Sing Along and Sounds - KiDiMu - Kid's Discovery Museum on Bainbridge Island

Source: https://kidimu.org/programs/sing-along-and-sounds

Archived: 2026-04-23 17:39

Sing Along and Sounds - KiDiMu - Kid's Discovery Museum on Bainbridge Island
Come explore and enjoy music with KiDiMu and BIMA! Musical hosts Mike Derzon and Johnny Bregar invite children aged 0-6 years old and their families to explore music, sounds and movement. The 35 minute concert will feature performances by professional musicians and sing-alongs for the family with an interactive element.
First we explore music at KiDiMu, and then we enjoy music at the Bainbridge Island Art Museum located just down the street!
When:
Our next date is:
Saturday May 30th, 2026
Where:
Visit KiDiMu at 9AM before the concert to enjoy hearing from KIC- Kids in Concert; head down to BIMA at 10:15AM to enjoy the Sing Along & Sounds concert which starts at 10:30AM
Tickets:
$15 per person
Infants
FREE
Get Tickets
Tickets include all-day admission to the museum and to the concert!
Sing Along and Sounds is organized by the nonprofit
Bainbridge Community Piano Association
. The Bainbridge Community Piano Association owns and maintains the grand piano at the Waterfront Park Community Center in Bainbridge Island for nonprofit groups and individuals to rent for concerts, recitals, music scholarship competitions, master classes and musical entertainment. For the past 17 years, the association has organized the jazz and classical concert series
First Sundays Concerts
.
We are excited to now offer concerts to young audiences.
*The access rate is per person with proof of participation in the following programs: EBT, CHIP, Provider One or WIC. The rate covers the card holders and all dependent children in the household. We offer the access rate to foster families.
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LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
In pursuit of equitable, creative, and educational experiences, KiDiMu acknowledges that the land on which we gather is within the aboriginal territory of the suq̀ʷabš “People of Clear Salt Water” (Suquamish People) who are expert fisherman, canoe builders, basket weavers, and the island’s original storytellers.
The suq̀ʷabš live in harmony with the lands and waterways along Washington’s Central Salish Sea as they have for thousands of years. Here, the suq̀ʷabš live and protect the land and waters of their ancestors for future generations as promised by the Point Elliott Treaty of 1855.
We honor and respect the resilience of the indigenous community and the land upon which we sit.