Thursday, January 31, 2019
Now's the Time: "Big Bands Are Better"
The starpower at Kansas City jazz clubs will be slightly dimmer than usual for much of February. Many of the town’s heavy hitters are part of the ”Big Bands Are Better” production at Musical Theater Heritage. The show opens Thursday, Feb. 7. All of February’s jazz gigs are posted at The Kansas City Jazz Calendar.
Wednesday, January 30, 2019
Confirmation: Weekly News & Notes
*Lori Chandler ponders the relationship between jazz performers and audiences.
*An outing by Havilah Bruders and Charles Williams is praised by a blogger.
*Chris Burnett is profiled by The Leavenworth Times.
*Joe Dimino documented the Yellowjackets’ concert at the Folly Theater. He also attended a jam session hosted by the Waldo Jazz Collective.
*Dean Minderman of St. Louis Jazz Notes previews a performance by Jamie Branch.
*Tweet o’ the Week: KansasCityJazzCynic- It seems as though if it were not for the support from other jazz musicians, this city would have no support for their jazz musicians..
(Original image by Plastic Sax.)
Sunday, January 27, 2019
Fake Fest
What would an optimal three-day festival consisting of jazz artists based in or affiliated with Kansas City look like? I used a Coachella lineup generator to answer that question. While it’s marred by unfortunate omissions, I’m pleased by my effort. I was forced to rearrange the order of the lineups and make a few odd name abbreviations to fit the template. For instance, Tech N9ne backed by We the People should be the headliner of the groove-centric third day, but the number of characters didn’t fit. Neither was I able to indicate that I wanted the Kansas City Jazz Orchestra to back Marilyn Maye on the swing-based opening night. Three-day passes to the hypothetical event in the Crossroads Districts are $125. Single-day admission is $50.
Thursday, January 24, 2019
Now's the Time: Havilah Bruders
Havilah Bruders is among the many Kansas City musicians who flit between genres. The vocalist is known to the rock community as a member of Cadillac FlambĂ©. Theatergoers know Bruders for her appearances in musicals. Bruders will display her jazz artistry at Chaz on Friday, January 25, and at a jazz brunch at Johnnie’s Jazz Bar & Grille on Sunday, January 27. All of the region’s listings are posted on The Kansas City Jazz Calendar.
Wednesday, January 23, 2019
Confirmation: Weekly News & Notes
*Karen E. Griffin of the American Jazz Museum hosts Kansas City’s “The Weekly Report” video communiquĂ©.
*The Leavenworth Times follows up on its initial story about the 424 Lounge.
*Tweet o’ the Week: Christian Swan: BOOM SHAKA LAKA, GOD IS GOOD! The CUR3 is taking off today for it's first trip to LA. We will be playing at NAMM for CTMonitors and networking throughout the city. If you'll be at #NAMM, catch us at booth #15728.
(Original image by Plastic Sax.)
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
Concert Review: Al Foster's 75th Birthday Party at Smoke Jazz & Supper Club
I hugged Al Foster last night. Anyone familiar with my Asperger’s-like traits knows such embraces are out of character for me, but the extraordinarily gracious drummer seemed to enjoy greeting well-wishers at the conclusion of the last of three sets at Smoke Jazz & Supper Club.
In an engagement billed as his 75th birthday party, Foster lead a band of trumpeter Jeremy Pelt, saxophonist Danye Stephens, pianist Adam Birnbaum, and bassist Doug Weiss. The superstar saxophonist Chris Potter sat in. It was swinging.
Less than 20 people heard the vital set by the auspicious musicians. The $40 cover and $20 bar minimum were prohibitive. Sure enough, a couple dozen people poured into the club for the subsequent free after-midnight set by a band of young musicians who took advantage of the opportunity to impress Foster.
(Original image by Plastic Sax.)
Thursday, January 17, 2019
Now's the Time: Lisa Henry
Vocalist Lisa Henry will join a quartet led by keyboardist Eddie Moore at Polsky Theatre on Sunday, January 20. The concert is part of the Winterlude series at Johnson County Community College. It's one of 17 events on Sunday listed at The Kansas City Jazz Calendar.
Wednesday, January 16, 2019
Confirmation: Weekly News & Notes
*Justin Wilson, the heir to Soundtrek Studios’ jazz-based legacy and the owner of Sound 81 Productions, is the subject of an audio profile created for KCUR.
*The Leavenworth Times reports that 424 Lounge, a venue with live jazz three nights a week, is slated to open this week.
*Forthcoming shows presented by Take Five Music Productions include Ben Allison & Think Free (February 17 at Mod Gallery) and Ryan Keberle & Catharsis (March 3 at Mod Gallery).
*The latest edition of Downbeat contains a 13-page spread about 25 of the “world’s best jazz cities”. Kansas City didn’t make the cut.
*Tweet o’ the Week: Alex Hutchinson- Ha -- well, I am heading to Kansas City next week, and hope to check out the American Jazz Museum, which has the plastic alto that Charlie Parker played at the famous Massey Hall concert in Toronto in 1953. Maybe someone will want to talk to me about that.
(Original image by Plastic Sax.)
