live Aid. “[He] was kind of dragged into it by his heels a little bit,” May revealed, adding that it wasn’t quite like the portrayal in Bohemian Rhapsody the movie, but close. “Having been dragged into it, mainly by me, as a matter of fact, he enveloped it.”

Once committed, Mercury gave the performance his all. “He just gave it his whole heart and soul, and he was determined that it would be something wonderful,” May said.

The Band’s Experience and Preparation

Queen was no stranger to large audiences, having played to stupendously huge crowds in South America, including Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro. “We had learned what to do,” May explained. “Freddie had this real magical way of reaching out to everybody in the audience. Everybody thought he was talking to them, even the guy at the back who was very shy, because Freddie remembered when he was the guy at the back, very shy.”

The band was given just 20 minutes to perform, with Live Aid organizer Bob Geldof urging them to “play the hits” and “don’t get clever.” Taking this advice to heart, Queen rehearsed extensively to cram as many hits as possible into their brief set. Their performance began with a partial rendition of “Bohemian Rhapsody,” followed by “Radio Ga Ga,” an iconic a cappella chant led by Mercury that had the Wembley crowd singing along, then “Hammer to Fall,” “Crazy Little Thing Called Love,” and closing with “We Will Rock You” and “We Are the Champions.”

A Seamless Event Driven by Unity

May admitted he had doubts the massive concert would run smoothly, given the sheer number of acts and quick changeovers. “It sounded ludicrous… How do you get people to change over between acts that fast?” But on the day, something remarkable happened. “Everybody came in with this incredible feeling of ‘let’s make it work and let’s forget about our egos.’ It really is true.”

The spirit of Live Aid was unlike any other day in May’s life. “Everybody’s heart was in the right place,” he said, capturing the genuine unity behind the star-studded event organized to raise money for famine relief in Africa.

A Defining Moment in Rock History

Queen’s Live Aid performance has since been hailed as one of rock’s greatest live shows, a moment when a band transcended expectations to deliver pure magic. Brian May’s candid reflections remind us that behind the legend was a group of musicians determined to make a difference — even if it meant dragging their frontman “by his heels” onto one of the world’s biggest stages. And once Freddie Mercury took hold of that moment, history was made.

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