Revel In The Park 2026 Brings Kitchen Dwellers to Winter Park, CO

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Published on February 10, 2026

Revel In The Park 2026 Brings Kitchen Dwellers to Winter Park, CO

Revel In The Park 2026 Brings Kitchen Dwellers to Winter Park, CO

Revel In The Park returns to the scenic Rendezvous Event Center in Winter Park, Colorado on Friday and Saturday, July 24–25, 2026, bringing another weekend of high-altitude music, mountain air, and community celebration to Grand County. Set against the Fraser Valley backdrop, the two-day event once again blends adventurous sounds with the laid-back spirit that has made Revel In The Park a midsummer favorite.

This year’s lineup is led by Kitchen Dwellers, joined by Shadowgrass, Dogs In A Pile, The Fretliners, Madeline Hawthorne, and Bonfire Dub, promising a weekend that spans psychedelic bluegrass, jam-driven explorations, roots storytelling, and late-night bass vibrations.

Revel In The Park 2026
Friday, July 24 + Saturday, July 25, 2026
Rendezvous Event Center
78821 US-40, Winter Park, CO 80482

Tickets go on sale Friday, February 13 at 10:00 a.m. MT.

Friday tickets: https://www.axs.com/events/1316464/kitchen-dwellers-tickets
Saturday tickets: https://www.axs.com/events/1324706/kitchen-dwellers-tickets

KITCHEN DWELLERS
In Dante’s Inferno, the author grapples with sin, its various manifestations, and its consequences. This time ultimately traces a trajectory of self-realization, acceptance, and accountability. Kitchen Dwellers embark on a similar odyssey over the course of their fourth full-length offering, Seven Devils. The Montana quartet—Shawn Swain (mandolin), Torrin Daniels (banjo), Joe Funk (upright bass), and Max Davies (acoustic guitar)—thread together an immersive and inimitable conceptual arc inspired by Dante’s Inferno and set to a soundtrack of folk-infused bluegrass spiked with psychedelic vision and rock energy.

Continuing their own journey as brothers, they deliver their most ambitious and anthemic body of work yet.

“These tunes deal with the human experience, and Torrin initially drew a parallel between the music and Dante,” Max states. “We explored the connection by correlating each song with a sin. Some of these connections are only apparent if you dive deep into the lyrics. Our goal is to essentially take the listener through our own interpretation of the Inferno story.”

“We didn’t go into the studio with the intent of making a concept album,” recalls Torrin. “I was driving around listening to everything, and I noticed these parallels. To dive deeper, we’re discussing topics like mental health, the human condition, and what we go through on the road. In life and music, everything is recurring and universal. I was reading Dante at the time, and it naturally fit.”

Thus far, Kitchen Dwellers have engaged and enraptured listeners with albums such as Ghost In The Bottle (2017), Muir Maid (2019), Live from the Wilma (2021), and Wise River (2022). Of the latter, Holler. praised how “Kitchen Dwellers have preserved their sense of youthful experimentation,” while Relix noted that “the songs on the new record build on this range, while also reflecting on the group’s Bozeman, Montana home.”

Between tallying millions of streams, the band has ignited hallowed venues such as Red Rocks Amphitheatre and graced the bills of Telluride Bluegrass, Northwest String Summit, WinterWonderGrass, and beyond.

In order to bring Seven Devils to life, the musicians opted to work with producer Glenn Brown, marking their first collaboration together and the band’s first time recording in Michigan.

“The studio itself definitely impacted the vibe,” Torrin notes. “It’s a tiny workspace, but it’s full of old recording equipment with legendary stories attached to it. For almost the entire time, we were forced to congregate in this room together. The process was ever-evolving, because ideas kept flowing.”

In the end, Kitchen Dwellers may just leave you changed.

“The record is a trip inward within the self,” Torrin concludes. “It tackles a lot of things in the world people try not to think about. The reality is we’re only truly happy when happiness comes from within. That’s the message.”

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