RSS Trio consists of three young Kansas City musicians who add a fresh twist to old-school sounds. The group is a staple of the late-night shift at Green Lady Lounge.
Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes
Original image by Plastic Sax.
*Jon McGraw promoted the Spotlight 2021: Charlie Parker initiative on Joe Dimino’s YouTube channel.
*The Kansas City Star made a belated acknowledgement of the passing of Everette DeVan.
* The American Jazz Museum marks the return of Charlie Parker’s plastic sax with a parade in the Jazz District on Sunday, August 29.
*Tweet of the Week: Mike Mahoney- The Ship, a Kansas City live music venue and bar, joins the list of places in KC requiring proof of vaccination or a recent negative COVID test to enter. May be others soon. @kmbc #MoVaccine
Jon Irabagon, Bohuslän Big Band and Kevin Sun Revamp Bird’s Nest
Original image by Plastic Sax.
Three new albums reflect the manifold breadth of Charlie Parker’s legacy.
Bird with Streams by the New York based Jon Irabagon is a spectacularly irregular solo saxophone album. Irabagon self-recorded Bird with Streams outdoors in South Dakota at the peak of last year’s quarantine. The New York based artist tears into “Now’s the Time” and “Mohawk” with the recklessness of an impassioned beatnik writer. Recommended if you like: Jack Kerouac, Bird, Mostly Other People Do the Killing.
Bohuslän Big Band is a hard-charging Swedish ensemble. Chasin’ the Bird, the storied band’s latest release, consists of foot-tapping arrangements of Parker favorites such as “My Little Suede Shoes” and “Yardbird Suite.” Recommended if you like: The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra, Bird, Benny Carter.
Kevin Sun, a New York based saxophonist, takes a different tack on <3 Bird. Joined by celebrated young cohorts including Adam O’Farrill on a dozen original compositions inspired by a quarantine-era Parker binge and three selections associated with Parker, Sun refreshes the Kansas City icon’s artistic endowment. Recommended if you like: Chris Potter, Bird, Sonny Rollins.
Now's the Time: Ronald McFadden
Ronnie McFadden, best known in Kansas City as half of the dynamic McFadden Brothers, once made an appearance with David Dahoud Williams and Eddie Baker in an advertisement for a bygone cable television company.
Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes
Original image by Plastic Sax.
*Tim Finn checked in with Mark Lowrey for In Kansas City magazine.
*Kansas City magazine paid tribute to the late Everette DeVan.
*Tweet of the Week: Keith Chrostowski- Kansas City businessmen transforming historic Public Works buildings in Jazz District (link)
*From a press release: Spotlight 2021: Charlie Parker celebrates the jazz icon’s 101st birthday with jam sessions and musical tributes, tours, lectures, exhibits, panel discussions, workshops and concerts. The month-long series was developed to honor Parker (also known as “Bird”) and his legacy and impact to jazz in Kansas City and worldwide. The event serves as an opportunity to promote the music of local Kansas City jazz artists who will perform at select events/venues. Spotlight 2021: Charlie Parker is recognized as the largest celebration of its kind in the world. Select events are open to the public. Tickets or reservation are required for other events… For additional information about all events, visit (the) event schedule.
Concert Review: Eddie Moore, Ryan J. Lee and Zach Morrow at Charlotte Street Foundation
Original image by Plastic Sax.
A thrilling performance by a band led by Eddie Moore at the Tank Room five years ago was a factor in his selection as the 2016 Plastic Sax Person of the Year. The keyboardist’s appearance with Ryan J. Lee (keyboards/electronics) and Zach Morrow (drums) at Charlotte Street Foundation on Thursday, July 22, was no less triumphant. Bolstered by excellent sound, captivating video projections and a capacity audience of about 100 spirited admirers, Moore’s trio offered a vital fusion of jazz, neo-soul and hip-hop. Renderings of “Misunderstood” and “Single Double”, the new songs that opened and closed the hour-long set, were bigger and bolder than the recorded versions. Time will tell if the memorable concert was merely a satisfying summation of Moore’s career to date or the cornerstone of a new era for Kansas City’s music scene.
