Kirk Whalum

Kirk Whalum (born July 11, 1958) is an American jazz saxophonist and songwriter. He toured with Whitney Houston for more than seven years and soloed in her single "I Will Always Love You", the best-selling single by a female artist in music history. He was also featured on many Luther Vandross albums, most often playing on the singer's covers of older pop and R&B standards such as "Anyone Who Had a Heart", "I (Who Have Nothing)", and "Love Won't Let Me Wait".

Kirk Whalum
Kirk Whalum in 1987
Background information
Born (1958-07-11) July 11, 1958
Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.
GenresSmooth jazz, pop, R&B, gospel
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsSaxophone, flute
Years active1985–present
LabelsWarner Bros., Sony, Columbia
Associated actsJonathan Butler, Whitney Houston, Luther Vandross, Babyface, Bob James, Donny Hathaway, Lalah Hathaway
Websitekirkwhalum.com

Whalum has recorded a series of well received solo albums and film soundtracks, with music ranging from pop to R&B to smooth jazz. His musical accomplishments have brought him a total of 12 Grammy nominations. He won his first Grammy award in 2011 for Best Gospel Song ("It's What I Do", featuring Lalah Hathaway) alongside lifelong friend and writer Jerry Peters.

Biography

Whalum performing in a September, 2007 music festival in Nashville.

Kirk Whalum was born in Memphis, Tennessee. He attended Melrose High School and Texas Southern University, where he was a member of the renowned Ocean of Soul Marching Band. In addition to singing in his father's church choir, Whalum learned to love music from his grandmother, Thelma Twigg Whalum, a piano teacher, and two uncles, Wendell Whalum and Hugh "Peanuts" Whalum, who performed with jazz bands around the country. He told John H. Johnson's magazine Ebony Man in a 1994 profile, "The music I like to play and write encompasses the four elements I grew up with: Memphis R&B, gospel, rock, and jazz. The emphasis, though, is on melody, period."[1]

In 1986, he performed at Jean Michel Jarre's giant concerts Rendez-Vous Houston and Rendez-Vous Lyon. At each concert, he performed the track "Last Rendez-Vous," also known as "Ron's Piece," in place of Jarre and Whalum's mutual friend, saxophonist and astronaut Ron McNair, who died in the Challenger disaster.

Whalum recorded a duet with R&B singer, Jevetta Steele called "Love Is A Losing Game" in 1993.

Whalum has worked on a number of film scores, including for The Prince of Tides, Boyz n the Hood, The Bodyguard, Grand Canyon, and Cousins (film).

In 2005 Whalum recorded the Babyface Songbook (2005) with R&B icon Babyface's best songs of the past 15 years, including "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)," "I'll Make Love to You," "When Can I See You," and others. Joining in the intimate and stylish proceedings are other smooth jazz notables, including trumpeter Rick Braun, soprano saxophone player Dave Koz, and guitarists Norman Brown and Chuck Loeb among others. That same year, he also performed a cover "Any Love" on the album Forever, For Always, For Luther, which included other smooth jazz greats, like the aforementioned Dave Koz, bassist Marcus Miller, tenor saxophonist Richard Elliot and alto saxophonist Mindi Abair covering Vandross' well-known songs. Whalum also contributed to the 2008 documentary film Miss HIV.

On June 20, 2014, Whalum was the inaugural Jazz Legend honoree of the National Museum of African American Music in Nashville, Tennessee. In September 2015, it was announced that Whalum would be joining the faculty of Visible Music College in Memphis, Tennessee.[2] In September 2018 he received the coveted honor of a Brass Note on Historic Beale Street in his native Memphis.

Discography

Studio albums

  • Floppy Disk (1985)
  • And You Know That (1988)
  • The Promise (1989)
  • Caché (1993)
  • In This Life (1995)
  • Joined at the Hip w/ Bob James (1996)
  • Colors (1997)
  • For You (1998)
  • Unconditional (2000)
  • Hymns in the Garden (2001)
  • The Christmas Message (2001)
  • Groovin w/ BWB (Braun, Whalum, Brown) (2002)
  • Into My Soul (2003)
  • Kirk Whalum Performs the Babyface Songbook (2005)
  • Roundtrip (2007)
  • Promises Made: The Millennium Promise Jazz Project (2008)
  • Everything is Everything: The Music of Donny Hathaway (2010)
  • More of Everything is Everything - ep (2010)[3]
  • Romance Language (2011)
  • Human Nature w/ BWB (Braun, Whalum, Brown) (2013)
  • BWB w/ BWB (Braun, Whalum, Brown) (2016)
  • #Lovecovers (2017)
  • Humanite (2019)

The Gospel According to Jazz Series - Live

  • The Gospel According to Jazz: Chapter I (1998)
  • The Gospel According to Jazz: Chapter II (2002)
  • The Gospel According to Jazz Chapter III (2010)
  • The Gospel According to Jazz Chapter IV" (2014)

Live albums

  • Live from the Detroit Jazz Festival 2013 (2014)

Collections

  • The Best of Kirk Whalum(2002)
  • Ultimate Kirk Whalum (2007)

Singles

As sideman

With Joey DeFrancesco

References

  1. Ebony Man, April 1994, p. 10.
  2. "Kirk Whalum to join Visible Music College". Retrieved 2015-09-19.
  3. "More Of Everything Is Everything - EP" Amazon.
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