Monday, August 31, 2009

Brandon Draper Saturday September 5th

Saturday Sept. 5
$5


Brandon Draper Presents


6pm - Brandon Draper featuring Matt Otto 
..."an insidiously mesmerizing listening experience.", Dan McClenaghan, All About Jazz.


"A fluent tenor saxophonist with a cool tone and a relaxed style, Matt Otto is able to glide over the most complex chord changes gracefully." Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Matt Otto - saxophone
Brandon Draper -drums
Roger Wilder - piano
Ben Leifer - bass


8pm - Brandon Draper Group 
BD - drums/percussion/electronics
Hermon Mehari - trumpet
Rich Wheeler - sax
Ben Leifer - bass

Friday, August 28, 2009

Kansas City Youth Jazz Benefit

KANSAS CITY, KS, August 17, 2009 - Jardine's Restaurant (4536 Main Street, Kansas City, MO),
Kansas City's preeminent jazz venue, will be jumping to the sounds of The Wild Women of Jazz, along with special guests Chris Burnett (saxophone), Stan Kessler (trumpet), Jason Goudeau (trombone), Greg Richtor (keyboards) and others as they host a very special benefit concert in support of Kansas City Youth Jazz.

"Last year's fundraiser at Jardine's with the Wild Women was one of the highlights of our year," says Leon Brady, Kansas City Youth Jazz founder and musical director. "This is such a great club to hear live jazz in and the Wild Women - as well as all of these tremendous musicians - really put on a fantastic show. Everybody who comes will have a great time while really helping our program."

The evening will run from 6:00 - 9:00 p.m., with an auction and raffle occurring throughout the
evening. A donation of $20 will be collected at the door, with the doors opening at 5:00 p.m.
Reservations can be made by calling Jardine's Restaurant at 816.561.6480.

###

Additional information on the benefit can be found at kcyouthjazz.org.

Steve Paul's Trio ALL Review

Trio ALL is making a mark for itself ; New self-named disc features well-informed original tunes and a few pleasant surprises.By Steve Paul

Credit: The Kansas City Star
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Edition: METROPOLITAN, Section: A+E, Page E1


Judging from their new disc, the young jazz players who make up Trio ALL have no shortage of audacious ambition.

From its eclectic, adventurous lineup of tunes to some wonderfully stylish playing, this is a piano trio with a future.

And to think it was pretty much an accident.

"We weren't conceiving of making an album," pianist Mark Lowrey says of the venture. "We just came to the table with a few arrangements each of things we wanted to hear and wanted to play together."

The idea was that he, bassist Ben Leifer and drummer Zack Albetta would get a chance to learn from one another and build up the book of tunes they could play in a growing number of gigs.

"They ended up sounding like an album," Lowrey adds, "in a strangely cohesive way. It was an accidental thing."

And it worked.

Lowrey, a versatile journeyman pianist, impresses with his double-fisted evocations of Mulgrew Miller and McCoy Tyner but also with delicate, edgy phrasings that recall the likes of Bill Evans and Keith Jarrett.

Albetta and Leifer are no less inventive and propulsive.

The group launched the disc recently at Jardine's, where the trio is scheduled for a monthly gig beginning July 1. From time to time you can also hear them warming up the bandstand as the rhythm section for vibrant singer Shay Estes.

One thing that contributes to the success of the CD is its natural, concert sound.

"In mixing the record," producer and engineer Eric Honour says, "we did everything we could to capture the feeling of a live event: Each of the instruments has its own well-defined space, and the blend is carefully tailored to preserve clarity and detail, while still placing all the instruments together in a sort of imaginary jazz club. I think that's crucial for a jazz record."

Another is the choice of material.
Three of this disc's seven tunes, more than half of its 43-plus minutes of music, are compositions by Leifer.

The 23-year-old bass phenom still has a semester to go in the jazz program at the UMKC Conservatory of Music, an academic career at least partly stretched out by his active performance schedule the last couple of years.

Leifer's "Time Well Spent" is a bluesy stroll with a descending lyrical line that carries a whisper of Thelonious Monk. In a solo, the bassist takes a laid-back, laconic turn that nevertheless reveals just how much tradition, skill and confidence he has amassed in a relatively short time.

His "Vitality" makes hay with passing quotes of notable modern-jazz favorites, including Herbie Hancock's "Dolphin Dance" and John Coltrane's "Moment's Notice." And the disc closes with Leifer's "New Meaning," which again hints at familiar phrases from deep within the jazz DNA. The tune also gives Lowrey space to stretch and to turn inward with good results.

Of the disc's other works, McCoy Tyner's "Passion Dance" is a high-speed chase that Lowrey and company handle with aplomb.

The trio credits "Dienda" to Mulgrew Miller, but the piece is usually pinned to another pianist, Kenny Kirkland, and it has become a lovely modern classic, popularized by the likes of Branford Marsalis and, with lyrics, Sting. Every time I hear this trio version, I like it even more.

It's no great stretch to tackle a standard like "My Favorite Things," and Trio ALL hardly remakes it, though Albetta injects into it some airy fun as the players give it a rhythmically upbeat lilt.

One surprise on the disc is Albetta's rearrangement of "Ghost Boat," which comes from the playbook of the Barclay Martin Ensemble. Like "Dienda," it starts on ballad turf but winds up in fetching, pop-jazz territory.

Accidents happen. And, in jazz, which is so dependent on improvisation, serendipity and the magic of the moment when musicians play together on a stage, accidents, especially if they sound like this session, are often exactly what you want to hear.

Steve Paul, senior writer and arts editor, 816-234-4762, paul@kcstar.com

Trumpet Summit Notes

STAN KESSLER PRESENT'S TRUMPET SUMMIT 2009!
Featuring CLINT ASHLOCK and HERMON MEHARI

September 3rd, Jardines, 7:30-11:30,
$5 cover

Get ready for some real fun when these three trumpeters lock horns in a no-holds-barred
brass spectacular. There's a real buzz in town about this performance.Check out new tunes and arrangements written just for this gig! The first trumpet summit in many moons, it promises to be exciting and unique.

Stan Kessler has been a stalwart on the KC scene for 35 years and leads The Sons of Brasil and HoraceScope. He has been voted best jazz trumpeter and best jazz band(The SOBs) in The Pitch readers poll.

Clint Ashlock has established himself as a force to be reckoned with among local trumpet players. He leads The New Jazz Order Big Band and has played with countless groups, including Heat Index.

Hermon Mehari has burst onto the scene with much flair and fanfare. A UMKC student, he has already made his mark by winning first place in the National Trumpet Competition Jazz Category. He is Co-leader of the award winning jazz group Diverse, which garnered first place at the Gene Harris Combo Competition.

They will be joined by one of the swinginest rhythm sections on the planet, Roger Wilder-piano, Ben Leifer-bass, and Tim Cambron-drums