Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood sang John Lennon's hit 1971 single Imagine at Jimmy Carter's funeral and the country singers' fans all have the same reaction.
Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood performed a duet at President Carter's funeral Thursday in Washington before Carter is laid to rest in Georgia.
Garth Brooks and wife Trisha Yearwood performed the John Lennon song "Imagine" at former President Jimmy Carter's funeral service at Washington National Cathedral.
Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood performed a rendition of John Lennon's 'Imagine', which they performed at Rosalynn Carter’s tribute service in 2023
President-elect Donald Trump selected opera tenor Christopher Macchio to perform the national anthem at the inauguration. Here's a list of some singers at previous presidential inaugurations.
What Lennon and Yoko Ono’s song does is undermine the very solution to the problems that plague humanity. This has been demonstrated over and over by the atheistic utopian regimes (Mao in China, Stalin in the USSR, Pol Pot in Cambodia, etc.) that engineered the deaths of over 100 million people in the 20th century alone.
Southern Baptist Jimmy Carter’s funeral was marred by the singing of John Lennon’s “Imagine” at the National Cathedral. Garth Brooks and his wife Trisha Yearwood performed the song at a Christian funeral in a Christian church.
Many Christians on social media took issue with Trisha Yearwood and her husband Garth Brooks performance of John Lennon s 1971 song Imagine during the funeral of former President Jimmy Carter at
The late president celebrated the impact and influence of the song, which decries war, nationalism, and the excesses of capitalism.
Former President Jimmy Carter and former first lady Rosalynn Carter weren't supposed to go on their first date. On a Sunday night in 1945, Jimmy Carter, on a break from the U.S. Naval Academy in ...
Thursday is a national day of mourning for President Jimmy Carter, and both the stock market and post offices are closed.
FILE - A girl holds a portrait of U.S. President Jimmy Carter in a market in Lagos, Nigeria, March 31, 1978, the day of his arrival for a state visit, the first to Africa by an American president.