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Now’s the Time: Bram and Lucy Wijnands with the Kansas City Jazz Orchestra

February 27, 2025 William Brownlee

The Folly Theater hosts the inspired pairing of the father-daughter tandem of Bram and Lucy Wijnands with The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra on Saturday, March 1. The Wijnands perform at the London cabaret Crazy Coqs in the embedded video.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra, Bram Wijnands, Lucy Wijnands, Folly Theater

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

February 26, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*Leon Brady, one of Kansas City’s most eminent jazz educators for decades, has died.

*The Pitch published a profile of Matt Hopper.

*Carl Allen was honored by the Jazz Education Network.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Leon Brady, Matt Hopper, Carl Allen

Album Review: Brennan Connors, Seth Andrew Davis, Jakob Heinemann and Evan Verploegh- Alchemy of Stone and Star

February 23, 2025 William Brownlee

“That’s Not Art, That’s Not Music”, the title of Lonnie Holley’s rancorous new single, is a phrase I’ve encountered while sharing my enthusiasm for sounds made by members of Kansas City’s The Extemporaneous Music and Arts Society.

Alchemy of Stone and Star, a live 2023 recording released four months ago, won’t win over listeners for whom free jazz is anathema. Yet the freewheeling collaboration of guitarist Seth Andrew Davis and drummer Evan Verploegh of Kansas City with the northern Midwest saxophonist Brennan Connors and bassist Jakob Heinemann is riveting.

Inventive interactions between Davis and Verploegh in the 19-minute “Decoding the Maps” achieve transcendence. Connors’ maturity is a revelation while Heinemann brings cohesiveness to the exceptionally artful music.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Seth Davis, Evan Verploegh, Extemporaneous Music Society

Now’s the Time: säje

February 20, 2025 William Brownlee

säje makes its Folly Jazz Series debut on Friday, February 28. The vocal quartet consists of Erin Bentlage, Sara Gazarek, Johnaye Kendrick and Amanda Taylor. The song performed in the embedded video won a Grammy Award in the category of “Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals” earlier this month.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Folly Theater

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

February 19, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*The Brian Baggett Trio is featured on the latest episode of Kansas Public Radio’s Live at Green Lady Lounge program.

*Joe Dimino shared footage of performances by Deborah Brown and Wire Town.

*The Pitch checked in with Eddie Moore.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Brian Baggett, Green Lady Lounge, Deborah Brown, Wire Town, Eddie Moore

Album Review: John Stein: Next Gen: Jazz for my Grandchildren

February 16, 2025 William Brownlee

An interpretation of Thelonious Monk’s “Mysterioso” scrubbed of shadowy ambiguities is emblematic of the tone of guitarist ​​John Stein’s nineteenth album. Clean and precise, Next Gen: Jazz for my Grandchildren sounds like the product of a music teacher. Stein retired from the Berklee College of Music in 2020 after spending 36 years as a professor at the Boston institution. Yet Next Gen isn’t antiseptic. Along with bassist Ed Lucie and drummer Mike Connors, the Kansas City native applies polite swing to standards and original compositions dedicated to his grandchildren. It’s only natural that grandfatherly jazz should be sweet, gentle and suffused with love.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, John Stein

Now’s the Time: Eddie Moore

February 13, 2025 William Brownlee

The high-profile Kansas City keyboardist Eddie Moore next performs at the Majestic on Saturday, February 15.

Tags Kansas City, jazz

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

February 12, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*The most recent episode of the Kansas Public Radio program Live at Green Lady Lounge features Jeff Shirley’s trio.

*Joe Dimino interviewed David Watson.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Jeff Shirley, David Watson

Album Review: Henry Scamurra- Urban Forum

February 9, 2025 William Brownlee

Diverse’s 2009 debut album is a significant landmark in Kansas City jazz history. In addition to heralding the arrival of a vital new youth movement, the self-titled album was the first major statement by Hermon Mehari, the trumpeter who has since achieved international acclaim.

