Originally issued in 1978, and making its first appearance on CD,
Apogee would never have been released on
Warner Bros. if
Steely Dan's
Becker and
Fagen -- then coming off of
Aja -- hadn't produced it.
Warner was not in the business of issuing new
jazz records at the time.
Apogee is an anomaly in many ways. First, it is a southern California answer to the great titan tenor battle records of the '40s and '50s. Rather than sounding like a cutting contest, it sounds like a gorgeous exercise in swinging harmony and melodic
improvisation by two compadres.
Pete Christlieb, who was then a member of
the Tonight Show Band and played on
Tom Waits' records, is a solid, old-school swinging tenor player whose style comes out of the
West Coast school, but whose phrasing feels more like 52nd Street circa 1947.
Warne Marsh was already a legend, 20 years older than
Christlieb, a warrior who had developed his own style on the tenor apart from
Rollins,
Coltrane,
Dexter Gordon, or any of the big stylists. His phrasing and
improvisational ideas are outside of time and space because he thwarted the conventions at every turn, yet he remained one of the most rhythmically astute improvisers in
jazz history. His time spent with piano and composition genius
Lennie Tristano is what laid the groundwork, but by the time
Marsh recorded this set he was in a league of his own. With a rhythm section that included
Lou Levy on piano,
Jim Hughart (another
Waits sideman at the time), and
Nick Ceroli on drums, the pair engaged a kind of freewheeling, good-time set that remains one of the most harmonically sophisticated recordings to come out of the 1970s.
The track selection revolves around the opening track,
"Magna-Tism," a jam reworked around the title cut of another like-minded southern California tenors album from the 1950s called
Just Friends by
Bill Perkins and
Richie Kamuca. Here,
Christlieb and
Marsh executed their lines -- courtesy of beautiful charts by
Joe Roccisano -- with grace, ease, and maverick intensity. There is a playfulness that comes to the front line from the rhythm section that both propels and lures the players into one another's orbits. While the opener offers long and loping dual lines, the intense solo contrasts on
"Tenors of the Time," written by
Roccisano especially for the session, showcase their wildly divergent solo approaches.
Marsh could charge the rhythm section or wind his way around it, while
Christlieb's sense of swing was open and hard. When they go after one another at about five and a half minutes into the track, the entire thing breaks wide open and becomes one of the great contrapuntal "singalong" moments in recorded
jazz history. Other standouts include the two blowout jam approaches to
Charlie Parker's
"Donna Lee" and the
Kern/
Mercer classic
"I'm Old Fashioned." But this is not merely some
neo-bop exercise in self-congratulation, as evidenced by the radical chromatic reworking of
Tristano's
"317 E. 32nd" or the melodic extrapolation at the heart of
"Rapunzel," composed by
Becker and
Fagen after the
Bacharach/David tune
"Land of Make Believe." The 2004
Rhino remaster, which features spectacular sound, also includes three bonus tracks form the session, the most notable of which is
Levy's moving groover
"Lunarcy." There are new liner notes by
David Ritz as well as the originals by the late
Robert Palmer. This is a bona fide classic that was well worth the wait for a deluxe CD treatment. ~ Thom Jurek