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Hadley Caliman / Pete Christlieb: Reunion
ByHe attributes it to retirement. He taught at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle for 22 years. He gave up his day gig several years ago and says, "Now I can get up in the morning and practice and search for the right sound. I think I've started to figure some things out."
If someone has been good for a very long time, is it appropriate to call him a late bloomer? Hadley was good enough in the 1950's to be considered a peer by other tenor saxophone players of the Los Angeles Central Avenue scene, like

Dexter Gordon
saxophone, tenor1923 - 1990

Wardell Gray
saxophone, tenor1921 - 1955

Harold Land
saxophone, tenor1928 - 2001

Teddy Edwards
saxophone, tenor1924 - 2003

Carlos Santana
guitarb.1947

Dexter Gordon
saxophone, tenor1923 - 1990

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
Gratitude and Straight Ahead, Hadley's comeback albums on the Origin label, used mostly younger Seattle players. The new album, Reunion, reaches deep into Hadley's rich past. Reunion has a co-leader, the world-class tenor saxophonist

Pete Christlieb
saxophoneb.1945
They go back, specifically, to a club called Marty's, on 58th and Broadway in mid-1960's Los Angeles. At the time it was part of an active L.A. club scene that included Donte's and Shelly's Manne Hole. Hadley says, "It was right after I got out of my drug hell. I was on parole. They required that I have a steady job. I was lucky enough to get a regular gig in the house band at Marty's.
Bobby Bryant
b.1934
Pearl Bailey
vocals1918 - 1990

Louie Bellson
drums1924 - 2009
Pete remembers some facts the same and some differently: "The band was Bobby Bryant on trumpet, two tenors, organ, and drums. When Herman Riley was on the road I was there every night and twice on Sunday. I was just 20. Hadley looked out for me. There's such a thing as bandstand etiquette. I never knew anything about it. I just tried to knock everybody's socks off. At Marty's, two tenor players meant a sword fight. Hadley looked out for me, but he also gave me a lot of whuppin's. He whupped the crap out of me, but it builds character. I got a history lesson and a music lesson. I came out of there at 22 a much more seasoned guy."
Hadley and Pete went separate ways. Hadley joined Gerald Wilson's big band, then moved to San Francisco, played with Santana, and eventually settled in the Pacific Northwest. Pete has had a distinguished career in music. He has been associated with many big bands, from

Woody Herman
band / ensemble / orchestra1913 - 1987

Doc Severinsen
trumpetb.1927

Steely Dan
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1972
Until Reunion, with one exception, they had not played together in over 40 years. There was one gig at a jazz festival in Portland Oregon many years ago. It had gone well enough that there had been talk of forming a band. Nothing came of it. Pete says, "We were both busy, and two states apart." When they came together to make Reunion, the cutting sessions of the old days at Marty's, now filtered through two lifetimes of musical and human experience, became the deep background for an intimate conversation. Pete says, "The important thing is to listen to your partner and complement his efforts. It was brotherly love in that studio."
There is a paradox at the center of this album. Reunion can be heard both as a testament to aesthetic and spiritual compatibility and a study in stark contrast. Pete and Hadley are very different players. They suggest the wide spectrum of what is possible on the tenor saxophone. The opening track, "Little Dex," sets the rules of engagement.

Bill Anschell
pianob.1959

Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis
saxophone, tenor1922 - 1986
Bill Anschell describes the contrast between Pete and Hadley this way: "Pete is so brash and assertive, yet everything he plays is kind of perfect. Hadley is more searching." Hadley's first search comes at 2:19 of "Little Dex." When Pete finishes and Hadley begins, it is like going from a man hollering proclamations to a seeker maneuvering toward an elusive goal. Pete charges down the center of ideas but Hadley slides into them sideways. Hadley's tone is not as strong and "perfect" as Pete's, but it is more like a mortal human voice, more existential in its moment-to-moment emotional impulses and cognitive discoveries.
"Little Dex" is what they called Hadley when he was first coming up. Dexter Gordon is only one of the echoes in Hadley's sound now, but Hadley says that back in the day, on Central Avenue, "Dexter was a god, and I had Dexter down. I parted my hair like him. I even had knock-knees like Dexter. The only thing was, I wasn't tall enough."
The other eight tracks offer continuous varied rewards. "Up Jumped Spring" is a song about ecstasy. Hadley played it with its composer, Freddie Hubbard. Pete takes the first solo. Hadley wrote "Comencio" in prison. It is also on Gratitude, but a version with Pete Christlieb is necessarily hotter. Hadley says, "It's the first tune I ever wrote that made sense." Hence the title. Hadley goes first. What makes him an exciting soloist, as he darts and dodges around his subject matter, is the sense that he might go anywhere. His provisional, spontaneous brush strokes always come upon a painting. "Gala" is an old tune by Hadley, who plays the head and takes the first solo. He describes it as "a song with strong audience appeal." No wonder. Its two-chord vamp is exotic and haunting. Hadley says, "Musicians can take it wherever they want." Bill Anschell takes it in a long arc, from quiet circling pools to insidiously accumulating intensity. It is the best of Anschell's many strong solos. An interesting subplot of this album is the striking work of

Chuck Deardorf
bassb.1954
Reunion is a joint venture, a celebration of a bond between two kindred spirits, long separated. It is also an album alive with fervent energy, set in motion and sustained by the lithe, strategic drummer

John Bishop
drumsb.1959
That description would probably sound grandiose to Hadley, who is modest and matter-of-fact about his art. He would be more likely to describe "I Thought About You" as one more attempt to "figure things out." He says, "I do what I do. If people like it, it's the greatest feeling in the world."
Liner Notes copyright ? 2025 Thomas Conrad.
Reunion can be purchased here.
Contact Thomas Conrad at All About Jazz.
Thomas travels frequently writing about jazz outside the borders of the United States.
Track Listing
Little Dex; Up Jumped Spring; Comencio; Gala; I Thought About You; Nasty Green; Wide Stance; Dream On; Love For Sale.
Personnel
Hadley Caliman
saxophonePete Christlieb
saxophoneBill Anschell
pianoChuck Deardorf
bassJohn Bishop
drumsAlbum information
Title: Reunion | Year Released: 2010 | Record Label: Origin Records
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