It’s entirely appropriate that Mehari contributes to two tracks on Henry Scamurra’s first album Urban Forum. The new recording announces a fresh round of auspicious young Kansas City based jazz musicians.

The outstanding saxophonist Scamurra is joined by vibraphonist Isaiah Petrie, bassist Spencer Reeve and drummer Jade Harvey on eight selections that connect to Kansas City jazz tradition by way of the recent innovations of Mehari, Logan Richardson and Peter Schlamb.

“Top of My Head” is among the new tracks that may become Kansas City standards. Based on the artistic promise displayed on Urban Forum, the album is likely to become at least as momentous as the arrival of Diverse.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Henry Scamurra, Hermon Mehari, Isaiah Petrie, Spencer Reeve, Jade Harvey

Now’s the Time: Deborah Brown

February 7, 2025 William Brownlee

Deborah Brown tops the bill at the Winterlude Jazz Festival at Johnson County Community College on Saturday, February 15. The Kansas City vocalist also performs with pianist George Colligan at the Blue Room on Friday, February 14, and at Upcycle Piano Craft on Sunday, February 16.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Deborah Brown, Jazz Winterlude

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

February 5, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*Michael Pagán’s Paganova performed on Kansas Public Radio’s Jazz in the Night program.

*Snippets of a David Watson gig were shared by Joe Dimino.

*Joel Harrison marvels at the visionary creativity of Pat Metheny in an appreciative essay.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Michael Pagán, David Watson, Pat Metheny

Album Review: Wire Town- Riffin’ on Grand

February 2, 2025 William Brownlee

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. The folksy expression applies to Wire Town’s artful new album Riffin’ on Grand. As with the band’s 2024 debut recording, Wire Town’s new release documents four of Kansas City’s finest artists honoring the town’s jazz tradition with seventy minutes of exquisite musicianship and life-affirming spirit.

Riffin’ on Grand again features guitarists Danny Embrey and Rod Fleeman along with bassist Gerald Spaits. Brian Steever ably replaces Todd Strait on drums on the set recorded at Green Lady Lounge eight months ago. The quartet has nothing to prove and no axes to grind. The four men strike an ideal balance of reserved tastefulness and articulate individual statements.

Embrey and Fleeman display the sort of mindmeld that can only be attained by close friends through decades of collaboration. Sublimating their egos, the guitarists and their band mates craft sonic landscapes as modestly majestic as the most dignified shan shui painting.

Green Lady Lounge hosts the album release show for Riffin’ on Grand at 6 p.m. Sunday, February 16.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Green Lady Lounge, Wire Town, Danny Embrey, Rod Fleeman, Gerald Spaits, Brian Steever

Now’s the Time: Moon City Big Band

January 30, 2025 William Brownlee

Moon City Big Band has been featured at Homer's Coffee House for years. The ensemble returns to the downtown Overland Park establishment on Saturday, February 1.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Moon City Big Band, Homer's Coffee House

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

January 29, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*Bukeka Blakemore and Anita Dixon-Brown are among the Creative City KC representatives pitching World Cup-inspired music initiatives in television news reports here and here.

*Joe Dimino interviewed Brian Steever.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Bukeka Blakemore, Anita Dixon, Brian Steever

Album Review: Eboni Fondren with the Laurent Marode Orchestra- An American in Paris

January 26, 2025 William Brownlee

It’s been almost impossible for mainstream jazz vocalists to capture even modest glimmers of attention since Samara Joy hit the scene. A generational talent with a voluptuous voice, Joy makes all other comers suffer by comparison. Even so, Kansas City’s Eboni Fondren equals Joy in at least one way: she possesses a similar amount of charisma. Fondren’s ebullient personality shines on An American in Paris. Accompanied by a European jazz band and a string quartet on a concise set of seven standards, Fondren is wonderfully elegant. The refined approach is mostly absent on her rough-and-tumble debut album The Journey. An American in Paris may not be Joy-ful, but it’s very good nevertheless.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Eboni Fondren

Now’s the Time: Marbin

January 26, 2025 William Brownlee

The members of Marbin are pranksters, online pedagogues and road warriors. The Chicago based band touches down at the Ship on Saturday, February 1.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, The Ship

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

January 22, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*The new episode of Kansas Public Radio’s Live at Green Lady Lounge program features the Rod Fleeman Trio.

