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Concert Review: Bram and Lucy Wijnands with The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra at the Folly Theater

March 9, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

Lucy Wijnands introduced a rendition of “I’m Old Fashioned” with disarming candor at the Folly Theater on Saturday, March 1. She admitted “we thought this would be appropriate for tonight.” The presentation of period music would have been excruciatingly corny in lesser hands. Instead, the evening of retro-jazz was an artistic triumph.

The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra featured keyboardist Bram Wijnands and his daughter Lucy in a generous acknowledgement of an area mainstay that demonstrates the organization’s ongoing commitment to the Kansas City community. The concert was a capstone in Bram’s career. For the New York based Lucy, the night was a memorable coming out party.

Bram Wijnands, a noted stride piano specialist prone to madcap antics, arranged all the material aside from the opening selections of the first and second sets. The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra may never have sounded better than on Wijnands’ chart for the Count Basie Orchestra’s 1937 classic “Topsy”.

Turns in the spotlight by trumpeter Trent Austin and saxophonist Brad Gregory stood out amid dozens of impeccable solos. Wijnands’ statements on piano and celesta were similarly thrilling. Kansas City audiences have come to expect excellence from Wijnands and the Kansas City Jazz Orchestra. Wijnands’ daughter Lucy is a relative newcomer.

Lucy Wijnand’s fully realized talent stunned unsuspecting members of the audience of approximately 350. (I was comped.) She shone most brightly while focusing on material Ella Fitzgerald recorded from the 1930s through the 1960s.

Just as her father didn’t attempt to copy Basie’s signature piano style, Lucy didn’t ape Fitzgerald. Instead, her rich vocals resembled Judy Garland as much as Fitzgerald. Stale moments were few and far between. The vim and vigor of the Wijnands and the Kansas City Jazz Orchestra made old-fashioned sounds seem brand new.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra, Bram Wijnands, Lucy Wijnands, Folly Theater, Trent Austin, Brad Gregory

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

March 5, 2025 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*The Brian Ward Trio is featured in the latest installment of Kansas Public Radio’s Live at Green Lady Lounge program.

*KCUR looked into one of Kansas City’s Fat Tuesday traditions.

*Joe Dimino interviewed Rob Scheps and Lucy Wijnands. He also shared footage of Bram and Lucy Wijnands’ collaboration with the Kansas City Jazz Orchestra at the Folly Theater.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Brian Ward, Green Lady Lounge, Lucy Wijnands, Bram Wijnands, The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra

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

June 12, 2024 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*The Kansas City Star reported that Patti Austin’s name was misspelled on her plaque at her induction into the Jazz Walk of Fame on 18th Street. Austin quipped “with friends like you, who needs enemies?” KCUR’s Steve Kraske previewed the event.

*Lucy Wijnands is featured in a television news report about an anti-Israeli act of vandalism at the Brooklyn jazz club Wilson Live.

*Joe Dimino interviewed Mike Parkinson.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, American Jazz Walk of Fame, Lucy Wijnands, Mike Parkinson

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

February 21, 2024 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*The Kansas City Star checked in with Will Matthews.

*A New Jersey publication interviewed Lucy Wijnands.

*From a press release: Kansas City Area Youth Jazz will conduct its annual auditions for fellowships on February 18 at BRC Audio Productions… The program is scheduled to present a “Next Generation Showcase” in July at The Folly Theater and the last Sunday in July is the capstone album recording session in Studio A at BRC Audio Productions.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Will Matthews, Lucy Wijnands, Kansas City Area Youth Jazz

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

April 12, 2023 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*The Kansas City Star caught up with Marilyn Maye.

*Lucy Wijnands was interviewed by Joe Dimino.

*Tweet of the Week: MCC Kansas City- The 18th & Vine Jazz Festival is a non-competitive event that gives middle school, high school and college students with musical experience the opportunity to gain an appreciation for Kansas City's rich jazz heritage. Info: (link)

*From a press release: Legendary American jazz guitarist, composer and improviser Pat Metheny announces his newest album, Dream Box, on the BMG Modern Recordings label on June 16... Comprising nine “found tracks” for “quiet electric guitar,” Metheny describes it as "a unique recording for me; it is essentially a compilation of solo tracks recorded across a few years that I only discovered while listening on tour.”

