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Unsung Saxophone Masters #3 – Hadley Caliman: The Search Continues

Posted in In Memoriam, saxophonists, Unsung Saxophone Masters with tags , , , , on April 14, 2026 by curtjazz

Hadley Caliman (1932 – 2010)

You have been told that you have cancer. Late stage. Your time on earth is now limited.

How do you spend it?

You can sit and wait for the inevitable…

You can work like mad to check things off of your “bucket list”…

Or, you can use that time to ensure that you leave an enduring legacy for future generations who practice your craft.

Hadley Caliman chose the third path.

In the final years of his life, he recorded the most memorable music of his more than fifty-year career

After more than three decades without recording as a leader, Caliman released three albums in just two years:

What listeners did not immediately know was that Caliman had recently been diagnosed with liver cancer.

Rather than slow down, he accelerated.

He practiced daily, performed constantly around the Pacific Northwest, and recorded with a renewed sense of urgency. Even as his health declined, he remained focused on the music. His last concerts took place in August 2010, just weeks before his death at age 78.

It was as if Caliman had decided that the final chapter of his life would also be the most concentrated statement of his artistic voice.


From Oklahoma to Central Avenue

Caliman’s journey began far from the jazz capitals.

He was born in Idabel, Oklahoma in 1932, the son of a white father and Black mother whose interracial marriage faced hostility during the Depression era. Eventually, his father brought him to Los Angeles, where the young Caliman encountered touring big bands. He decided he wanted to play the saxophone.

At Jefferson High School, one of the great incubators of West Coast jazz talent, he studied with Dexter Gordon and became known as “Little Dex.”

The nickname was earned honestly. Gordon’s sound and phrasing left a deep imprint on the young tenor player, and the influence would remain audible throughout Caliman’s career.


The Central Avenue Years

In the 1950s Caliman became part of the legendary Central Avenue jazz scene in Los Angeles, playing alongside musicians such as Gordon, Wardell Gray, Harold Land, and Teddy Edwards.

It was a vibrant but dangerous environment.

Drugs were deeply embedded in the scene, and Caliman later spoke openly about his struggles with addiction and the years he lost to incarceration during that period. Surviving those years would become an essential part of his story.

As Caliman himself once reflected: “I played and shot drugs with some who survived and some who didn’t. The fact that I’m still here is miraculous.”


A Working Musician’s Life

Over the decades that followed, Caliman built an impressive but largely unsung career.

He recorded four solid albums as a leader, between 1971 and 1977, starting with his self-titled debut and concluding with Celebration, featuring the legendary Elvin Jones on drums.

He played in the big band of the great West Coast arranger/bandleader, Gerald Wilson. He performed, recorded, or toured with an extraordinary range of artists, including, Freddie Hubbard, Joe Henderson, Mongo Santamaria and Nancy Wilson.

He appeared on recordings with Santana during the early 1970s, when rock bands were beginning to incorporate jazz improvisers into their sound.

But like many strong tenor players of his generation, Caliman never became a widely recognized leader. His career followed the path of the working jazz musician; club dates, touring, sideman work, and eventually teaching.


The Teacher

For more than two decades, Caliman served on the faculty of Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, mentoring younger musicians and shaping the Northwest jazz community.

Students remember him as both demanding and generous.

Teaching also had an unexpected benefit: it deepened his own musical thinking. Caliman later remarked that working with students forced him to continue examining his sound and approach to the instrument.


The Sound

Caliman’s tenor voice reflects several strands of the jazz tradition.

You hear:

  • the authority and swing of Dexter Gordon
  • the harmonic daring of Charlie Parker
  • the spiritual searching of John Coltrane

But the combination is uniquely his.

Critics often describe his tone as warm, rounded, and deeply human; a sound shaped by decades of musical experience and personal struggle.

Where some tenor players proclaim ideas with certainty, Caliman’s improvisations often feel exploratory. His lines circle around musical questions, probing for answers in real time.

He sounds less like a lecturer and more like a seeker.


The Final Chapter

When Caliman retired from teaching in the early 2000s, he returned to performing full-time.

The results were remarkable.

His 2008 album Gratitude, recorded shortly after his cancer diagnosis, marked his first recording as a leader in more than 30 years and reintroduced his voice to a wider audience.

It also served as my introduction to Mr. Caliman.

I was unaware of his life challenges at the time. I nonetheless felt cheated, as if I had wasted time by not listening to him sooner. His sound was powerful, yet warm and inviting and he swung with authority. I wanted more.

Two more albums quickly followed: Straight Ahead (2009) and Reunion (2010), a collaborative session with Pete Christlieb.

