Sacred Garden, the latest essential statement from the Kansas City saxophonist Logan Richardson and Blues People, opens with a clip of a Charlie Parker interview. The deafening arena rock anthem “Twenty Twenty Four” immediately follows. Richardson and his colleagues sound prepared to accompany a current pop trailblazer like Travis Scott, SZA or The Weeknd. The message seems clear: the truest way to uphold Parker’s spirit in 2024 is to work at the vanguard of contemporary music. Sacred Garden is decidedly up to date. “Back to the Point” blends a sticky funk groove with shards of heavy metal. Richardson refines his signature sound on tracks including “Moonlight,” “The Fallen” and “The Walls Speak.” In the interview, Parker said “most likely in another twenty-five, or maybe fifty years some youngster will come along and take the style and really do something with it.” Richardson clearly isn’t afraid of inviting bold comparisons. His audacity is justified on Sacred Garden.