*A University of Kansas student’s report about jazz in Kansas City cites Green Lady Lounge as “the city’s highest-paying gig for musicians.”

*Joe Dimino interviewed Carl Allen.

*Kemet Coleman is lobbying for additional government investment in Kansas City’s music scene.

*An academic gives a lecture about Kansas City’s jazz legacy at UCLA on January 22.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Green Lady Lounge, Carl Allen

Kansas City Cachet

January 19, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

The most compelling jazz has always been rebellious, adventurous and innovative. Yet a debilitating perception pervasive in Kansas City and beyond posits jazz as a moldering art form best applied as relaxing background music.

The refutation of this notion is among the reasons I treat the annual publication of the Francis Davis Jazz Poll and the El Intruso’s Periodistas Internacionales jazz poll as a holiday. Sifting through the data published January 10 is a powerful affirmation of the artistic vitality of jazz.

I’m honored to be consulted in the enterprises. Sunny Five’s caustic Candid is my selection for the top album in both polls. The attack of the avant-garde all-stars aligns with my ongoing affinity for punk rock. The improvisatory onslaught was all too necessary in 2024.

The polls can be used as barometers of Kansas City’s current stature in the jazz universe. The 19th Annual Francis Davis Jazz Poll focuses on recordings. Six of the approximately 600 albums released in 2024 receiving votes are connected to the Kansas City area.

Tell the Birds I Said Hello: The Music of Herbie Nichols, an exquisite trio recording featuring Kansas City guitarist Steve Cardenas, came in at #67. Pat Metheny’s solo guitar statement Moodial finished at #70. Charles McPherson’s excellent Reverence is ranked #107.

In a separate vocal category, Betty Bryant’s delightful Lotta Livin’ is graded at #16. Although attention was lavished on it locally, the latest archival Charlie Parker release Bird in Kansas City placed at a humble #24 in the reissue division. I gave it a nod on my ballot.

Where the Francis Davis poll is open to critics favoring both conventional and anarchic styles, El Intruso’s 17th Annual International Critics Poll 2024 is intended to reward “creative music, jazz and beyond, free improvisation, art-rock, and experimental music.”

Albums are just one of many classifications at stake in El Intruso’s referendum. No Kansas City musicians were among the finalists in any section, but Seth Andrew Davis, Marvin Gruenbaum, Pat Metheny, Aryana Nemati and Peter Schlamb were recognized.

Amusingly, El Intruso puts faces to the names of voters. Anyone who has imagined what a typical jazz critic looks like will have their suspicions confirmed as they scroll through the individual selections of the electors. A goofy photo antithetical to the spirit of rebellion accompanies the ballot of the man responsible for Plastic Sax.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Steve Cardenas, Pat Metheny, Charles McPherson, Betty Bryant, Charlie Parker, Seth Davis, Marvin Gruenbaum, Aryana Nemati, Peter Schlamb

Now’s the Time: The Yellowjackets

January 16, 2025 William Brownlee

Smooth jazz practitioners The Yellowjackets may hold the record for most appearances in the Folly Jazz Series. The quartet returns to Kansas City on Saturday, January 25. The current lineup consists of Russell Ferrante, Bob Mintzer, Dane Anderson and Will Kennedy. The embedded video captures a portion of a 1981 performance with a young Ferrante on keyboards.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Folly Theater

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

January 15, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*Jacob Schwartzberg is featured in The Kansas City Jewish Chronicle.

*Rob Scheps created a fundraiser connected to a recording session in Kansas City.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Jacob Schwartzberg, Rob Scheps
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