Hadley Caliman

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Hadley Caliman with the Freddie Hubbard Quintet at the Pori Jazz Festival, Finland, 1978.

Hadley Caliman (January 12, 1932 – September 8, 2010),[1] was an American bebop saxophone and flute player.

After studying at the Jefferson High School with trumpeter Art Farmer and fellow saxophonist Dexter Gordon,[2] Caliman performed or recorded with Carlos Santana,[2] Joe Henderson, Earl Hines, Freddie Hubbard,[3] Jon Hendricks,[1] Earl Anderza,[4] Patrice Rushen[5] and several other jazz notables.

In the late 1960s, he was briefly a member of a jazz-rock fusion group led by Ray Draper. He recorded his first solo album in 1971.

Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Caliman was active leading a quartet and quintet in the Seattle area, served on the music faculty at Cornish College of the Arts, and taught private lessons to area musicians.[6] He died of liver cancer in September 2010, at the age of 78.[7]

Discography

As Leader

  • 1971: Hadley Caliman (Mainstream Records)
  • 1972: Iapetus(Mainstream)
  • 1976: Projecting (Catalyst Records)
  • 1977: Celebration (Catalyst Records)
  • 2008: Gratitude (Origin Records)
  • 2010: Straight Ahead (Origin Records)
  • 2010: Reunion - Hadley Caliman & Pete Christlieb (Origin Records)

As Sideman

With Todd Cochran

  • Bayeté: Worlds Around the Sun (Prestige, 1972)

With Hampton Hawes

With Eddie Henderson

With Freddie Hubbard

With Bobby Hutcherson

With Azar Lawrence

With Malo

  • Dos (1972)

With Julian Priester

With Patrice Rushen

With Carlos Santana and Buddy Miles

With Carlos Santana

With Akbar DePriest

  • Live! On the Willamette (1997)

With Nicholas Hoffman

  • Jazzy's Dance (2000)
  • Blues For Eddie (2002)

With Fangs

  • Fangs (2004)

With Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra

  • Sacred Music of Duke Ellington (2006)
  • The Endless Search (2006)

With Thomas Marriott

  • Both Sides of the Fence (2007)

With Pete Christlieb

  • Reunion (2009)

See also

References

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