Green Bay, Wisconsin

Everything Green Bay is known for

17 songs mention this city 4 artists from here

Green Bay, Wisconsin, located at the mouth of the Fox River in the northeastern part of the state, is widely known as the home of the Green Bay Packers. While not primarily recognized for its music scene, the city has a musical identity shaped by artists who call it home and songs that mention it. For example, folk artist Pat MacDonald is from Green Bay, and the punk metal band Boris the Sprinkler also originated here.

The city's connection to music is also heard in popular culture, with songs like "Green Bay, Wisconsin" by The Mighty Mighty Bosstones and Ludacris's "Roll Out (My Business)" referencing the city. Green Bay's local venues, such as the Meyer Theatre and the Epic Event Center, host various live performances, contributing to the local music landscape.

Music in Green Bay

Songs About Green Bay

Roll Out (My Business)
Ludacris
100%
Green Bay, Wisconsin
The Mighty Mighty Bosstones
83%
"She would not let Green Bay, Wisconsin destroy her"
Damn I’m Cold
Bun B
50%
"Lambeau Leap in that pussy like in Green Bay"
23%
crazy train
ozzy osbourne
10%
Good Ass Intro
Chance the Rapper
8%
"Replay the replays, Green Bay, the Packers"
92 Bars
The Game
7%
"Known for putting cheese on niggas heads the way the Packers do it"
Dedication
Coo Coo Cal
7%
"All my Green Bay niggas"
Pimp Juice
Nelly
5%
"send you Green Bay Packin'"
Burn
Meek Mill
4%
"All white Maybach, Green Bay they packing"
MotorSport
Migos
4%
"If Quavo the QB, I'm Nick Lombardi"
Gods Don’t Chill
Murphy Lee
4%
"Green Bay sendin' em Packin'"
Holiday
James McMurtry
3%
"How 'bout those Packers, think it'll snow?"
I Wanna Fuck Your Mama
Willie D
3%
"When I hit it like a Green Bay Packer"
Dying Breed
Colby Acuff
2%
"And you can bet on Sundays, I'm cheerin' on Green Bay"
Gangsta
Young Dro
2%
"Packers like the Green Bay"
Dedication (feat. Mr. Do It To Death)
Coo Coo Cal
1%
"All my Green Bay niggas"

History of Green Bay

Titletown, USA RoadyGoat

Green Bay is the smallest city with a major pro sports team, and it wears the nickname 'Titletown' because no franchise in the NFL has won more. The Packers hold thirteen league championships, the most in league history, including the first two Super Bowls and titles in 1996 and 2010. They're also a genuine oddity: the only community-owned, nonprofit team in American major pro sports. More than five hundred thousand shareholders hold Packers stock, but it pays no dividends, can't be traded, and grants no real equity, it's pride on paper. No single person can own more than a tiny sliver, so there's no billionaire owner to threaten relocation; the town literally owns the team. They play at Lambeau Field, where the bleachers freeze and the legend of the 'frozen tundra' was born. In Green Bay, the team and the town are the same thing.

The Brown County Potter's Field RoadyGoat

1931

On Curry Lane on Green Bay's east side lies the Brown County Potter's Field, also called the County Home Cemetery — the county's pauper burial ground. 'Potter's field' is a Biblical term, from the clay field the priests bought with the silver Judas returned, set aside to bury strangers; in America it came to mean a public grave for the unknown and the poor. This is the second of two such sites in Brown County. Opened in 1931 and used until 1973, it holds residents of the old Brown County Poor Farm, Insane Asylum, and Mental Health Center, along with the destitute and unidentified — men and women, from one day old into their nineties. By the 1990s it had vanished under trees and brush, until the Winiecki VFW Post 9677 reclaimed it, restored the markers, and raised a memorial dedicated in 2015. All but two of those buried here have now been named.

RoadyGoat → · 4.3 mi away

Lambeau Field

1957

Home of the Green Bay Packers since 1957 and the oldest continuously operating NFL stadium in the country.

Everything Near Green Bay

9 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.

Explore Green Bay on the Map