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Blue Note Napa Presents
The Bacon Brothers: The Shaky Ground Tour
Fri, 9 Aug, 9:30 PM PDT
Doors open
9:00 PM PDT
Blue Note Napa
1030 Main Street, Napa, CA 94559
TICKET SALES TERMINATED
Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
Meet & Greet Experience Available! YOU MUST HAVE A TICKET TO THE SHOW. M&G is sold separately. $100/person. Meet and Photo opportunity only. Does NOT include ticket for the show.
Meet & Greet is at 4:30 for early show and 8:45 pm for late show.
The Bacon Brothers, never content to be typecast, they’ve fiercely devoted themselves to the cause of making music, undeterred by fame, fortune or the pitfalls that frequently obstruct the path to success. Even from an early age (they cite such influences as the Rolling Stones, the Beatles, Motown, Led Zeppelin, Philly soul, and James Taylor, with mentions from Michael of Pete Seeger, Jimmy Rogers, Chet Atkins, and the Jim Kweskin Jug Band, and additional kudos to Michael from Kevin for his input), the two siblings share a singular body of work that’s found them spending more than 20 years of working the road and paying their dues, resulting in seven albums -- spanning rock, soul, folk and Americana.
Ages 8+
BLUE NOTE NAPA is located on the 1st floor of the Historic Napa Valley Opera House at 1030 Main St. We are an intimate 144-seat Live Music club and Restaurant, where you can enjoy performances of world renowned and local Bay Area artists alike. We offer a full menu with an elegant wine and cocktail list. Enjoy fantastic main courses, sharing plates, and desserts while you take in a show.
All ticket prices are based on per person.
Dinner is served in all sections.
Your ticket is your dining reservation.
Every Ticket does get a seat in area purchased.
Our Seating Policy is First Come, First Seated, not Reserved.
We recommend arriving before or close to door time
We do not have a standing room only section
Pairs are sat across from each other, not next to each other.
No Refunds. No professional cameras or outside food and drink.
Ear Plugs are available for free at the Box Office
Any special needs or accommodation requests, please call our Box Office.
A portion of all ticket fees goes to the historic preservation of the Opera House.
Tickets are the same price whether purchased in person, over the phone or online
“Sapphire” Booth Seating: Booth seating for parties of 4, 5- 6 persons
Our premier level of seating! Booths are only sold as four, five or six and are not available as singles or pairs. You will be seated when you arrive. (Seating is dark blue color on map)
“Royal Blue” Center Table Seating: Seating in premier center table areas in front of stage: Pairs are seated across from each other. (Seating is light blue on map)
Standard Side Table Seating: Seating in side table areas left and right of center section: Pairs are seated across from each other. (Seating is yellow on map)
Bar Area Ticket Seating (only patrons 21+ or with 21+ may sit at bar):
Great View!! Bar Chairs are tall with backs and comfy padded seats. Purse hooks too. (Bar area is pink on map).
1030 Main Street, Napa CA 94559
Box Office: 707.880.2300 Tues-Sat,2:30-9:30 pm
Event Information
Age Limit
8+
Refund Policy
ALL SALES ARE FINAL. NO REFUNDS UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCE.
Ticket buyers are responsible for confirming Blue Note Napa’s show information prior to purchase and choosing the correct date and time for the show they want to attend. In the case of an event cancellation, not a reschedule, tickets will be fully refunded to the original ticket buyer that purchased directly through TicketWeb, and notifications will be sent out to the buyer’s email used to purchase the ticket(s).
Emails will be sent from either our boxoffice@bluenotenapa.com or from TicketWeb. Please allow 15-30 days for refund to be reflected on your method of payment.
We are obligated to refund to the card on file. If you have a new card or number with the same bank, the bank will transfer the refund to the correct account.
If you have closed the old account and are with a new bank, the old bank will either issue you a check to your address or bounce the money back to our ticketing partner and they will contact you.

Pop Rock
The Bacon Brothers
The Bacon Brothers
Pop Rock
Bound by blood and a mutual love of American roots music, The Bacon Brothers have spent the past quarter-century in a creative whirl, funneling their shared DNA into a genre-bending sound. They call that sound "Forosoco" — a blend of folk, rock, soul, and country influences, delivered by two songwriters who were born to collaborate — and it's taken the siblings across the world, from shows in Japan to performances at American landmarks like Carnegie Hall and the Grand Ole Opry.
