Bob Geldof reveals why new remix of iconic charity hit will be the last
It was 1979 when the world discovered Sir Bob Geldof.
The number one hit, I Don't Like Mondays, shot him and his Irish rock band the Boomtown Rats to international fame.
But it's Geldof's humanitarian work that's made him a household name.
READ MORE: Woman who was charged after reporting Australia's worst paedophile faces court
Sir Bob Geldof spoke to Ally about the inspiration behind the iconic song. (Nine)Disturbed by a news report on the famine in Ethiopia, Geldof was inspired to write the 1984 hit Do They Know It's Christmas.
He enlisted big names from Bono and Boy George to Sting and George Michael to raise awareness and money for the famine.
"I was sickened by it. I mean, that is really it," Geldof told A Current Affair.
Sir Bob Geldof has released a remix of 1984 charity hit Do They Know It's Christmas. (Nine)"I sat down and turned on the TV, and here was this devastating thing that put, you know, my pathetic, puny personal problems in a horrifying perspective."
Since then, three more versions of the charity song have been made, in 2004, 2014 and now, in 2024.
Instead of recruiting new artists, this time Bob Geldof has remixed famous renditions from previous versions to combine the greatest voices of our time.
Sir Bob Geldof recruited a score of famous names for the charity collaboration. (Nine)And he says it will be the last hurrah for the iconic Christmas tune.
"I personally think, it's the definitive one and there will be no more," Geldof said.
"The world has never been more fragile in my life, and I'm old, and I don't think people can take on board any more horror.
"They cannot absorb any more, but it's happening."
Watch the full video in the player above.