Sunday, January 13, 2019
Concert Review: Ben Tervort, Matt Otto and Brian Steever at Westport Coffee House
I’m considering forgoing future trips to New York City. I periodically visit the jazz capital partly to hear music that isn’t performed in Kansas City. I was thrilled, consequently, when Ben Trevort’s Classically Trained filled a crucial component of that void at Westport Coffee House last Tuesday.
Bassist Tervort, saxophonist Matt Otto and drummer Brian Steever played an hour of impressionistic, European-style jazz. The rhythmically unconstrained trio shifted between joyous swing and unhurried avant-garde musings on original material and standards.
Trevort judiciously gave his bandmates free reign. Listening to Otto delineate the melody of a ballad is akin to watching a masterful Japanese artist paint a wondrous landscape. And every time I see Steever perform I’m certain that he’s my favorite drummer in town.
Unlike in New York City, attending Tuesday’s show didn’t require navigating a subway system, paying a drink minimum or battling a crowd. In fact, all of the people who paid the $10 cover to catch the first set could have fit inside a taxicab. It’s too late to cancel my forthcoming trip to New York, but Tervort’s adventurous endeavors in Kansas City may play a decisive role in my subsequent travel plans.
(Original image by Plastic Sax.)
Thursday, January 10, 2019
Now's the Time: New York Voices
New York Voices will perform at Community Christian Church on Tuesday, January 22. Details are available here. Out of respect for the event’s organizers, I elected not to embed the group’s “colorful” rendition of “Traffic Jam.” Every area jazz performance is listed at The Kansas City Jazz Calendar.
Wednesday, January 9, 2019
Confirmation: Weekly News & Notes
*Ernest Melton is featured at the site of Quincy Jones' streaming entertainment startup Quest TV. The photo that accompanies the article looks familiar.
*Not a single release by a Kansas City artist earned a spot on the list of the Top 50 albums in The 2018 NPR Music Jazz Critics Poll.
*The man behind Plastic Sax extolled Logan Richardson on KCUR’s Up To Date program last week.
*John Stafford spoke to Joe Dimino about the new album by a vocal ensemble at Kansas City Kansas Community College.
*In her guest editorial about the Open Spaces festival for The Kansas City Star, Anne Gatschet writes that “(t)ourists are unlikely to say, ‘I’m going to Kansas City. Can’t wait to see the Mutual Musicians’ Foundation.’”
*Tweet o’ the Week: Ryan Heinlein- Pretty remarkable to neither honor the tradition or be forward thinking at all. That’s how this dies.
*From a press release: The Kansas City Jazz Summit will take place April 23 - 26, 2019. This event caters to middle school, high school and college jazz bands, combos and jazz choirs and will take place at Kansas City Kansas Community College. The festival will highlight Kansas City's rich jazz heritage through the "Basically Basie" Jazz Heritage Competition. Bands are judged on their ability to capture the essence of the Kansas City style as best exemplified by the Count Basie Orchestra. There is also a non-competitive category (Summit) that allows bands to showcase their own unique style and personality.
(Original image by Plastic Sax.)
Sunday, January 6, 2019
Peter Schlamb: The Plastic Sax Person of the Year
Peter Schlamb has been feverishly praised at Plastic Sax since his name was first mentioned at this site in 2010. Almost every one of the rave reviews garnered by the brilliant vibraphonist is entirely organic. Schlamb doesn’t promote his work.
Schlamb’s stellar seven-song EP Electric Tinks was furtively released a few weeks ago without a smidgen of publicity. Schlamb doesn't even list it at his site. Yet in my review of the EP- the sole critique the project has received- I assert that Schlamb’s plugged-in vibraphone is “the most compelling sound of the past few years” in Kansas City.
It’s not an accident that the arrival of the St. Louis transplant has coincided with the artistic renaissance of Kansas City’s jazz scene. That’s why Shlamb is the Plastic Sax Person of the Year for 2018. Mum’s the word.
The previous recipients of Plastic Sax's Person of the Year award are John Scott (2017), Eddie Moore (2016), Larry Kopitnik (2015), Deborah Brown (2014), Stan Kessler (2013), Doug and Lori Chandler (2012), Jeff Harshbarger (2011), Mark Lowrey (2010) and Hermon Mehari (2009). Bobby Watson was named the Plastic Sax Person of the Decade in 2009.
(Original image by Plastic Sax.)
Thursday, January 3, 2019
Now's the Time: Earl Harvin
It’s going to get loud at the Ship on Saturday, January 5. Earl Harvin and Mike Dillon are likely to make a racket akin to the percussive workout in the embedded video. Two dozen additional jazz gigs on Saturday are listed at The Kansas City Jazz Calendar.
Wednesday, January 2, 2019
Confirmation: Weekly News & Notes
*Green Lady Radio now also streams on YouTube.
*WBGO shares a new version of Bobby Watson’s “In Case You Missed It.” The selection is from a forthcoming album by the Ralph Peterson Messenger Legacy band that includes the Kansas City saxophonist.
*Dean Minderman of St. Louis Jazz Notes compiled dozens of “best jazz of 2018” lists.
*The Kansas City Jazz Calendar contains (almost) all of January’s bookings.
*Tweet o’ the Week: Weldon Williams- A decent treatment of jazz in Kansas City, it showed more like a kiddy museum than a serious destination. (link)
(Original image by Plastic Sax.)