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Marilyn Maye, Lucy Wijnands, Pat Metheny

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

January 19, 2022 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*The prominent author and critic Terry Teachout, a one-time resident of the Kansas City area, has died.

*Joe Dimino documented a matinee performance by Bram and Lucy Wijnands.

*Tweet of the Week: KCMO Public Library- We are saddened to learn of the passing of arts critic and author Terry Teachout. The Library was honored to host him for several public programs including in Nov. 2013 for his book Duke: A Life of Duke Ellington. Watch it here.

Tags Kansas City, Terry Teachout, jazz, Bram Wijnands, Lucy Wijnands

The Kansas City's Jazz Scene's Top Trends and Stories of 2021

December 26, 2021 William Brownlee

Original image of Tyree Johnson by Plastic Sax.

1. Mask off

Kansas City never entirely embraced pandemic precautions.  Much of the populace treated official mandates as gratuitous suggestions.  Even so, Kansas City’s live music landscape shifted during the difficulties.  The good news is that new jazz-friendly venues replaced many of the rooms that didn’t survive.

2. Saying the quiet part out loud

Some readers of Plastic Sax are annoyed by this site’s penchant for disclosing disheartening attendance figures.  Pat Metheny acknowledged the town’s limited appetite for jazz in an interview with In Kansas City magazine.

3. Fiver

Many observers insist that the customary absence of cover charges at performances of jazz devalues the music.  Green Lady Lounge, Kansas City’s most popular jazz venue, instituted a five dollar admission fee this year.

4. Underground surge

Thanks largely to the initiatives of the enterprising young musicians Seth Davis and Evan Verploegh, avant-garde jazz and experimental music was much easier to find in 2021.

5. 3333

After relocating to 3333 Wyoming Street, the Charlotte Street Foundation became a welcoming home for left-of-center improvised music.

6. The beat goes on

The storied drummer Carl Allen replaced Bobby Watson as Endowed Chair of Jazz Studies at UMKC.  Much of the jazz scene’s fate rests on Allen’s ability to attract and develop promising talent.

7. Dunn good

Gerald Dunn, the person who has become the institutional memory of the American Jazz Museum and has long served as an essential component of Kansas City’s music scene, was named a Jazz Hero by the Jazz Journalists Association.

8. Missouri uncompromised

Carolyn Glenn Brewer’s new study Under Missouri Skies: Pat Metheny in Kansas City 1965-1972 provides essential insights into a previously under-documented era.

9. Next level

Hermon Mehari’s progression as a refined practitioner of European jazz and the ascension of Lucy Wijnands’ career were among the most notable artistic developments by artists associated with Kansas City.

10. Rest in peace

The passing of organ kingpin Everette DeVan was the most prominent of several heartbreaking deaths.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Pat Metheny, Green Lady Lounge, Seth Davis, Evan Verploegh, Charlotte Street Foundation, Carl Allen, Gerald Dunn, Carolyn Glenn Brewer, Hermon Mehari, Lucy Wijnands, Everette DeVan

The Top Jazz Albums of 2021

November 21, 2021 William Brownlee
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More than two dozen jazz albums by artists associated with the Kansas City area were released in 2021.  A ranking of my ten favorite titles follows.  For context, I’ve added a list of my top ten jazz albums by artists without immediate connections to Kansas City.


The Top Kansas City Jazz Albums of 2021

1. Pat Metheny- Road to the Sun

Plastic Sax review.

2. Pat Metheny- Side-Eye NYC (V1.IV)

Plastic Sax review.

3. Hermon Mehari and Alessandro Lanzoni- Arc Fiction

Plastic Sax review.

4. Verploegh and Baker- Singles

Plastic Sax review.

5. Steve Million- What I Meant to Say

Plastic Sax review.

6. The Count Basie Orchestra- Live at Birdland

Plastic Sax review.

