Concert Review: Anthony Roth Constanzo at the Folly Theater

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

Anthony Roth Costanzo censured himself at the Folly Theater on Saturday, December 18, after explaining that he and pianist Bryan Wagorn “met when we were nobodies.”  After surveying the largely empty house, the countertenor exclaimed “we’re still nobodies!”

In truth, Constanzo is one of the world’s biggest opera stars.  His celebrated turn in the title role of Philip Glass’ Akhnaten is among his prominent achievements.  Yet he attracted what appeared to be less than 300 people in his Kansas City debut.  

I took advantage of Midwestern indifference by purchasing a discounted front row seat to the concert on Cyber Monday.  Positioned just 20 feet from the unamplified countertenor, I considered reaching for the earplugs I always carry with me.  

The diminutive Costanzo applied startling heft to his piercing instrument.  He and Wagorn repeatedly paused during a gorgeous reading of a Hector Berlioz song cycle to permit echoes of Costanzo’s powerful voice in the piano’s soundboard to reverberate.

A revealing interpretation of George Gershwin’s “The Man I Love” allowed me to hear the standard in an entirely new way.  A pair of compositions he recently commissioned in his position as the current Artist-In-Residence of The New York Philharmonic were no less engaging.

Costanzo admitted his feelings are hurt when he’s asked if he’d prefer to have a “real voice.”  He demonstrated his facility with voices of all types during a fascinating master class at Grant Recital Hall the next day.   Even in the unglamorous setting, Costanzo shone like a certifiable celebrity.

The Top Fifty Performances of 2021

Original image of J.D. Allen, Eric Revis and Nasheet Waits at the Blue Room by There Stands the Glass.

The pandemic nixed my annual resolution to attend 365 gigs per year. I began making up for lost time after receiving my second vaccination shot on April 27. I’m extremely pleased to have once again caught up with road warriors like Pat Metheny and Richard Thompson and to have finally made it to shows by notable artists including Marc Anthony and Renée Fleming. Aside from a delusional period of post-vaccination euphoria in May and June, I wore a mask throughout every performance.

1. J.D. Allen, Eric Revis and Nasheet Waits- Blue Room

My review.

2. Mary Lattimore- Lied Center

My review.

3. Pat Metheny- Orchestra Hall (Detroit)

My review.

4. Anthony Roth Constanzo- Folly Theater

My review.

5. St. Vincent- Grinder’s KC

My review.

6. Erykah Badu- Midland theater

My review.

7. Irreversible Entanglements- Stephens Lake Park Amphitheatre (Columbia, Missouri)

My review.

8. Marc Anthony- T-Mobile Arena

My review.

9. Bird Fleming and Bill Summers’ “Voyage of the Drum”- Dunbar Park

My review.

10. Rod Fleeman Trio- Green Lady Lounge (multiple shows)

Fleeman is Plastic Sax's 2021 Person of the Year.


11. José James at Old Church Concert Hall (Portland)

My review.

12. Oleta Adams with Isaac Cates & Ordained- Old Mission United Methodist Church

My review.

13. Te Deum- St. Mary's Episcopal Church

14. Asleep at the Wheel- Muriel Kauffman Theatre

My review.

15. Eddie Moore, Ryan J. Lee and Zach Morrow- Charlotte Street Foundation

My review.

16. The Kansas City Symphony’s Mobile Music Box- The Jewish Community Center of Greater Kansas City

My review.

17. Thollem McDonas- 9th and State

My review.

18. UMKC Opera’s George Frideric Handel’s “Acis and Galatea”- White Recital Hall

My review.

19. Johnny Rawls- Gladstone Summertime Bluesfest

My review.

20. Jeff Kaiser, Kevin Cheli and Seth Davis- Charlotte Street Foundation

My review.

21. Mike Dillon and Nikki Glaspie- 1900 Building

My review.

22. Brentano Quartet- Lincoln Recital Hall (Portland)

My review.

23. Flooding- 7th Heaven

My review.

