Asking someone to marry you is a big deal, and you want to get the proposal just right. One fan had the right idea — why not get down on one knee in front of thousands of people alongside Lee Brice?
Lee Brice won the ACM's coveted Single Record of the Year Award with his emotional love song "I Don't Dance" at the ACM Awards ceremony over the weekend. Brice wrote the touching tune for his first dance with wife Sara at their wedding.
Lee Brice has some exciting news that will make older fans wish they were back in school again. He is performing at 10 colleges across the country in April and May.
Lee Brice is battling the same freezing weather that's hitting most of the United States, but that's not stopping him from rolling down the road on his tour. Well, at least it's not stopping him for long.
On Saturday night (Jan. 24), Lee Brice joined Garth Brooks onstage in Boston, Mass. to sing 'More Than a Memory,' a song he helped write for the superstar when he temporarily came back from retirement in 2007. Fans may remember it was the only song to ever debut at No. 1 on the radio airplay charts.
Friday night (Sept. 12) is a night Lee Brice will undoubtedly never forget. The singer, who performed before a sold-out crowd at New York City's Madison Square Garden as the opening act on Luke Bryan's That's My Kind of Night Tour, was given a plaque by the RIAA, naming his single 'I Don't Dance' as the Fastest Certified Platinum Country Single of the Year.
Lee Brice's long-awaited 'I Don't Dance' album is finally in stores. But while listeners might naturally gravitate towards the album's first two singles, the title track and 'Drinking Class,' the singer-songwriter urges his fans to listen to the project from start to finish.
The new video from Lee Brice makes its Top 10 Video Countdown debut this week. 'I Don't Dance' checks in at No. 8, besting videos from Luke Bryan and more. The top will look familiar to regular voters of this weekly poll.
Lee Brice started college like many 18 year olds and thought his life would go in one direction. He enrolled at Clemson University to become a civil engineer but a couple of years later, after a trip to Nashville, the singer's life changed forever.