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‘A Capitol Fourth’ Celebrates America’s 250th a Day Early: Which Artists Are Playing This Year’s PBS Special?
June 29, 2026 2,330 views

‘A Capitol Fourth’ Celebrates America’s 250th a Day Early: Which Artists Are Playing This Year’s PBS Special?

By Lisa Andersen
For the past 45 years, A Capitol Fourth has celebrated the nation’s birthday on July 4 live from the U.S. Capitol, bringing some of America’s most beloved performers together for an Independence Day concert and fireworks that is televised on PBS. Related Alan Jackson’s ‘Finale’ Concert Was a Celebration of a Country Mu

For the past 45 years, A Capitol Fourth has celebrated the nation’s birthday on July 4 live from the U.S. Capitol, bringing some of America’s most beloved performers together for an Independence Day concert and fireworks that is televised on PBS.

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This year, as the country heralds its Semiquincentennial, A Capitol Fourth: 250th Weekend Celebration is starting early, moving its annual festivities to July 3 to get the jump on a crowded slate. “Not only are there tons of things going on in Washington, there’s tons of things going on all over the country,” says Michael Colbert, executive producer of A Capitol Fourth. “We’ve heard already from so many public television stations how excited they are that we’re kicking off this year a day early. Next year, we’ll go back to the Fourth, as we’ve always been.”

Joining host Alfonso Ribeiro will be a packed roster of artists across the musical spectrum including Chicago, Trace Adkins, Patti Labelle, Kool & The Gang, Carly Pearce, Alan Jackson, Loren Allred, Angel Blue, the National Symphony Orchestra and the Broadway cast of Just in Time, as well as actors Gary Sinise and Joe Mantegna.

“We really try to have something for everybody,” Colbert says. “You start out with a blank sheet of paper, and you end up with just an unbelievable group of artists from so many wonderful genres.”

Given the nature of the holiday, the focus is on American performers, but in past years “we have been blessed here and there to have friends from other parts of the world to come and celebrate with us,” he says.  

'A Capitol Fourth'

In these divisive political times, A Capitol Fourth (and its sister, the National Memorial Day concert) remains devoutly nonpartisan. “Since day one, these have been completely nonpartisan, and they’re always going to be,” Colbert says. “There’s no other way to do it. Left, right or center, everybody is for celebrating our birthday.”

Also special this year to commemorate the 250th birthday, the concluding fireworks will shoot off from George Washington’s Mount Vernon, Virginia, home, instead of the usual location on the National Mall in D.C., as actress/singer Allred sings “God Bless America.” “What a perfect connection to 250 years ago,” Colbert says. “We wouldn’t be a country if it weren’t for George Washington.”

The concert airs commercial-free starting at 8 p.m. ET on PBS stations across the country, and then many markets immediately repeat it, so the special takes up PBS’s entire three-hour primetime block that night. The program, presented by Boeing, also streams on YouTube and airs on the American Forces Network.

Because of the special 250th anniversary, more festivities than usual are planned. The unusually crowded field includes the Macy’s two-hour 4th of July Fireworks on NBC. Also happening is Disney Celebrates America, a 24-hour cross-platform broadcast and primetime special anchored by David Muir that starts July 3 and carries over through July 4, and President Donald Trump’s Great American State Fair/Freedom 250 celebration that began June 25 on the National Mall and concludes July 10.  

The Capitol Fourth is literally a family affair for Colbert, whose late father started the event 46 years ago when Colbert was 12. “I was there, holding his script and a Diet Coke for him,” Colbert recalls. He and his wife, Jill Jackson, now serve as the executive producers of the festivities.

And many of the performers feel like family, having played the events several times. Riberio returns as host for a fourth year. “We all know he does live television every week [as host of Dancing with the Stars], but he is a joy to work with,” Colbert says. “He’s such a talent, but he’s also one of the nicest people I’ve ever met, and when you’re live and you got that clock dangling above your head to get off on time, he is just such a pro.”

Several of the artists have special performances planned. Adkins will perform the television debut of his new song, “American Made,” as well as “Still a Soldier” in a tribute to 250 years of military service and sacrifice, flanked by service members dressed in period uniforms through 1776 to current day.

LaBelle will sing Frank Sinatra’s “The House I Live In,” while operatic soprano Blue will perform “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” Pearce will sing “The National Anthem” and a country-tinged version of “This Land Is Your Land.”

Additionally, the Artemis II crew and members of the Winter Olympics and Paralympics will take part.

While the bulk of the performances are live (the only exception over the decades has been during the Covid-19 shutdown), this year will have one taped appearance from Jackson performing “American the Beautiful,” which the country superstar taped at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium over Memorial Day. (Jackson, who suffers from degenerative neurological disorder Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, filmed a farewell concert at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium June 27.)

For Colbert, each year’s participation brings a greater appreciation for the event and the country. “I just feel very humble and happy and grateful to be able to do this,” he says. “Not just continuing my dad’s legacy, but to be able to do something that it ultimately about love of country and love of one another. Let’s celebrate and dance all the way through it.”