Help Us Keep the Blues Alive — One Volunteer at a Time
The Cascade Blues Association is 100% volunteer-powered. Whether you can give a few hours a month or jump in at events, there’s a place for you. Click Volunteer to get started. Opportunities in events, activities and programs include chairs, lead roles and support. Whether you can donate minutes, hours, onsite or remotely, you’ll be joining a community of people who believe this music matters.
The Cascade Blues Association runs on the heart and hustle of volunteers — and we’d love for you to jump in.
We’re on the lookout for blues lovers to do all kinds of cool stuff:
- Write for the website, the Blues Notes, or the Membership Newsletter.
- Are you an Insta, FB or YouTube super user? Hype us up on social media!
- Keep the website looking great! We need a web wrangler! No code? No problem. Just bring your eye for detail.
- Got the gift of the ask? Help us wrangle donated treats and treasures for events like the Member Picnic or items for our fundraising events – items for raffles and silent auctions – these events keep the CBA fun and funded!
- Or pitch something we haven’t even thought of yet
Whether you’ve got ten minutes or ten talents, there’s a way to plug in.
Ready to jump in?
Fill out our short form and tell us what you’re into.
MORE WAYS TO SUPPORT THE BLUES
Support the Blues Community When You Shop at Freddy’s!
If you are a Fred Meyer Customer, you are able to link your Rewards Card to the Cascade Blues Association by following the link below.
Whenever you use your Rewards Card at Freddy’s, you will be helping the CBA to earn a donation from Fred Meyer.
Link your Rewards Card now at www.fredmeyer.com/i/community/community-rewards
“Fred Meyer Community Rewards – Where Shopping & Giving Unite”
If you do not have a Rewards Card, you can sign
up for one at the Customer Service Desk of any Fred Meyer store.

Benefits of Volunteering
Why Volunteer with the Cascade Blues Association?
Blues isn’t just music. It’s community. And community doesn’t run itself.
Whether you’re 18 or 80, a lifelong fan, a gigging musician, a venue owner, or someone who just knows that a good shuffle can fix a bad day — volunteering keeps this whole thing moving.
Here’s what you get back.
1. It’s Good for Your Health (Seriously)
Volunteering lowers stress, boosts mood, and gives you a reason to get out of the house that isn’t scrolling your phone.
When you’re helping at a showcase, staffing a booth at a festival, or pitching in at the Muddy Awards, you’re moving, connecting, laughing, and doing something that matters. That sense of purpose? It’s fuel. It helps you sleep better, think clearer, and feel more grounded.
Live music is good for the soul. Helping make it happen is even better.
2. It Gives You Purpose
Some of us are lucky enough to be retired, while others are still active in the work force. We’re all juggling bills, family, and taking care of daily essential activities. It’s easy to feel like you’re just running in place.
Volunteering changes that. You show up knowing your time is helping preserve and promote blues in the Pacific Northwest. You’re supporting artists. You’re building opportunities. You’re part of something bigger than yourself.
That hits different.
3. It Expands Your Network (Without the Awkward “Networking” Vibe)
In this scene, relationships matter.
Volunteering puts you shoulder-to-shoulder with musicians, venue owners, sound techs, and fellow fans who care as much as you do. You build real connections — not business-card exchanges, but actual relationships.
For musicians, it can lead to gigs and collaborations.
For venue owners and music businesses, it strengthens community ties.
For students and young professionals, it adds real experience and credibility.
And for everyone? It makes the blues world feel closer and stronger.
4. It Builds Real Community
Community isn’t just a word we put on a flyer.
It’s showing up. It’s setting up raffle tables. It’s selling tickets. It’s cheering for someone else’s win. It’s making sure the next event happens.
When you volunteer with CBA, you’re helping create safe, welcoming spaces where people gather around music that tells the truth. That kind of community doesn’t happen by accident — it happens because people step up.
5. You Discover Skills You Didn’t Know You Had (Or Had Forgotten)
You might sign up thinking you’ll just “help out.” Next thing you know, you’re organizing logistics, managing communications, coordinating artists, helping with marketing, or running a membership table like a pro.
Volunteering lets you do things in a supportive environment. You grow or renew confidence. You sharpen new (or rusty) skills. You realize you’re capable of more than you thought.
That confidence spills into the rest of your life.
6. You Get to Share What You’re Already Good At
Are you organized? Great — we need you.
Good with people? Perfect.
Tech-savvy? Even better.
A musician? A writer? A connector? A problem-solver?
Whatever your background — music, business, hospitality, retail, nonprofit, education — there’s a place for your skills here. When you bring your expertise to CBA, you help elevate the entire blues community.
And when the community grows, everyone benefits.
7. It Gives You Perspective
It’s easy to get caught up in our own stress — work pressure, finances, everyday worries.
Then you spend a few hours helping at an event, watching someone light up when they hear live blues for the first time, or seeing a local act get recognized at the Muddy Awards — and something shifts.
You remember why this music matters. You remember why connection matters.
That perspective is grounding. It reminds you what’s real.
8. You Learn Something New
Every event, every meeting, every conversation teaches you something — about music, about the industry, about nonprofit work, about people.
If you’re curious about how events run, how contests like Journey to Memphis operate, how newsletters and promotions come together — volunteering gives you a front-row seat behind the scenes.
9. It Feels Good. Period.
There’s no way around it.
Doing something that helps artists, supports venues, funds programs like Blues in the Schools, and keeps the music alive? It feels good.
Not performative good. Not “look at me” good. Just solid, honest, heart-level good.
And in a world that can feel heavy, that matters.
The Bottom Line
The Cascade Blues Association is volunteer-powered. Always has been.
If you love this music — if you want to see it thrive now and for the next generation — we need you.
You don’t need special credentials.
You don’t need endless free time.
You just need to care.
And if you’re here, reading this? You probably already do.