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Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

September 18, 2024 William Brownlee

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*The first two episodes of Bill McKemy’s Nameless and Unremembered podcast are available at streaming services. McKemy, Toni Gates, Lisa Henry and Rich Wheeler consider the lives of the underappreciated regional heroes N. Clark Smith and “Blind” Boone in the discussions.

*Joe Dimino interviewed Kansas City bassist Spencer Reeve.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Bill McKemy, Lisa Henry, Rich Wheeler, N. Clark Smith, Blind Boone, Spencer Reeve

Album Review: Brandon Draper Quintet- Live at Jardines

March 31, 2024 William Brownlee

Jardines once dominated Kansas City’s jazz scene. The club just beyond the northeast corner of the Country Club Plaza hosted touring and locally based jazz musicians prior to its messy closure in 2011.

My fondest memories include multiple performances by Karrin Allyson, the Jeff Hamilton Trio, Marilyn Maye and Saturday afternoon jam sessions hosted by Tommy Ruskin. Getting scolded by Sara Gazarek when my flip phone rang during a ballad and challenging an adversary to a fistfight at the venue are among my less pleasant recollections.

The venue regularly hosted shows overseen by Kansas City’s young lions including keyboardist Mark Lowrey and drummer Brandon Draper. The latter musician recently released excerpts of recordings made at Jardines in 2010.

The 78-minute album features Draper with trombonist Kevin Cerovich, saxophonist Rich Wheeler, vibraphonist Peter Schlamb and bassist Craig Akin. Imbued with the giddy energy of young improvisors coming into their own, Live at Jardines is a vital blast from the past.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Brandon Draper, Kevin Cerovich, Rich Wheeler, Peter Schlamb, Craig Akin, Jardines

Album Review: Alaturka- In Concert with KU Jazz Ensemble I

December 20, 2020 William Brownlee
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Alaturka was one of one of Kansas City’s most auspicious bands during the quartet’s most active period in the first half of the previous decade.  Beau Bledsoe (guitar, oud and primary musicologist), Rich Wheeler (saxophone), Jeff Harshbarger (bass) and Brandon Draper (percussion) combined the classical music of Turkey with American jazz.

Augmentation from a big band seemed like an unnecessary and excessive proposal.  Yet a surprise release reveals that Alaturka’s 2013 collaboration with Dan Gailey’s KU Jazz Ensemble 1 at the Lawrence Arts Center resulted in an entirely tasteful concert.

Each member of Alaturka is in peak form and almost all of the textures the big band adds to selections like “Leyla” on In Concert with KU Jazz Ensemble I are appealing evocations of Gil Evans’ arrangements for Miles Davis’ 1960 album Sketches of Spain. While a bit of momentum is lost on “Dar Hejîrokê/Fig Tree,” the superlative document inspires hope for a resumption of activity in the Alaturka camp.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Alaturka, Beau Bledsoe, Jeff Harshbarger, Brandon Draper, Rich Wheeler

Confirmation: Weekly News and Notes

September 30, 2020 William Brownlee
Original image by Plastic Sax.

Original image by Plastic Sax.

*Lonnie McFadden’s longstanding Friday afternoon gig at The Phoenix will end October 30. He’s slated to begin performing at the former Reserve Restaurant & Lounge at The Ambassador Hotel in November. The Kansas City Business Journal  reports the venue is now named The American Reserve Bar & Grille.

*Joe Dimino documented a performance by We the People. He also recorded his chat with saxophonist Rich Wheeler.

*Hermon Mehari created a lush music video for “Dreamscapes,” a track from his A Change For the Dreamlike EP.

*From a press release: The American Jazz Museum's newest gallery space honors Kansas City native Ida McBeth, a self-proclaimed "song stylist" and nationally recognized jazz legend. The Ida McBeth Gallery offers space for artists, particularly those devoted to music, who need a small gallery space to showcase their work. The inaugural collection Legendary Jazz Greats by Robert Blehert honors Ida along with 26 other jazz heroes like Count Basie, Thelonious Monk and Charlie Parker… (T)he new exhibit... will be on display until December 31. The Ida McBeth Gallery is open to the public with paid admission to the American Jazz Museum.

Tags Kansas City, jazz, Lonnie McFadden, The American Reserve Bar & Grille, We The People, Rich Wheeler, Hermon Mehari, American Jazz Museum, Ida McBeth