24. En Vogue- Hy-Vee Arena

My review.

25. Mary Gauthier- Knuckleheads

26. Joshua Bell and Alessio Bax- Helzberg Hall

My review.

27. Pistol Pete- recordBar

28. Second Nature Ensemble- Westport Coffee House

My review.

29. Dare- 7th Heaven

My Instagram clip.

30. The Kansas City Symphony’s “Coming to America”- Helzberg Hall

31. Renée Fleming- Helzberg Hall

32. Kyle Hutchins, Aaron Osborne, Seth Davis and Evan Verploegh- Charlotte Street Foundation

My review.

33. Guitar Elation- Green Lady Lounge (several shows)

34. Kansas Virtuosi- Yardley Hall

My review.

35. UMKC Conservatory’s “Jazz at the Playhouse”- University Playhouse

My Instagram clip.

36. Granger Smith- KC Live

37. Sentenced 2 Die- 7th Heaven

My Instagram clip.

38. Jackie Myers, Matt Hopper and Ben Tervort- Market at Meadowbrook

39. Summerfest Chamber Music Festival- Atonement Lutheran Church

My review.

40. Trinity Jazz Ensemble- Rolling Hills Presbyterian Church

My review.

41. Mike Stover- Campground

42. Richard Thompson- Folly Theater

My review.

43. Ben Tervort Quartet- Westport Coffeehouse

My Instagram clip.

44. Roman Alexander- KC Live

My review.

45. Béla Fleck- Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall (Portland)

My review.

46. The Kansas City Chorale- Rolling Hills Presbyterian Church

47. Kian Byrne- Second Presbyterian Church

48. Everyday Strangers- Gem Theater

My instagram clip.

49. Lyric Opera of Kansas City- Meadowbrook Park

50. Paris Williams- Lemonade Park

There Stands the Glass also ranked the The Top 50 Songs of 2021 and The Top 50 Albums of 2021. Pat Metheny is this site’s Artist of the Year. Rod Fleeman is Plastic Sax’s Person of the Year. A list of There Stands the Glass’ top performances of 2020 is here.

Pat Metheny: There Stands the Glass’ Artist of the Year

I ranked Pat Metheny’s albums as one of my final pre-vaccination pandemic projects ten months ago.  Time-consuming and intensely rewarding, the process enhanced my appreciation of the iconic musician’s career and has informed everything I’ve listened to since.

Metheny added two albums to his voluminous discography in 2021.  The vital live recording Side-Eye NYC (V1.IV) documents a collaboration with the young innovator James Francies.  The elegant Road to the Sun dovetails with my burgeoning interest in classical music.  

I’d never given the crowd-pleasing guitarist John Pizzarelli much consideration. A quarantine-inspired solo guitar set of Metheny covers released in April changed my opinion.  The insightful Better Days Ahead is among the year’s most pleasant surprises.

Viewers of the new Listening to Kenny G documentary were reminded of Metheny’s disarming candor.  In a 2021 interview with In Kansas City magazine, he acknowledged an unpalatable truth about the limited scope of Kansas City’s jazz audience.

Asked why he hasn’t performed in Kansas City in nine years, the Lee’s Summit native said “Kansas City’s a really great sports town… the kind of, let’s say, intense listening that is found all over Europe, New York, LA, those kinds of places, for this kind of music has always been elusive for Kansas City musicians.”

The challenge is documented in Carolyn Glenn Brewer’s new book Beneath Missouri Skies. The illuminating account of Metheny’s teen years maintains that the current scarcity of support for jazz in the Kansas City area also bedeviled musicians in the 1960s and 1970s.

That’s why I timed a trip to Detroit to catch a date on Metheny’s tour with Francies and drummer Joe Dyson.  There may not be 1,000 people in Kansas City willing to pay $50 to hear Metheny, but I purchased a $75 ticket to join 1,500 appreciative fans at a concert hall on Woodward Avenue.