Now's the Time: Alex Bugnon
The Swiss keyboardist Alex Bugnon is the most prominent jazz component of the Missouri Wine & Jazz Festival at Penn Valley Park on Saturday, July 31. Samantha Fish, an incendiary blues-rock artist originally from Kansas City, headlines the event.
Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes
Original image by Plastic Sax.
*A review in UK Vibe suggests Florian Arbenz’s Conversation #1, an album featuring Kansas City’s Hermon Mehari, is “exciting and interesting.”
*Tweet of the Week: Quinton Lucas- I have stuck with CDC guidance throughout the pandemic and today is no different. I will return Kansas City to a mask mandate indoors based upon national and regional health guidance and discussion with other Kansas City leaders. I will provide further details in the morning.
Concert Review: Kyle Hutchins, Aaron Osborne, Seth Davis and Evan Verploegh at Charlotte Street Foundation
Original image by Plastic Sax.
Plastic Sax’s rave review of Second Nature Ensemble’s June performance at Westport Coffee House seems subdued compared to another observer’s analysis of the event that references Friedrich Nietzsche and Jean-Paul Sartre. As the cliché has it, hold my beer.
A concert including two of the same musicians- Seth Davis (electronics and guitar) and Evan Verploegh (drums)- at Charlotte Street Foundation on July 14 inspires additional purple prose. Abetted by Kyle Hutchins (saxophones) and Aaron Osborne (bass), Davis and Verploegh played two sets of sinister improvised music for about 20 attentive listeners.
The opening portion of the first set evoked a whale in distress before the liquid atmosphere gave way to deep space. A glitchy segment sounded as if a denizen of a distant planet was monitoring a decades-old radio broadcast of a Duke Ellington Orchestra concert. The final salvo could have been the soundtrack for a disaster film about an accident at a gene-editing laboratory.
The second set was a two-part guitar-based freakout. A jam in the vein of Mary Halvorson and Susan Alcorn gradually morphed into (Robert) frippery. The veracity of these flights of fancy can be checked against video documentation of the first and second sets. Cross-referencing texts by Nietzsche and Sartre is optional.
Now's the Time: The James Ward Band
In addition to participating in an auspicious concert last month, the funk, R&B and jazz luminary Bill Summers spent time jamming with locally based musicians while in Kansas City. Summers revisits the Herbie Hancock and Bernie Maupin composition “Butterfly” in a groovy collaboration with The James Ward Band. (Tip via Plastic Sax reader JW.)
Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes
Original image by Plastic Sax.
*CBS Sunday Morning checked in with Marilyn Maye.
*Chris Burnett pays tribute to the late Bob Cowan.
*Joe Dimino interviewed musicians affiliated with the late Everette DeVan, shared snippets of a show at Lonnie’s Reno Club, and documented an event memorializing DeVan.
*The Pitch admires the efforts of the Kansas City Jazz Academy.
*The Fisher Center in New York presents a concert titled Genius Mother Mary: A Sonic Retrospective of Mary Lou Williams on July 29.
*Tweet of the Week: Barrio KC- Get ready for a good time because we’ve got the Max Groove Duo from 7-10pm at Red Bridge! #tequilaandtunes
*Announced four months ago, but only recently uncovered by Plastic Sax: The UMKC (Conservatory) is pleased to announce that Carl Allen will join our faculty Fall 2021 as the newly appointed William D. and Mary Grant/Endowed Professor of Jazz Studies. Mr. Allen is one of the most celebrated jazz artists of his generation, having performed and taught all over the world and recorded with legendary jazz greats Freddie Hubbard, Jackie McLean, Michael Brecker, Sammy Davis Jr., Branford Marsalis, Lena Horne, Herbie Hancock, Benny Golson, Christian McBride and many others.
