Effort hopes to rebuild eastern KC neighborhood by reviving jazz roots
April 20, 2017 | Bobby Burch
Since the 1920s, jazz has built a reputation for Kansas City.
About 90 years later, a local organization is hoping the power of jazz can rebuild Kansas City.
Led by co-founders and spouses Daniel and Ebony Edwards, KC Jazz LP is working to establish Kansas City as the jazz recording capital of the world while helping revitalize the origins of its jazz heritage.

Ebony and Daniel Edwards with their little girl.
KC Jazz LP held its first “Record to Rebuild” benefit concert Wednesday from which the nonprofit will use proceeds to transform a vacant neighborhood in Kansas City’s underserved east side near 18th and Vine. The recorded concert — featuring vocalist Krystle Warren and trumpet player Hermon Mehari — also will be made into an album, whose proceeds will support revitalization efforts to make the neighborhood a creative hub for artists of all kinds.
“We want to rebuild the area — specifically the neighborhood in which swing jazz came from and went globally,” Daniel Edwards said. “All the recordings we make, the proceeds go to rebuild throughout the community.”
Edwards said that his organization’s ultimate vision is to build a world-class performance venue that would rival the Kauffman Center, but be specifically for jazz on the east side. The neighborhood — nearby the historic 18th and Vine jazz district — has been decimated by urban blight and all but one house has been demolished.
The Edwardses own 38 vacant lots in the neighborhood, including the condemned house at 2519 Michigan Avenue, which the couple plans to restore to become a recording studio.

2519 Michigan Ave.
“It’s rough — I’ll tell you,” Daniel Edwards said. “But it’s the only house on the block that still exists and it was built in the 1890s. The city has had a long history of tearing down properties and I’ve been fighting to keep the building alive for the last six months. I’ve kept getting demolition notices but we’re trying to save it to be a resource for artists.”
Immediate next steps for KC Jazz LP is to purchase streaming tech equipment to capture its live concerts. Ebony Edwards said the equipment will allow her organization to share Kansas City Jazz music in a high-quality format with people around the world.
With a larger global audience, she’s hopeful that not only more people will support their mission but also discover the area’s amazing musicians.
“I’m excited to showcase to the world the amazing talent we have here in Kansas City,” she said. “I want this to put us on the map.”
Ebony Edwards said she’s been encouraged by the community’s supportive response to KC Jazz LP. The concert on Wednesday — which she said was a coming out party of sorts for KC Jazz LP — attracted more than 100 people, many of whom were unfamiliar with their work and the area jazz community.
“They’re happy we’re bringing new energy to the community,” she said. “Yesterday was such a success because it was our first time having the opportunity to talk to a broader community who isn’t familiar with the jazz scene and neighborhood. So many of the people that we met yesterday were getting familiar with this project were very supportive, excited and wanted to see it happen.”

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
West Coast accelerator for women taps second wave of Kansas City tech founder talent
Kansas City is in the pipeline now, as the FourthWave Accelerator for women in tech recently selected a local founder for its cohort for the second consecutive year. After her own valuable experience with the accelerator in 2021, Carlanda McKinney, founder of Bodify, encouraged her fellow Pipeline fellow Terri Foudray, founder and CEO of ConvIOT,…
After exit: How Rx Savings Solutions’ $875M sale could mean opportunity for KC (even if details aren’t yet clear)
The years after a headline-grabbing acquisition can mean a “jump ball” for the ecosystem where the startup was grown, said Jeff Hornsby, acknowledging the various outcomes ahead when a hometown company gets new owners. Possibilities range from massive community reinvestment to staffing reductions and all-out relocation, though such moves aren’t mutually exclusive. “They may say…
NFL Draft wants diverse vendors for ‘largest event in the history of our city’; Here’s how to apply
When the NFL Draft comes to Kansas City in April, diverse local businesses will share center stage with the next generation of football players. The NFL Business Connect program is an initiative that seeks to link up to 100 local, diverse businesses with large event experience to contracting opportunities related to the 2023 NFL Draft,…
These brothers brought artisan Mexican designs to the streets of KC; now Pancho’s Blanket is opening a Crossroads shop
A handmade Mexican garment company led by brothers Jonathan and Joseph Garvey is quickly making the leap from First Friday pop up to Crossroads storefront — announcing the debut of a permanent home for the shop next week. Pancho’s Blanket — which partners with artisans in Tlaxcala, Mexico, to design and make wool jackets, blankets,…
