
Belly Up Presents
The Bacon Brothers - People In The World Tour
Fri, 26 Jun, 9:30 PM PDT
Doors open
8:30 PM PDT
Belly Up
143 S. Cedros Ave, Solana Beach, CA 92075
Description
The Bacon Brothers at Belly Up in Solana Beach, San Diego, CA
VENUE PRESALE 1/22/2026 @ 10:00AM PT
PUBLIC ON SALE 1/23/2026 @ 10:00AM PT
THERE IS A DELIVERY DELAY IN PLACE FOR THIS SHOW. Tickets will be delivered to your inbox 48 hours in advance of the show start time.
General Admission Ticket Price: $71 adv / $76 day of
Reserved Loft Ticket Price: $124
Note: Loft & GA tickets available at box office. Convenience service charges apply for online & phone purchases. Loft Seating Chart / Virtual Venue Tour
$1 from every ticket sold will be donated to SixDegrees.org, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that amplifies grassroots organizations through storytelling and creates community-powered opportunities for people to show up for one another through kindness, curiosity, and genuine care.
Box Office: 858-481-8140 | Boxoffice@bellyup.com | FAQ
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There are no refunds or exchanges on tickets once purchased.
All times and supporting acts are subject to change.
Event Information
Age Limit
21+
eTicket Delivery
Your tickets will be e-mailed closer to the event date.
Refund Policy
There are no refunds for any tickets bought from the Belly Up, any time, without exception. In the event of a reschedule or show postponement there will be a refund window in which customers can request a refund by contacting boxoffice@bellyup.com - in these instances no fees incurred by purchasing over the phone or online will be refunded.
In the event of a full show cancellation - a full refund including fees will be refunded automatically at the point of purchase.

Country
The Bacon Brothers
The Bacon Brothers
Country
For The Bacon Brothers, music is all about exploration.
The siblings have spent the better part of three decades creating their own mix of folk, rock, soul, and country music. They call that diverse sound "forosoco," and it's taken them around the world, from headlining gigs in Japan to American performances at iconic venues like Carnegie Hall, the Grand Ole Opry and Gruene Hall.
The exploration continues with the band's twelfth release, Ballad Of The Brothers. It's a record that highlights not only the similarities between Kevin Bacon (known worldwide as an A-list Hollywood actor) and Michael Bacon (celebrated as an Emmy-winning composer), but the differences, too. The two siblings may be bound together by blood and a mutual love of American roots music, but they've grown into sharp songwriters and cinematic storytellers with their own distinct approaches. Ballad Of The Brothers makes room for both of those approaches, offering a mix of edgy alt-rock ("Take Off This Tattoo"), Motown-inspired soul ("Put Your Hand Up"), fingerpicked folk ("Let That Be Enough"), and everything in between.
"We're two musicians who write songs very differently, and we've grown to really appreciate those differences," says Michael. "Whenever I go see a band play live, I'd much rather see them do a thousand things than just one thing. We take a similar approach to our albums."
While writing new material for Ballad Of The Brothers, the Bacons made several trips to Tennessee, where they teamed up with Nashville-area songwriters like Casey Beathard, Brett Tyler, and Kimberly Kelly. They continued to travel once it came time to record the album, too. "Live With The Lie" was tracked in New Jersey, where the band abandoned the use of a click track in favor of capturing a raw, real performance with their touring band. "Put Your Hand Up," a brassy soul song that splits the difference between Memphis grit and Motown groove, was recorded in Philadelphia. "Take Off This Tattoo" was produced in Los Angeles by Kevin's son, Travis Bacon. "It sounded like a country song when we wrote it," Michael remembers, "but once we decided to give it to Trav, who has more of a rock and electronic sensibility, it became something new." The band even added a fiddle solo to "Take Off This Tattoo" — an unexpected choice for a rock song, perhaps, but one that emphasizes the Bacon Brothers' willingness to break new ground. "We worked with fiddle player Brian Fitzgerald on that song," explains Kevin, "and the direction we gave him was: 'Imagine that you're playing an electric guitar, but it just looks like a fiddle.' He absolutely crushed it."
Like much of the Bacon Brothers' work, Ballad Of The Brothers offers a mix of autobiography and richly-detailed fiction. The tongue-in-cheek "Old Bronco" finds Kevin turning a song about his 1969 Bronco truck into a metaphor for aging. "Airport Bar," one of the most gorgeous tracks in the Bacons' catalog, compares a doomed relationship to a sports bar in an airport terminal. On the album's title track (inspired by Gruene Hall, the historic dancehall where Willie Nelson played some of his most memorable shows), the brothers deliver a Wild West narrative about two East Coast city slickers who take a road trip to Texas. Whether by fate or by Faust, they find themselves onstage at a Texas honky-tonk, blessed with musical talent they didn't know they had. "I wanted to write a Faustian story set in one of my favorite states ever," says Michael. "It's sort of like Texas' own version of Charlie Daniels' 'The Devil Went Down to Georgia.'"
For Michael and Kevin Bacon, Ballad Of The Brothers marks the continuation of a musical partnership that began long ago in Philadelphia, where the two siblings were raised on a soundtrack of 1970s singer/songwriters, Philly soul bands, and classic rock acts. They're creating their own soundtrack now, and like many artistic endeavors, the work is never truly done.
"We're still exploring the sound we began making all those years ago; we've just gotten a lot better at it," Michael says. "Music is a life's work. It's a universe of things yet to know. We're still making new discoveries."