ON SALE SOON
Friday, Apr 10 2026, 10:00 AM PDT

Belly Up Presents
The Mother Hips
Sat, 3 Oct, 8:00 PM PDT
Doors open
7:00 PM PDT
Belly Up
143 S. Cedros Ave, Solana Beach, CA 92075
ON SALE SOON
Friday, Apr 10 2026, 10:00 AM PDT
Description
The Mother Hips, Saturday October 3, 2026 at Belly Up in Solana Beach, San Diego, CA
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: $25 adv / $28 day of
Reserved Loft Ticket Price: $44
Note: Loft & GA tickets available at box office. Convenience service charges apply for online & phone purchases. Loft Seating Chart / Virtual Venue Tour
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.

Alternative Rock
The Mother Hips
The Mother Hips
Alternative Rock
Hope. Warmth. Companionship. Few things in this world can conjure up such sensations quite like the sight of a glowing lantern in a darkened window.
“The glowing lantern is a universal symbol for sanctuary,” says Mother Hips co-founder Tim Bluhm. “That’s what we wanted this album to be: a warm safe place to get in out of the dark cold night.”
Written and recorded through the heart of the COVID-19 pandemic, Glowing Lantern is indeed a work of great comfort, even as it grapples with the profound anxiety of these troubling and uncertain times. The songs here are weighty, abstract ruminations wrapped in unflagging optimism, bittersweet streams of consciousness delivered with a jaunty confidence in better days to come. Bluhm and fellow co-founder Greg Loiacono produced the album themselves, and the juxtaposition of darkness and light in their stark lyrics and buoyant arrangements reflect a tension familiar to anyone who’s ever struggled to find their footing or make sense of the inexplicable. At the heart of it all, though, is a distinct sense of camaraderie, a feeling of closeness and brotherhood that the band has ironically only come to rediscover as a result of the past year of isolation and lockdowns. Glowing Lantern is as collaborative a record as The Mother Hips have ever made, and it’s impossible not to feel the joy, gratitude, and friendship radiating out of it like a beacon in the night.
Founded nearly 30 years ago while Bluhm and Loiacono were still just students at Chico State, The Mother Hips caught their first big break before they’d even graduated from college, when legendary producer and industry icon Rick Rubin signed the band to his American Recordings label. In the decades to come, the group would go on to release ten critically acclaimed studio albums and cement themselves as architects of a new breed of California rock and soul, one equally informed by the breezy harmonies of the Beach Boys, the funky roots of The Band, and the psychedelic Americana of Buffalo Springfield. Hailed by the San Francisco Chronicle as “one of the Bay Area’s most beloved live outfits,” the group’s headline and festival performances became the stuff of legend and helped earn them dates with everyone from Johnny Cash and Wilco to Lucinda Williams and The Black Crowes. Rolling Stone called the band “divinely inspired,” while Pitchfork praised their “rootsy mix of 70’s rock and power pop," and The New Yorker lauded their ability to “sing it sweet and play it dirty.”