A rare combination of critical acclaim and commercial success makes Metheny a jazz unicorn.  And his particularly auspicious 2021 makes him There Stands the Glass’ Person of the Year.  Bad Bunny was the recipient of this site’s 2020 Person of the Year designation.

Album Review: Virgil Thomson- Complete Chamber Works

I vowed to become fully conversant in the life and work of Virgil Thomson after attending an ambitious concert dedicated to the Kansas City native at Helzberg Hall in 2011.  There just hasn’t been enough time.  There’s never enough time.  I read only 50 pages of Music Chronicles 1940-1954 when I borrowed the 1,177 page collection of Thomson’s music criticism from a library earlier this year.  Monadnock Music’s Complete Chamber Works, a 160-minute set billed as “the first recording of the complete chamber works by Pulitzer Prize winner Virgil Thomson on one album,” was released on December 3.  The inclusion of three “world premiere recordings” is also notable.  My woefully untrained ears hear Complete Chamber Works as a mixed bag.  Relatively conventional works including String Quartet No. 1 don’t move me.  Yet the release is sprinkled with ingratiatingly peculiar pieces such as “A Portrait of Georges Hugnet” that sound as if they could have been composed yesterday.  Further investigation would undoubtedly provide commensurate rewards.  Based on my pitiful track record, it’s unlikely to happen.

Concert Review: Mary Lattimore at the Lied Center

Original image of Walt McClements and Mary Lattimore by There Stands the Glass.

LAAND, the organization responsible for Mary Lattimore’s concert at the Lied Center in Lawrence on Saturday, December 12, got it wrong when it promoted the event as “a blissed out evening.”  Lattimore wields a harp, but her instrumental music has little to do with insipid New Age contrivances.  The sonic landscapes she created for an audience of about 125 conveyed an imperiled sense of beauty, like laments for a utopia destined to succumb to hostile combatants.

Walt McClements joined her on a couple selections.  The accordionist’s earlier solo outing sometimes sounded like an inebriated priest riffing on Johann Sebastian Bach on his church’s dusty pipe organ.  The rewarding showcase of innovative ambient music began with a pleasing set by Jackson Graham.  The vibraphonist resembled an anxious millennial version of Gary Burton.

Lattimore explained one composition was inspired by her concern that an astronaut’s extended space voyage would inevitably be followed by a comparatively tedious earth-bound existence.  I felt a similar form of melancholy as I left the stellar exhibition of (un)easy listening.  Spending two ethereally edgy hours with the music of Lattimore, McClements and Graham may make other sounds seem mundane.

Original image of Jackson Graham by There Stands the Glass.

Concert Review: Béla Fleck at Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

I’d almost forgotten about hippies.  Béla Fleck’s concert at Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in Portland on Tuesday, December 9, reacquainted me with the subculture.  The show was the first hippie-dominated event I’ve attended in at least 20 months.  

A funny smell permeated the air, many members of the audience of about 2,000 looked as if they were models at a sustainable clothing fashion show and yes, uninhibited noodle dancers frolicked in the balcony.

The stage production was almost nonexistent.  Far more significantly, the low volume was wholly inadequate for the cavernous room.  The speakers broadcasting the performance in the men’s room were louder than the sound field in the balcony.

The acoustic newgrass played by Fleck, guitarist Bryan Sutton, mandolinist Sam Bush, fiddler Stuart Duncan, dobroist Jerry Douglas and bassist Edgar Meyer was difficult to hear.  The maddening disappointment at the pricey concert was enough to transform peace-loving hippies into brick-hurling punks.

A Tough Pill to Swallow: The Top 50 Songs of 2021

Screenshot of Injury Reserve’s “Knees” video by There Stands the Glass.

My ranking of the fifty new songs I loved most in 2021 bears little resemblance to There Stands the Glass’ Top Albums of 2021 list.  The disparity is intentional.  A forthcoming accounting of the 50 best live performances I caught in 2021 will contain further deviations.  Injury Reserve’s disquieting “Knees” meant the most to me in recent months.  The rest of the songs are sequenced by personal preference with a bit of flexibility for optimal playlist appeal.  Here’s the Spotify playlist.


