Thursday, July 10, 2025
73.0°F

First Central Basin Community Concert is Sept. 20

CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years, 10 months AGO
by CHERYL SCHWEIZERStaff Writer
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | September 3, 2015 1:45 PM

MOSES LAKE — Tickets are on sale for the 2015-16 Central Basin Community Concert Association season, with the first concert scheduled for Sept. 20 at the Wallenstien Theater on the Big Bend Community College campus. This will be the concert association's 62nd season.

The association sponsors four concerts per season, and until this season has been a subscription series where participants bought one ticket for the entire season. But there's a change for 2015-16 — tickets also will be sold for individual concerts, said concert association board member Mary Anderson. Season ticket sales will continue also, and season tickets are available at the Moses Lake Chamber of Commerce office and from concert association members.

Season tickets are $60 for adults, $135 for a family pass, $85 for single parent families and $30 for college students. Tickets to individual shows are $33 for adults, $70 for families, $45 for single parent families and $17.50 for students.

The concerts for 2015-16 are jazz musician Ronnie Kole, Sept. 20; ventriloquist Kevin Johnson, Oct. 29; the group Hits & Grins, playing music from the classic country repertoire, March 2, 2016; and the vocal pop group Bandstand Boogie, April 23.

Kole is the featured performer Sept. 20, with the concert scheduled for 3 p.m. Kole is influenced by the music of New Orleans, one of the birthplaces of jazz and where musicians have been playing new riffs on the form for more than a century.

Concert association members work with a booking agency, Live on Stage, to select the artists, Johnson said. Since the agency also works with other local concert associations, Central Basin season tickets can be used to attend concerts in other communities, she said. It's called reciprocity, and Central Basin has reciprocity agreements with associations in Wenatchee, Tri-Cities and Sunnyside. The reciprocity agreements also extend to the west side, to concert associations in Everett, Centralia, Longview and Shelton. Reciprocity actually extends throughout the Pacific Northwest, she said.

The concert association was formed in the 1950s to bring live performance to the Columbia Basin, and some of the current board members have been involved from the beginning. Anderson said concert association members hope to get more people involved, especially younger people — and especially when it comes time to pick the concerts for next season. The group picks performers based on the amount of money they've raised prior to auditions for the following season, which occur in the fall.

The goal is to select acts that appeal to the widest audience, Anderson said, and getting the widest possible opinion on the possible selections helps with that. People who want to buy a ticket, or who want more information, can contact Anderson, 509-760-6908.

MORE ENTERTAINMENT STORIES

Getting musical
Columbia Basin Herald | Updated 1 year, 10 months ago
Celtic singers, dancers in concert Saturday
Columbia Basin Herald | Updated 8 years, 7 months ago
Sail On to bring sounds of Beach Boys to Moses Lake
Columbia Basin Herald | Updated 1 year, 3 months ago

ARTICLES BY CHERYL SCHWEIZER

July 9, 2025 7:32 p.m.

Two women found dead in Larson area home

MOSES LAKE — The identities of two women found dead July 5 in a house near Moses Lake were released Wednesday. J’Lene Ludtke, 46, and Haley Mathison, 23, were found dead early on the morning of July 5 in a residence in the Larson area north of Moses Lake. Josh Sainsbury, chief deputy of emergency operations, said there’s no evidence of foul play. The cause of death for both women is still undetermined, pending the results of toxicology tests, said Casey Sherwood, a death investigator with the Grant County Coroner’s Office.

Moses Lake considering new shopping cart, sidewalk ordinance
July 9, 2025 6:09 p.m.

Moses Lake considering new shopping cart, sidewalk ordinance

MOSES LAKE — Revisions to Moses Lake’s ordinance for the use of public sidewalks and a new ordinance governing shopping carts taken from businesses will be voted on at the July 22 Moses Lake City Council meeting. Council members reviewed the proposed ordinances during the July 8 meeting, and council member Don Myers suggested a change to the proposed shopping cart ordinance. “I was looking at Federal Way, and they had a (provision) in there that waived the fee for shopping cart retrieval if (the business) had security measures in place for shopping carts,” Myers said.

Othello working to establish city fire department
July 9, 2025 5:30 p.m.

Othello working to establish city fire department

OTHELLO — An analysis of what the city of Othello would need to set up its own fire department is in the early stages of preparation. Greg Prothman, founder of GMP Consultants, which is working with city officials on the project, said the first step will be determining what the city is looking for. “We have a retired fire chief working with the mayor to put together a scope of work,” Prothman said.