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Pop / Rock 06/09/2001

Big names snub Farm Aid

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LONDON, UK (BBC) - The biggest names in UK music have refused to appear at a benefit gig for farmers hit by the foot-and-mouth crisis.

U2, Robbie Williams and Oasis are among the acts who turned down the request to headline Farm Aid, which will be held in Cardiff on 27 October.

The all-day event, set up by farmer and Glastonbury festival organiser Michael Eavis, will feature Coldplay, Toploader and Reef and raise money for six charities.
Mr Eavis criticised the stars who refused to appear, saying it was "not a very tall order" and they were too concerned about money to help such causes. "The big headlining bands haven't come on board readily," he told. "They don't really see it as their problem. They don't identify with small farmers' problems. They've got loads of money."
Mr Eavis is a full-time dairy farmer, and has organised the Glastonbury festival on his Somerset farmland for the last 30 years. He approached six of the biggest artists in the country to perform at Farm Aid, including Oasis, he said. "I would have like to have had the Oasis brothers. It's up to them, but I don't really think it's a lot to ask for".
"They've only got to roll up in their transit van and play for an hour, and they enjoy doing it anyway. It's not a very tall order. But that's not the way they look at it."

Other bands who have agreed to appear include Ash and Morcheeba, with about four or five more bands to be added to the bill. Mr Eavis said he expected to raise more than �500,000 from ticket sales, which will be held at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium, with money from TV revenue and donations to be added on top of that.

Glastonbury festival this year, and said he decided to organise Farm Aid because he has seen hardships facing farmers and rural communities at first hand. "The whole industry is very demoralised at the moment, so we need a very morale-raising concert," he said. "Hopefully we will raise funds as well and draw attention to the problems farmers are facing."

He described the foot-and-mouth crisis as "the straw that broke the camel's back" after BSE and other problems facing the industry.

'Struggling'

"Farmers have got a bad press. People think they all get huge subsidies and ride round in four-wheel-drive vehicles, but I know many farmers who can't even afford a car. We should remember that thousands of farmers out there are really struggling, they look after the countryside and do a great job but they are finding it almost impossible to earn a living."

Mr Eavis launched the concert at a London gallery, which is holding an exhibition of the UK countryside to raise money for the cause.

The show is expected to attract more than 50,000 fans. Tickets, costing �25, will go on sale next week.

The charities that will benefit are the Royal Agricultural Benevolent Fund, the Addington Fund, the Farm Crisis Network, the Rural Stress Information Network, the Samaritans and the RSPCA.






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