Dynaudio Magazine | Our blog and collection of articles.

The Sound of Humanity: meet Kirk Whalum

Written by Jimi Famurewa | Jun 14, 2022 8:10:23 AM

It is a song that even those with only a passing interest in music will know intimately. 1992. Whitney Houston. The Bodyguard soundtrack. A record-breaking 14-week stint at the summit of the Billboard Hot 100. That hushed, unfurling opening and then the soulful tornado of Houston’s delivery. And then, right there, in the middle eight, there is something else. The plaintive wail of a saxophone. Just as clear. Just as soulful. Just as heartbreakingly raw and human. And behind that unforgettable sound? A Memphis-born jazz legend by the name of Kirk Whalum.

Now, for some, being a key part of I Will Always Love You – one of the most abiding pop moments in modern history – would represent an unbeatable career zenith. It would, if we are frank, provide an invitation to do some contented laurel-resting, fuelled by the fumes of such a blazing triumph.

Not for Kirk Whalum. Since that early ’90s breakout (one of many, many highs from a seven-year collaboration with the late singer) Whalum has rarely stayed still. There have been projects with jazz greats Rick Braun and Norman Brown. He completed reworked versions of the songs of artists like Donny Hathaway and Babyface. His landmark, 21-year-old The Gospel According to Jazz project is on its fourth instalment.

 

 

 

 

What is music, anyway?

And now, Whalum is bringing his passion, his span of musical knowledge and his outsize charisma to a unique collaboration with Dynaudio. Over the coming months, Whalum and an illustrious cast of other instrumentalists, sonic thinkers, creators and agitators will explore some of music’s most fascinating questions. Why does one instrument, rather than another, speak so compellingly to a future virtuoso? What prompts lone musicians to seek out other ears, hearts and minds? Why do some unlikely collaborations prove disastrous and why do some hit career-defining, world-shaking creative pay dirt?

These are just some of the areas that will be prodded, teased and pulled apart. Not in pursuit of some definably ‘correct’ answer but, rather, merely in the hope of an open, evolving dialogue and a deeper understanding. Whalum will be at the heart of all this, of course. And – beyond the career resume detailed above – you may be wondering what makes him the man to lead this figurative sonic brain trust. Well, to understand where Whalum is now (and where he is heading) you need to first understand where he came from.