1. Injury Reserve- "Knees"

2. Coi Leray- "No More Parties"

3. J Balvin and Skrillex- “"In Da Ghetto"

4. Tokischa and Rosalía- "Linda"

5. Priya Ragu- "Lockdown"

6. Little Simz- "Rollin' Stone"

7. Cake Pop, Pritty, Aaron Carter and Ravenna Golden- "Satin Bedsheets"

8. The Streets- "Who's Got the Bag"

9. Celeste- "Tonight Tonight"

10. Billie Eilish- "Lost Cause"

11. Badbadnotgood- "City of Mirrors"

12. Chlöe- "Have Mercy"

13. Sir the Baptist featuring Anthony Hamilton- "Jesus in the Ghetto"

14. Rod Wave- "Tombstone"

15. Remi Wolf- “Anthony Kiedis”

16. Blackstarkids- "Juno"

17. Shannon & The Clams- "Year of the Spider"

18. Olivia Rodrigo- "Brutal"

19. Amyl and the Sniffers- "Freaks to the Front"

20. Willow featuring Cherry Glazerr- “¡Breakout!”

21. Elle King and Miranda Lambert- “Drunk (And I Don’t Wanna Go Home)”

22. Roman Alexander featuring Ashley Cooke- "Between You & Me"

23. Tinashe- "Bouncin'"

24. Megan Thee Stallion- "Thot Sh*t"

25. IDK with Swae Lee and Rico Nasty- "Keto"

26. Jungle- "No Rules"

27. Jana Rush- "Disturbed"

28. Nightmares on Wax- "Miami 80"

29. Earl Sweatshirt- "2010"

30. Slowthai featuring James Blake and Mount Kimbie- "Feel Away"

31. Pooh Shiesty featuring Gucci Mane- "Ugly"

32. Baby Keem and Kendrick Lamar- "Family Ties"

33. Saweetie featuring Doja Cat- "Best Friend"

34. City Girls- "Scared"

35. Kevin Gates- "Plug Daughter 2"

36. Maxo Kream- “Cripstian”

37. Tony Allen and Danny Brown- "Deer in Headlights"

38. Robert Plant and Alison Krauss- "High and Lonesome"

39. Samantha Fish featuring Tech N9ne- "Loud"

40. Rauw Alejandro and Anitta- “Brazilera”

41. Céu - “Chega Mais”

42. Adele- "All Night Parking"

43. Cécile McLorin Salvant - "Ghost Song"

44. Nick Cave and Warren Ellis- “Albuquerque”

45. Willie Nelson- "Too Sick to Pray"

46. Brittney Spencer- "Sober & Skinny"

47. Lauren Alaina- "It Was Me"

48. Moby, Mark Lanegan and Kris Kristofferson- "The Lonely Night"

49. Loretta Lynn- “I Don’t Feel at Home Anymore”

50. Sarah Brand- "Red Dress"


Links to 16 previous year-end There Stands the Glass surveys begin here.

Concert Review: Brentano Quartet at Lincoln Recital Hall

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

Brentano Quartet wasn’t my first choice on Friday night in Portland on December 4.  I’d been looking forward to finally catching Thievery Corporation. My hopes were dashed when the band’s concert at Roseland Theater sold out.  I made new plans when I learned that the program for Brentano Quartet’s recital at Lincoln Hall would begin with "Quietly Flowing Along" from John Cage’s Quartet in Four Parts.  The weirder the better for me.

Sure enough, a distinguished matron near the front row seat I claimed amid an audience of about 125 responded in horror to an interpretation of Igor Stravinsky’s discordant Concertino for String Quartet that followed the opening salvo of Cage.  I almost fell out of my chair laughing to Dmitri Shostakovich’s devious "Polka". And Barbara Sukowa’s recorded recitations of Amy Lowell’s Stravinsky-inspired poems were enlightening.

