Having plied his trade around the world for more than three decades,
German guitarist, bandleader and musical explorer JJ Whitefield has
always instilled in his craft a natural aesthetic of authenticity, a key
component which has seen him amass a sizeable and varied catalogue of
material which has remained timeless where some of his contemporaries
have faded away.
In the early 90s, as various UK bands were signed up by sizeable labels
and enjoyed even mainstream chart success in the Acid Jazz and rare
groove boom, Whitefield was a founding member of the Poets Of Rhythm,
self-releasing their own uncompromisingly hard-edged take on 70s street
funk on the then completely unfashionable 7” single format, forerunning
the Deep Funk scene by almost a decade. 30 years on, in spite of a
legion of retro-focused bands having followed in their wake, few have
yet to come close to matching the energy and spirit of those early Poets
45s.
Since then, Whitefield has applied himself to all manner of new
incarnations and innovative side-projects, releasing further funk
surveys with his own band under the pseudonym Karl Hector, with releases
on labels such as Stones Throw, Daptone, Ninja Tune, Mo’Wax, Strut and
more. An avid music lover, explorer and
record collector extraordinaire, Whitefield’s music has effortlessly
absorbed his expanding interests along the way, particularly drawing
influence from Ethiopian Jazz and West African funk and highlife, as
well as Kraut-rock and ambient via his Rodinia alter-ego.
More recently, Whitefield has begun to venture into the astral planes of
what’s now commonly referred to as ‘spiritual jazz’, and this is very
much where we find him manifesting on ‘The Infinity Of Nothingness’. A
set of mature, delicate and meditative orchestrations, like much of
Whitefield’s best work the album is studiously true to its key
influences - and in this instance the twin figureheads of Sun Ra and
Pharoah Sanders are particularly preeminent - but also completely avoids
falling into a trap of mere tribute or facsimile. With subtle yet
diverse accents of Hip Hop, Library and the Avant Garde appearing wholly
unobtrusively, the album is unified by a marked trance-like feel,
beginning with the sparse, processional opener ‘Nothingness’ through to
the 3 part ‘Infinity Suite’ of ‘Time’, ‘Space’ and ‘Energy’.
As he did as a schoolboy with the Poets of Rhythm, with ‘The Infinity Of
Nothingness’ Whitefield achieves that exceptionally rare feat of
creating music that is not only worthy of sitting alongside that of his
overarching influences, but will also stand up with it against the tests
of time.
Tracklist:
1. Nothingness
2. Solar Breeze from the East
3. Spectral Realms
4. Infinity Suite, Pt. 1: Time
5. Infinity Suite, Pt. 2: Space
6. Infinity Suite, Pt. 3: Energy