I suppose one possible approach is making two price tables instead of two: the first one will store some generic price-related data (like 'note' and 'pricelist_id' link, as these won't change with time), and the second one will store the actual prices (along with, probably, timestamps of their activation - but that's not necessary):
prices (price_id, pricelist_id, note)
price_versions (price_ver_id, price_id, price, started_at, ended_at)
tickets (ticket_id, price_ver_id, name, issued_at)
As you see, you refer to price_versions in your tickets to get the specific price. But you can easily collect the generic price-related information as well (by joining the prices table from there).
This approach lets you construct an additional constraint, checking that issued_at is not before started_at and not after ended_at (it that NOT NULL in the corresponding row). But that's an addition, not a requirement, I suppose.