I felt as if a light had been turned on in an unevolved chamber of my brain.  Experiencing the cheeky noise being created just eight feet away seemed to transport me into the consciousnesses of the late composers.  Unfortunately, the Carlo Gesualdo and Ludwig van Beethoven pieces that followed an intermission extinguished my metaphysical reveries.  I started thinking about Thievery Corporation just five minutes into an uninspiring version of Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 16.

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

Take What You Want: The Top Albums, EPs and Reissues of 2021

The Top 50 Albums of 2021

1. Kanye West- Donda

My review.

2. Irreversible Entanglements- Open the Gates

My review.

3. Mathias Eick- When We Leave

My review.

4. Molly Herron- Through Lines

My review.

5. Pino Palladino and Blake Mills- Notes with Attachments

My review.

6. Tyler, The Creator- Call Me If You Get Lost

7. The Metropolitan Opera- Philip Glass’ Akhnaten

8. Nala Sinephro- Space 1.8

My review.

9. Lana Del Rey- Chemtrails Over the Country Club

My podcast analysis.

10. Lise Davidsen- Beethoven Wagner Verdi

My review.

11. Sleaford Mods- Spare Ribs

My review.

12. Sons of Kemet- Black to the Future

13. St. Vincent- Daddy's Home

14. Caroline Shaw and Sō Percussion- Let the Soil Play Its Simple Part

15. Evan Parker Quartet- All Knavery & Collusion

16. Turnstile- Glow On

My podcast analysis.

17. Marianne Faithful and Warren Ellis- She Walks in Beauty

18. Fire-Toolz- Eternal Home

My podcast analysis.

19. Benoît Delbecq- The Weight of Light

My review.

20. Summer Walker- Still Over It

21. Damon Locks & Black Monument Ensemble- Now

22. Brockhampton- Roadrunner: New Light, New Machine 

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

24. Behzod Abduraimov- Debussy Chopin Mussorgsky 

My review.

25. Artifacts- …And Then There’s This

26. Max Richter- Exiles

27. Chris Thile- Laysongs

28. Danish String Quartet- Prism III

29. Alan Jackson- Where Have You Gone

30. Migos- Culture III

31. Les Filles de Illighadad- At Pioneer Works

32. Angel Bat Dawid- Hush Harbor Mixtape Vol. 1 Doxology

33. Morgan Wallen- Dangerous: The Double Album

34. Borderlands Trio- Wandersphere

My review.

35. Pat Metheny- Road to the Sun

My review.

36. Patricia Brennan- Maquishti

37. Yola- Stand For Myself

38. Roscoe Mitchell- Dots: Pieces for Percussion and Woodwinds

39. Karol G- KG01516

My podcast analysis.

40. Craig Taborn- Shadow Plays

41. Moor Mother- Black Encyclopedia of the Air

My podcast analysis.

42. Georgia Anne Muldrow- Vweto III

43. Dopolarians- The Bond

My review.

44. Sara Serpa- Intimate Strangers

45. Abstract Mindstate- Dreams Still Inspire

My review.

46. Chynna- Drug Opera

47. La Arrolladora Banda el Limón- En Contra De Mi Voluntad

48. Lana Del Rey- Blue Banisters

49. Floating Points, Pharoah Sanders and the London Symphony Orchestra- Promises

My review.

50. Drake- Certified Lover Boy

The Top 25 EPs of 2021

1. Benny the Butcher- The Plugs I Met 2

My podcast analysis.

