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From Mentorship to Main Stage: How Blaine Harbor’s Waterfront Festival Builds Community Through Music

Story Center by Story Center
April 24, 2026
Reading Time: 9 mins read
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From Mentorship to Main Stage: How Blaine Harbor’s Waterfront Festival Builds Community Through Music

Violinist Majid Khaliq, faculty member at the Blaine Harbor Music Festival, performs during the festival.

On a summer evening in Blaine, it doesn’t take long to notice something different.

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Music drifts across the harbor, folding into the sound of water and conversation, and people gather without much formality, some with chairs, others just pausing on a walk. What feels like a simple local concert quickly reveals something more.

Over the course of a week, the Blaine Harbor Music Festival turns this small waterfront town into a place where world-class musicians, young artists, and the surrounding community come together, sharing something that feels both easygoing and unexpectedly special.

A Small Town with a Big Sound

For many attendees, the most striking part of the Blaine Harbor Music Festival is its setting. Concerts unfold against the backdrop of the harbor, with music spilling into open-air spaces and drawing locals and visitors alike.

“Blaine is located in what is considered rural Whatcom County, and as many know, it is really beautiful here,” said Glenn Tuski, a longtime volunteer and former board president. “If you live in Blaine, you can walk to the G St. Plaza and hear music with roots from the world over.”

Faculty members Charlie Porter and Nick Biello perform during the Blaine Harbor Music Festival

That accessibility is part of what makes the festival so impactful. While high-caliber performances often require a trip to larger cities like Seattle or Vancouver, the festival brings that same level of artistry directly to Blaine. Audiences can experience jazz, singer-songwriter sets, Brazilian music, and big band performances all within a single week, often for free.

The result is something rare: a world-class music experience embedded in a small-town setting. As Tuski described it, “the world of incredible music comes to Blaine.”

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Building a Cultural Destination

Over the past 25 years, the festival has evolved into more than just a series of concerts. It has become a driver of tourism and a defining feature of Blaine’s rich cultural identity.

“The festival brings all of this to a tiny little bordertown, lighting up tourism and bringing people from all over to experience the concert series that week,” said DeeDee Marshall, board president of the Pacific Arts Association.

Most of the performances are free and set right along the harbor, so families settle in on the grass, others wander the waterfront, and before long, the music just feels woven into the flow of the town. One standout event, the ticketed Big Band night, draws especially strong crowds with its mix of live music, dancing, and a catered dinner.

“It is the night that everyone looks forward to,” Marshall said, noting that the event features renowned musicians and even swing dance instruction to get the crowd involved.

The Heart of the Festival: The Youth Music Camp

​While the public performances bring energy to Blaine’s streets, the true heart of the festival lies in its youth music camp. Running concurrently with the concert series, the camp is where young musicians from across the region spend an immersive week learning, creating, and performing.

“Actually, it is the focus of all that we do, and the evening concert series grows out of that,” Tuski said.

A Blaine Harbor Music Festival ensemble performs at sunset.

Unlike traditional music programs, this camp places students side-by-side with professional musicians. They don’t just observe, they collaborate. Students rehearse in small groups, write original compositions, and perform publicly alongside their mentors.

“This camp is unique, like none other I have seen,” Marshall said. “Students get to work directly with professional musicians who mentor and support them… At the same time, every day they get to see their mentors on stage performing, as well as having the opportunity to sit side-by-side with them and perform on stage.​”

For artistic director Nick Biello, that integration is intentional. The concerts and the camp are designed to reinforce each other.

“There’s this really cool cross-pollination,” he said. “They’re all in the front row…looking up at Greta Matassa [a prominent, local jazz singer and teacher]…and seeing what it looks like in practice when professionals do it.”

Matassa’s extensive 40-year career is chock full of impressive accolades, including 11 recorded albums, eight “best jazz vocalist in the Northwest” wins in Earshot magazine, a 2014 induction into the Seattle Jazz Hall of Fame, and 20 years as one of the most respected educators in the field.

Growth Beyond the Classroom

The impact of the camp extends far beyond musical technique. In just one week, students often experience dramatic personal growth.

“Our artistic director claims we squeeze in a year’s worth of typical student growth in music in one week,” Tuski said.

That growth is fueled by an environment that balances high expectations with genuine support. Students are challenged to improve while being encouraged to take creative risks and express themselves.

“They grow musically, gain confidence, [get] stage presence, and learn how to harness their creativity,” Marshall said.

Biello emphasized that this kind of immersive, in-person experience offers something many young musicians lack​.

“They have teachers [who] are giving them direct attention…constructive feedback…and also compliments,” he said. “Once they see all the possibilities…their eyes kind of light up.”

Just as important are the relationships formed during the week. Students connect with peers who share their passion and often leave with lasting friendships.

“I think the personal relationships…is the predominant growth that I see,” Biello said, noting that even shy students leave with a sense of belonging.

The camp is open to students across the Pacific Northwest, ages 12-20, of all skill levels, creating a unique and memorable experience that participants won’t soon forget.  

Long-time faculty and GRAMMY Award-winning jazz trumpeter and composer Charlie Porter said they create a supportive environment for students of all skill levels, a place where they feel invited, inspired, and challenged. 

“We’re teaching people that sometimes have a lot of knowledge with improvisation and sometimes don’t have any at all,” Porter said. “We find a way, always, to mix people together where everybody is finding that they’re challenged and that they’re doing something that’s making them raise their game.”

A Community Effort

The festival’s success is inseparable from the community that supports it. From local schools and city partnerships to volunteers who handle everything from logistics to meals, the event is powered by collective effort.

“It’s an army of volunteers, and the people of Blaine step up, all year long, to make it happen,” Tuski said.

That commitment is rooted in the festival’s mission to make music education accessible. Scholarships and financial aid ensure that students can participate regardless of their financial situation.

Jovino Santos Neto, a faculty member at the Blaine Harbor Music Festival, performs during the festival.

“We have never turned someone away for not having enough money,” Marshall said. “It is important to our community to include all students with this life-changing experience.”

For Biello, that spirit of giving is part of what makes the festival so special.

“It’s this little hidden gem…with really loving, caring, giving people that want to provide this gift to students,” he said.

An Invitation to Experience It

At its core, the Blaine Harbor Music Festival is about the connection between artists and audiences, mentors and students, and a small town and a much larger creative world.

Whether you come for a single concert or spend the week immersed in it, the experience is definitely one you’ll remember.

Check out the 2026 performance schedule and enroll in the camp on the Blaine Harbor Music Festival website, blaineharbormusicfestival.org.

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.cascadiadaily.com ’

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