That final album carried special significance. The two musicians had first played together decades earlier in a Los Angeles club band, where a young Christlieb occasionally subbed for another tenor player. Now, more than forty years later, they met again in the studio.

The result is not a cutting contest but a conversation between two seasoned voices in the tenor tradition.

Caliman demonstrated so much vitality and creativity during those performances, that I just knew he had so much more to give.

Sadly, that was not the case.


The Last Performance

Even as his health declined, Caliman continued to perform.

He practiced daily until he became too weak to continue, just one week before his death. His final concerts took place in August 2010 in the Seattle area.

Friends who saw him on stage during those final months recalled that once the music began, he was completely focused.

He gave his all until the very end.

Hadley Caliman passed away on September 8, 2010, at the age of 78.

His passing brought a remarkable creative renaissance to a close, but not before he had made sure his voice would be heard.


Where to Begin Listening

If you’re discovering Hadley Caliman tonight, start here:

  1. “Back for More”Gratitude (2008)
  2. “Cathlamet”Straight Ahead (2009)
  3. “Little Dex”Reunion (2010)

Listen for the warmth in the tone and the restless curiosity in the phrasing. Caliman’s solos rarely rush toward conclusions. They keep asking questions.

Conclusion

Hadley Caliman spent a lifetime searching for his sound. In the final years of his life, he seemed determined to make sure that search was heard. Those last recordings are not simply a comeback; they are a statement. A reminder that growth in this music never stops, that the voice continues to evolve, even in the face of mortality. In the end, Caliman did more than leave a legacy. He left a testimony. And if you listen closely, you can still hear him working things out, one phrase at a time.

Reviving Unsung Tenor Saxophone Masters

Posted in saxophonists, Under The Radar, Unsung Saxophone Masters with tags , , , , on March 3, 2026 by curtjazz

THE RETURN

Fourteen years ago, I began a series here at CurtJazz.com called Unsung Saxophone Masters.

I wrote one entry.

Then life, radio, teaching, and a thousand other beautiful distractions carried me in different directions. The series quietly sat there; unfinished, like an unresolved cadence.

But some music waits.

The tenor saxophone, perhaps more than any other instrument in jazz, carries stories. These stories deserve to be told again. They especially include the stories of those who stood just outside the spotlight. As we revive this series, we will start with the tenor players.

When we think of the great jazz tenors, certain names come instantly to mind: Coltrane. Rollins. Webster. Getz. Shorter. Giants, all of them.

But jazz history, and jazz listening, is far richer than its headline names.

This series is about the masters who:

  • Recorded brilliantly but briefly
  • Worked steadily but without myth
  • Influenced deeply but quietly
  • Never quite became the brand

These are not “minor” players. They are musicians of consequence whose legacies deserve deliberate attention.

Back in 2012, I began with Curtis Amy. He was a West Coast tenor with Texas roots. He had a preacher’s warmth in his tone and a sense of spiritual grounding. This often gets overlooked in discussions of Los Angeles jazz.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/9/96/Way_Down_%28album%29.jpg

Amy was never marketed as a movement leader. He was never canonized. But listen closely to Way Down or his sideman work, and you hear authority. Depth. Patience.

He was not unsung because he lacked substance.
He was unsung because history can be selective.

And so, we return.

In the coming installments, we will revisit voices such as:

  • Tina Brooks — the brilliant Blue Note modernist whose recorded legacy is heartbreakingly small
  • J.R. Montrose — harmonically bold, often mislabeled as “West Coast cool”
  • Harold Land — steady, searching, and perpetually underrated
  • And others whose work shaped the sound of modern jazz without always shaping its marketing

This will not be a nostalgia project.

It will be a listening project.

Each post will explore:

  • The sound
  • The context
  • The sideman work
  • The overlooked sessions
  • The emotional center of the player

Because jazz history is not only written by the most visible.

It is carried in tone.

If you’ve followed CurtJazz Radio for any length of time, you already know that we program beyond the obvious. This series simply gives that philosophy a written home again.

The tenor saxophone remains the storytelling horn of modern jazz.

The posts in this series will appear once a week.

Let’s listen to the stories we missed.

I’m not going to leave you musically empty handed. Here’s a sampling of some excellent tenor work on that greatest of tenor jam tunes: “The Eternal Triangle”. Featured are three modern cats. They all deserve wider recognition. They are Eric Alexander, Ralph Lalama and Tad Shull with the great organist Mel Rhyne. . Let this tide you over until our next post in the series, which will feature Harold “Tina” Brooks.