2. Caroline Shaw- Narrow Sea

3. Vince Staples- Vince Staples

4. Lyle Mays- Eberhard

5. The Alchemist- This Thing of Ours

6. Aida Cuevas- Antología de la Música Ranchera, Vol. 2

7. F*cked Up- Year of the Horse (four installments)

8. Rachika Nayar- Fragments

9. Wanda Jackson- Encore

10. Burial- Shock Power of Love


11. Los Dos Carnales- Corrido Pa’ la Historia

12. Benny the Butcher- Pyrex Picasso

13. Bummer- Dead Horse

14. Dare- Against All Odds

15. YoungBoy Never Broke Again- Sincerely, Kentrell

16. Benjamin Mørk and Arve Henriksen- The Valleys

17. Rudimentary Peni- Great War

18. Portrayal of Guilt- We Are Always Alone

19. María Huld Markan Sigfúsdóttir- Kom Vinur

20. Gatecreeper- An Unexpected Reality


21. Melvin Gibbs- 4 +1 Equals 5 for May 25

22. A Place to Bury Strangers- Hologram

23. Ryoji Ikeda- EP

24. Charlie Hunter- Kick, Snare, Baritone Guitar

25. Rosie Lowe and Duval Timothy- Son

The Top 25 Reissues, Reimaginings and Compilations of 2021

1. Hasaan Ibn Ali- Retrospect In Retirement Of Delay: The Solo Recordings

My review.

2. John Coltrane- A Love Supreme: Live in Seattle

3. Sun Ra- Lanquidity (Definitive Edition)

4. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds- B-Sides & Rarities, Part II

5. Bob Dylan- Springtime in New York: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 16, 1980-1985

6. Nubya Garcia- Source ⧺ We Move

7. Toumani Diabaté and the London Symphony Orchestra- Kôrôlén

8. Alice Coltrane- Kirtan: Turiya Sings

9. Various- The Boys From Nairobi: 80s Benga & Rumba

10. The Beatles- Let It Be (Super Deluxe)

11. Wild Up- Julius Eastman, Vol. 1: Femenine

12. Lee Morgan- The Complete Live at the Lighthouse

My review.

13. Julius Hemphill- The Boyé Multi-National Crusade for Harmony 1977-2007

14. The Beach Boys- Feel Flows: The Sunflower & Surf’s Up Sessions, 1969-1971

15. Johnny Cash- Bear’s Sonic Journals: Live at the Carousel Ballroom, April 24, 1968

16. Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey- Winterwood Revealed: Live Vipers & Studio Doves

17. Hailu Mergia and the Walias Band- Tezeta

18. J Dilla- Welcome 2 Detroit: The 20th Anniversary Edition

19. Prince- Welcome 2 America

20. PJ Harvey- Is This Desire?: Demos


21. Dyke & The Blazers- I Got a Message Hollywood: 1968-1970

My review.

22. Hasaan Ibn Ali- Metaphysics: The Lost Atlantic Album

23. Neil Young and Crazy Horse- Way Down in the Rust Bucket

24. The Weeknd- The Highlights

25. The Rolling Stones- Tattoo You: 40th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition

Links to 16 previous annual There Stands the Glass surveys begin here.

Concert Review: José James at Old Church Concert Hall

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

José James characterized himself as “the black Mel Tormé” at Old Church Concert Hall in Portland on Thursday, December 2.  He was kidding, but the flippant characterization is apt.  James’ interpretation of Tormé’s “The Christmas Song” during the holiday-themed concert echoed the Velvet Fog’s sensibility while adding intimations of contemporary R&B.     

The stylish update of conventional crooning delighted the well-heeled audience of about 250. (I paid $36 for a general admission ticket at the door).  James’ considerable charisma, compelling stories and honeyed voice elicited several standing ovations.  Astonishingly, the f-bombs James dropped while promoting the new album Merry Christmas from José James served to further charm his admirers.

Even so, Christian Sands was the evening’s real star.  A former protegé of Christian McBride, Sands is one of the most notable young mainstream jazz pianists.  His unflaggingly elegant and thrillingly quick-witted playing revives the swinging sound of Erroll Garner and Ahmad Jamal.  The suggestion that Sands plays like an old man is intended as a compliment.

Bassist Daniel Winshall and drummer Jharis Yokley patiently held their own until they were unleashed on a monumental rendition of “My Favorite Things.”  The wooly reading applied to the Rodgers and Hammerstein composition was the loudest portion of the evening.  The encore was the quietest selection.  James and Sands’ hushed duet on “White Christmas” was four sublime minutes of perfection.