Concert Review: Trinity Jazz Ensemble at Rolling Hills Presbyterian Church
Original image of stained glass at Rolling Hills Presbyterian Church by Plastic Sax.
An unassuming pianist roared with startling ferocity at Rolling Hills Presbyterian Church on Thursday, July 1. The Kansas City mainstay Michael Pagán lit up a recital of sacred-themed jazz. An iteration of the longstanding Trinity Jazz Ensemble- vocalist (Brother) John Anderson, trumpeter Mike Parkinson, saxophonist Doug Talley, pianist Pagán, bassist Tim Brewer and drummer Sam Platt- performed an inspired array of original material and classic compositions.
Pagán disrupted the otherwise pleasingly polite concert with a memorable outburst. For three consecutive selections in the middle of the performance, Pagán played like one of the world’s most celebrated pianists. Free of ostentation, the informal showcase began with “Deep In My Soul.” Pagán’s original is one of the strongest compositions to emerge from Kansas City in recent years. Parkinson exclaimed “that’s deep!” at the conclusion of the song.
A fiery incarnation of Wynton Kelly seemed to overtake Pagán during a reading of Hank Mobley’s “A Baptist Beat.” It was followed by Pagán’s solo rendition of Keith Jarrett’s “Silence.” He matched the meditative brilliance of the composer. While his contributions continued to impress, Pagán assumed a less conspicuous role for the remainder of the concert. Yet his unexpected salvo served as a valuable reminder that splashy superheroes lurk inside many of the Clark Kents in Kansas City’s jazz community.
Now’s the Time: Tyrone Clark
A nifty little video created by an artist reflects the late-night atmosphere at Green Lady Lounge. Tyrone Clark, the bassist featured in the visual, leads a band at the venue twice a week.
Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes
Original image by Plastic Sax.
*The Pitch notes the passing of Everette DeVan.
*Tweet of the Week: Pat Metheny- Pat Metheny Announces Side-Eye NYC (V1.IV); Due Out September 10th; An Exciting New Release Featuring The 20-Time Grammy Winner With New Young Stars. Extensive World Tour Dates Unveiled. Pre-Order Now: (link)
Book Review: Carolyn Glenn Brewer- Beneath Missouri Skies: Pat Metheny in Kansas City 1964-1972
Original image by Plastic Sax.
Pat Metheny’s 1976 debut album Bright Size Life is so magical that listeners would be forgiven for thinking the music materialized out of nowhere. Carolyn Glenn Brewer’s illuminating new study Beneath Missouri Skies: Pat Metheny in Kansas City 1964-1972 provides a detailed accounting of the origins of the Lee’s Summit native’s sound.
Brewer, the author of the excellent Changing the Tune: The Kansas City Women’s Jazz Festival, 1978-1985, exhaustively traces Metheny’s formative musical endeavors. Her story opens with The Beatles’ appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show and closes during the summer following Metheny’s graduation from high school.
Not only is Brewer a contemporary of Metheny, she was a fellow musician and sister of one of Metheny’s primary teen collaborators. She bolsters her eyewitness impressions of many of the key events of Beneath Missouri Skies with extensive research and interviews.
Beneath Missouri Skies will delight Metheny enthusiasts eager to learn even the most minute details of his musical development, but it’s even more crucial as a history of a previously underdocumented era of jazz in Kansas City. The scarcity of recordings and videos of the scene Brewer describes makes her work necessary.
The colorful antics of Gary Sivils, the business acumen of Warren Durrett and the influential theories of John Elliott loom large. Musicians such as Herman Bell, Rod Fleeman, Russ Long, Bettye Miller, Dave Scott and Paul Smith also play key roles in Beneath Missouri Skies. While she clearly has great personal and professional affection for her subjects, Brewer doesn’t romanticize the setting.
