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Dan Bern and Bob Hillman


$25 General Admission Doors at 7:30pm. Show from 8:15-10:30pm with one intermission $3 off each ticket when you use the code earlybird16 at checkout. Offer ends November 30th. Promo Codes are not applicable at the door. Codes are not case sensitive, but must be typed as one word. If you must put him in a box, make sure it’s a big box! Undefinable by genre, crossing over and through folk, rock, singer-songwriter, and kids music, Dan Bern is a captivating live performer with a loyal, multi-generational following. He has written thousands of songs, released dozens of albums, and played shows across North America and Europe–from coffee shops to Carnegie Hall, and he most recently opened for The Who and Roger Daltrey. Dan’s songs have appeared in numerous films (“Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story” “Get Him to the Greek” “The Bubble” “Zero Effect”) and TV shows (Amazon Prime’s award-winning kids program “The Stinky & Dirty Show”). A rare, and true renaissance artist, Dan is the author of several books, is a prolific painter, has his own podcast, and internet radio station. During Covid, his online “Hunkered in the Bunker” shows developed their own passionate community of followers. His topical sports songs are regularly featured on “The Tony Kornheiser Show.” http://www.danbern.com Bob Hillman, a San Francisco singer/songwriter, is well into the second act of a career that began in the late 1990s, flourished in the early 00s, survived ten years of “real jobs,” and resumed in 2015. Downtown in the Rain, a mostly acoustic, five-song EP featuring guitarist Greg Leisz, was released on November 17, 2023. His two most recent projects are Bob Hillman & Spooky Ghost, a “noise folk” collaboration with former Bowie guitarist Gerry Leonard, and Inside & Terrified, a COVID-era EP featuring Jay Bellerose on drums and David Levita on nylon-string guitar. His most recent full-length album was released in April 2019. Some of Us Are Free, Some of Us Are Lost attempts capture the visceral spirit of certain folk and folk-rock masterpieces of the 60s and 70s without specifically referring to their sounds or instrumentation. In hindsight, the only real connection to that era is probably David Crosby’s re-tweet about a song called Cocaine Ruins Everything, which mentions him: “Great song...very very good...well done.” http://www.bobhillmanmusic.com/ Recommended If You Like: Arlo Guthrie, Loudon Wainwright III, Bob Dylan

Event Links

Tickets: https://go.evvnt.com/3365192-0

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