WEEKEND: Sequim City Band kicks off its 25th season Sunday at the James Center for the Performing Arts at Carrie Blake Park

SEQUIM — The Sequim City Band will celebrate the opening of its 25th season with a performance at 3 p.m. Sunday.

The free concert will be at the James Center for the Performing Arts at Carrie Blake Park, 202 N Blake Ave.

The band’s director is Tyler Benedict, a low-brass musician, who has held the baton since 2013.

The concert will feature “Sunny Sequim March” and “Lavender Rag,” which were composed by the founding director, Chuck Swisher, to honor the Sequim-Dungeness Valley.

Also to be performed are “Don’t Cry for Me, Argentina,” “Themes Like Old Times,” “I Want a Girl,” “Peg of My Heart, “By the Light of the Silvery Moon” and selections from “The Wizard of Oz.”

The band also is preparing a “soulful salute” as an encore.

Subsequent performances by the band — part of the Concerts at the James series — will be June 12, July 4, Aug. 9 and Sept. 13.

All performances begin at 3 p.m. and are free to the public.

The James Center is located at 563 N. Rhodefer Road, with parking available at Rhodefer Road to the east or Blake Road to the west.

The outdoor venue has limited seating, so organizers encourage attendees to bring chairs or blankets as well as refreshments.

“As the band opens its 25th season of outdoor concerts . . . about 60 musicians will fill the risers on the stage of the James Center,” said Vicky Blakesley, the band’s publicity director.

“The audience can enjoy the concert from blankets and lawn chairs, some with attached umbrellas to protect from the late afternoon sun, casually placed on the large grassy area in front of the stage.”

The grassy areas offer plenty of room for children to run and play prior to the concert, Blakesley said.

Band history

In the early 1990s, Swisher — a retired music teacher and director from Pullman — recruited fellow musicians and formed a concert band to play during the sunny summer months in Sequim, Blakesley said.

That original group consisted of 14 adult volunteers who embarked on regular monthly concerts, each with new programs.

The first program was in April 1992, with the band assembled under the cover of the picnic shelter in Carrie Blake Park.

As the band grew from those dozen-or-so pioneer musicians, the inspiration for a permanent outdoor performance venue came from band members and some loyal audience members, Blakesley said.

In 2003, interested citizens and band members joined forces and raised monies to build an outdoor performance stage and small rehearsal hall with storage space.

The groundbreaking was in June 2004 and the building was completed by early 2005.

The James Center is named for the majority donor, Rex James Bates, who died in March 2016.

For more information about the Sequim City Band and its performances, visit www.sequimcityband.org.

________

Reporter Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 56650, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Serve Washington presented service award

Serve Washington presented its Washington State Volunteer Service Award to… Continue reading

Mary Kelsoe of the Port Angeles Garden Club thins a cluster of azaleas as a tulip sprouts nearby in one of the decorative planters on Wednesday along the esplanade in the 100 block of West Railroad Avenue on the Port Angeles waterfront. Garden club members have traditionally maintained a pair of planters along the Esplanade as Billie Loos’s Garden, named for a longtime club member. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
In full bloom

Mary Kelsoe of the Port Angeles Garden Club thins a cluster of… Continue reading

Housing depends on many factors

Land use, infrastructure part of state toolbox

Sarge’s Place in Forks serves as a homeless shelter for veterans and is run by the nonprofit, a secondhand store and Clallam County homelessness grants and donations. (Sarge’s Veteran Support)
Fundraiser set to benefit Sarge’s Veteran Support

Minsky Place for elderly or disabled veterans set to open this spring

Jefferson commissioners to meet with coordinating committee

The Jefferson County commissioners will meet with the county… Continue reading

John Southard.
Sequim promotes Southard to deputy chief

Sequim Police Sergeant John Southard has been promoted to deputy… Continue reading

Back row, from left to right, are Chris Moore, Colleen O’Brien, Jade Rollins, Kate Strean, Elijah Avery, Cory Morgan, Aiden Albers and Tim Manly. Front row, from left to right, are Ken Brotherton and Tammy Ridgway.
Eight graduate to become emergency medical technicians

The Jefferson County Emergency Medical Services Council has announced… Continue reading

Driver airlifted to Seattle hospital after Port Angeles wreck

A woman was airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in… Continue reading

Becca Paul, a paraeducator at Jefferson Elementary in Port Angeles, helps introduce a new book for third-graders, from left, Margret Trowbridge, Taezia Hanan and Skylyn King, to practice reading in the Literacy Lab. The book is entitled “The Girl With A Vision.” (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
After two-year deal, PA paraeducators back to work

Union, school district agree to mediated contract with baseline increases

Police reform efforts stalled

Law enforcement sees rollback on restrictions

Pictured, from left, are Priya Jayadev, Lisa O’Keefe, Lisa Palermo, Lynn Hawkins and Astrid Raffinpeyloz.
Yacht club makes hospice donation

The Sequim Bay Yacht Club recently donated $25,864 to Volunteer Hospice of… Continue reading