She recounts the demeaning musical compromises musicians were obligated to make at the majority of gigs in Kansas City. Metheny and his colleagues were regularly compelled to cover shopworn pop hits like “Proud Mary.” The inference that these artistic constraints would contribute to Metheny’s crossover success is among the multitude of insights provided by the invaluable Beneath Missouri Skies.
Now’s the Time: Arny Young
The intrepid Kansas City drummer Arny Young is featured in an entertaining KCPT video profile that first aired in 2017.
Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes
Original image by Plastic Sax.
*Everette DeVan, Kansas City’s foremost jazz organist for decades, has died.
*Pat Metheny says the quiet part out loud in an interview with In Kansas City magazine. Asked why Kansas City is no longer included in his tour itineraries (Plastic Sax lamented the issue in 2018), Metheny cites the town’s limited audience for improvised music. He says the “intense listening… that is found all over Europe, New York, LA, those kinds of places, for this kind of music has always been elusive for Kansas City musicians.”
*Tweet of the Week: Duane A Daughtery- I am heartbroken to learn of the passing of my friend and KC jazz legend, Everette DeVan. A man of serious artistic and personal integrity. Go in grace. You are already missed.
Concert Review: Second Nature Ensemble at Westport Coffee House
Original image by Plastic Sax.
Second Nature Ensemble’s revelatory performance at Westport Coffee House on Sunday, June 27, provided a glimpse into a possible future of a viable form of jazz in Kansas City and acted as a reminder of the significance of a couple of long-standing components of the scene. Four takeaways follow.
1. Plugged in
Second Nature Ensemble is hardly the first band to fuse electronic-generated sounds with analog avant-garde improvisations, but no locally based ensemble executes the concept with more cultivated acumen. The music created by Michael Eaton (tenor saxophone), Dwight Frizzell (EWI), Seth Davis (electronics and guitar), Ben Tervort (acoustic and electric bass) and Evan Verploegh (drums) was worthy of comparison to the work of innovative stalwarts like Evan Parker. The distinctive talent of each of the five men prevents the group from being mere copycats. Here’s a brief sample.
2. The Reverend
A founding member of BCR, Frizzell is the grand doyen of left-of-center improvised music in Kansas City. Yet I hadn’t heard Frizzell perform in an improvisational context in years. Wielding an electronic wind instrument with enthusiastic abandon, Frizzell displayed more boyish energy than his younger collaborators. I almost expected him to achieve levitation at any moment.
3. Beatdown
Verploegh, a recent Kansas City transplant, is an exciting addition to the local scene. Intense and unpredictable, he often resembled an angry version of the cheerful Kansas City drummer Brian Steever.
4. Caffeinated
The approximately 25 people who passed through the doors during the two-hour performance were silent. Their reverent appreciation and the superlative amplification resulted in the most pristine sound I’ve encountered at a post-quarantine concert. The refreshed layout of the theater below Westport Coffee House and adjacent to Green Room Burgers & Beer indicates the space is still the most advantageous small listening room in Kansas City.
Now's the Time: Blair Bryant
The Kansas City bassist and bandleader Blair Bryant performs at an event in the Jazz District presented by the American Jazz Walk of Fame on Saturday, July 3. The organization’s new inductees are the late Al Jarreau and the Mutual Musicians Foundation.
Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes
Original image by Plastic Sax.
*Kansas City magazine includes Black Dolphin, Green Lady Lounge and Mutual Musicians foundation in a clickbait listing of the city’s best bars.
*St. Louis Jazz Notes runs down Jazz St. Louis’ recently announced 2021-22 season.
*The Tulsa World published a lengthy examination of the depressing decline of the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame, an institution beset with “financial mismanagement and scandal.”
*Tweet of the Week: American Jazz Walk of Fame- We're back! Join us in one week.July 3rd, It's the annual American Jazz Walk of Fame. Music and Walk of Fame induction, Plus, this year it wraps with the big fireworks display! All on 18th & Vine.