7. Florian Arbenz, Hermon Mehari and Nelson Veras- Conversation #1: Condensed

Plastic Sax review.

8. John Armato- The Drummer Loves Ballads

Plastic Sax review.

9. Lucy Wijnands- Sings the David Heckendorn Song Book

10. Blob Castle- Music for Art Show

Plastic Sax review.

The Top Jazz Albums of 2021 by Artists From Elsewhere

1. Irreversible Entanglements- Open the Gates

2. Mathias Eick- When We Leave

3. Pino Palladino and Blake Mills- Notes With Attachments

4. Nala Sinephro- Space 1.8

5. Sons of Kemet- Black to the Future

6. Evan Parker Quartet- All Knavery & Collusion

7. Damon Locks & Black Monument Ensemble- Now

8. Sylvie Courvoisier and Mary Halvorson- Searching for the Disappeared Hour

9. Artifacts- …And Then There’s This

10. Angel Bat Dawid- Hush Harbor Mixtape Vol. 1: Doxology

Links to similar annual surveys of the past 11 years begin here.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Pat Metheny, Count Basie Orchestra, Steve Million, Lucy Wijnands, Hermon Mehari, Evan Verploegh, Benjamin Baker, John Armato

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

September 1, 2021 William Brownlee
Original image by Plastic Sax.

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*Toriano Porter advocates the efforts of the American Jazz Museum for The Kansas City Star.  KCUR also published a brief feature about the return of the institution’s plastic sax.

*Julie Denesha created an audio feature about Raj Ma Hall for KCUR.

*Tyree Johnson is the subject of a KC Studio profile.

*Carolyn Glenn Brewer discussed her book about Pat Metheny’s formative years on Neon Jazz.

*Tweet of the Week: KCUR's Up To Date- Closing out the show today, the young Kansas City woman who just won the Ella Fitzgerald Vocal Competition: Lucy Wijnands.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, American Jazz Museum, Charlie Parker, Raj Ma Hall, Tyree Johnson, Pat Metheny, Lucy Wijnands

Now's the Time: Lucy Wijnands

August 26, 2021 William Brownlee

Lucy Wijnands performs at the Blue Room on Friday, August 27, as part of the Spotlight 2021: Charlie Parker endeavor. The daughter of pianist Bram Wijnands won the The Ella Fitzgerald Jazz Vocal Competition in Washington D.C. a few months ago.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Lucy Wijnands, Bram Wijnands, Blue Room, Charlie Parker

Album Review: John Armato- The Drummer Loves Ballads

August 15, 2021 William Brownlee
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The most emblematic Kansas City jazz album of 2021 is the work of a drummer who currently lives in Sacramento.  John Armato oversees a bevy of prominent Kansas City musicians on his ambitious concept album The Drummer Loves Ballads.

Armato turns to the contacts he made during the years he spent on Kansas City’s jazz scene to realize his imaginative vision.  Two storied outsiders- saxophonist Houston Person and cornetist Warren Vaché- also get in on the action on the project released in May.

A survey of a few highlights reflects the album’s breadth.  Brett Jackson pays tribute to the late baritone saxophonist Kerry Strayer on “Night Lights.”  Lucy Wijnands, the daughter of the Kansas City mainstay Bram Wijnands, croons the dreamy chanson “The Shadows of Paris.”

A duet by vocalists Ron Gutierrez and Molly Hammer is ravishing.  Veteran pianist Wayne Hawkins and clarinetist Lynn Zimmer make sentimental contributions.  An interpretation of “Lonely Woman” features characteristically stunning work from guitarist Rod Fleeman and bassist Gerald Spaits.

The inclusion of so many scene stalwarts on the stylistically conservative, musically impeccable and deliberately hushed The Drummer Loves Ballads makes the album an invaluable document of the mainstream sound that continues to dominate Kansas City’s jazz clubs.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, John Armato, Brett Jackson, Kerry Strayer, Lucy Wijnands, Ron Gutierrez, Molly Hammer, Wayne Hawkins, Lynn Zimmer, Rod Fleeman, Gerald Spaits