The Bacon Brothers turn a new page with their eleventh release, Erato, whose five songs showcase the duo at their diverse peak. It's an EP of dynamic contrasts: quiet moments and big payoffs, organic instrumentation and electronic textures, self-penned songs and high-profile collaborations. For Michael and Kevin Bacon, it's also the continuation of a story that began long ago in Philadelphia, where the two siblings were raised on a soundtrack of 1970s singer/songwriters, Philly soul singers, and classic rock bands.
"We're still exploring the sound we began making 25 years ago; we've just gotten a lot better at it," says Michael, whose success as an Emmy-winning composer mirrors his brother's own accolades as an A-list Hollywood actor. "Music is a life's work. It's a universe of things yet to know. It's exciting to be doing stuff we couldn't have done 20 years ago — to know that we've come so far, yet still have so much left in the tank."
On Erato's title track, the brothers appeal directly to the goddess of romantic poetry for inspiration. "Send me lightning in a bottle, Erato," they sing, their voices stacked together in harmony, their melodies flanked by layers of jangling guitar and folk-pop instrumentation. Unfolding like a summoning of the muse herself, it's one of countless highlights on a record that also makes room for the stripped-back soul of "Dark Chocolate," the atmospheric acoustics of "Karaoke Town," and the summery island-pop of "Let Me Happen."
"We're a songwriting band, and the songs lead the way," Kevin explains. "We're not beholden to a specific sound. We just write the songs and let them point us in the right direction. That's how we've done it since the very beginning."
This time around, The Bacon Brothers' songs point the duo toward unexplored territory. "Let Me Happen" grew out of a piece of unused music Michael had originally composed for a television show two decades earlier. "Michael has another musical life as a composer," Kevin notes, "and turning one of his instrumental compositions into a lyrical song is not something we've ever done before." Likewise, "In Memory (Of When I Cared)" finds the siblings teaming up with songwriting legend Desmond Child for a track that splits the difference between minor-key rock & roll and modern-day pop. "Desmond has a gift for writing magnetic songs that people get trapped inside of," Michael says of Child, a Songwriters Hall of Fame icon whose songwriting credits include Bon Jovi’s "Livin' on a Prayer," Aerosmith's "Crazy," and Joan Jett's "I Hate Myself For Loving You." Working with a co-writer was a rare experience for the Bacons, whose previous 10 albums were almost exclusively written by Kevin and Michael. In Desmond Child, they found more than just a collaborator — they found validation in their strengths as prolific craftsmen, too.
Another unexpected collaborator was Kevin's son, Travis Bacon, who produces the track "Karaoke Town." "I wrote it on acoustic guitar," Kevin remembers, "but I also knew that I could support the song's simplicity with a bigger, darker, more electronic arrangement, which is right in my son's wheelhouse."
With its balance of warm acoustics and digital flourishes, "Karaoke Town" represents a rare collaboration between father and son, proof that the apple doesn't fall far from the family tree.
Erato was recorded in various cities across the country, from producer Joe Nicolo's studio in Pennsylvania to Travis Bacon's studio in Los Angeles. Two songs were finished in Atlanta, their recording sessions sandwiched between shoots for one of Kevin's film projects. From his home studio in New York, Michael added cello and autoharp to several other tracks. Members of The Bacon Brothers' longtime road band appear on the record's title track, while a handful of first-time collaborators contribute to other songs, turning Erato into one of the band's most diverse records yet.
"We're always trying to break out of our specific habits and try something new," Kevin says. "We're two songwriters who have a lot of different influences, and we've learned to embrace that reality. As long as it comes from us, it sounds like us."
"If you're an athlete or a dancer, you usually have to launch a new career by the time you're 40," Michael adds. "We're lucky. We're still moving forward and getting better, and that's where we like to be."
The family that picks together sticks together. With Erato, Michael and Kevin Bacon — brothers, songwriters, frontmen, and multi-instrumentalists — prove their staying power once again.