Greenwood also detailed his plans to participate in the celebrations of President-elect Donald Trump's victory in the 2024 election, including the inauguration.
Lee Greenwood opens up about performing his hit song for President-elect Donald Trump once again as the incoming 47th president is set to be sworn in for the second time.
Lee Greenwood will perform “God Bless the U.S.A.” at President-elect Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again Rally in downtown Washington on Sunday as well as the swearing-in ceremony Monday.
The ceremony, which had been moved inside to avoid the significant chill in the Washington area, also featured an appearance by Lee Greenwood, who offered his familiar anthem, "God Bless the U.S.A." before the proceedings. Greenwood also made an appearance ...
WASHINGTON — Forty years ago, Lee Greenwood released “God Bless the U.S.A.,” a patriotic anthem that has become a standard at political gatherings. He's performed the song for a number of ...
Lee Greenwood and the United States Marine Corps band performed his patriotic hit during the presidential inauguration.
First lady Jill Biden expressed her disappointment with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a new interview with The Washington Post, providing rare public comments about the fractured relationship between her husband, Joe Biden, and Pelosi following the president’s departure from the 2024 race.
In addition to DeGraw, Carrie Underwood, Lee Greenwood, Kid Rock, Billy Ray Cyrus, the Village People, Jason Aldean and Rascal Flatts, among others, are set to perform at various Washington, D.C., venues.
President-elect Donald Trump had one of the biggest names in country music performing at his swearing-in ceremony.
Mr. Greenwood decided against college. He moved to Nevada where he spent 20 years, writing, performing, and singing in every hotel on the Las Vegas strip.
Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly swore in country music singer Lee Greenwood as an honorary deputy on Thursday before Greenwood’s performance at the Fitzgerald Performing Arts Center in Palm Coast.
When you’re raised in an authoritarian Christian community you can never quite comfortably fit into, you learn early on about the ambiguity of language. Words like “love,” for example, mean very different things to a person who respects others’ bodily autonomy