It is indeed possible to achieve this effect with CSS only, but the CSS is mind-bending:
.container {
background-color: rgba(168,214,255,1);
padding: 20px;
}
.tab {
height: 50px;
background-color: #4790CE;
margin-bottom: 10px;
border-radius: 20px;
position: relative;
}
.tab.active {
background-color: #63B6FF;
border-radius: 20px 0 0 20px;
box-shadow: 0 0 15px #3680BD;
}
.tab .shadow {
position: absolute;
top: -10px;
left: 50px;
right: -20px;
bottom: -10px;
border-radius: 20px;
background-color: transparent;
-webkit-border-image: -webkit-gradient(linear, left top, right top, color-stop(10%,rgba(168,214,255,0)), color-stop(80%,rgba(168,214,255,1))) 50 50 stretch;
border-width: 10px 20px 10px 0;
}
You basically use border-image to mask the dropshadow. You would be able to achieve this without extra markup through the :after pseudo-selector, but :after doesn't play nice with animation.

View the demo on jsfiddle (Webkit only, but you can adapt it easily to FF. IE9 would be out of luck, unfortunately).