In 1963, alto saxophonist Jackie McLean was well aware of John Coltrane and Ornette Coleman. He assembled a band with vibist Bobby Hutcherson, who had already played with Eric Dolphy, drummer Tony Williams, bassist Eddie Khan, and trombonist/composer Grachan Moncur III. While still adhering to the hard bop principle, One Step Beyond's title is literal. The introduction of space as an element in the twin-horn front line is consistent with what would come later that year on Destination Out! McLean is clearly hearing the Eastern modalism and intervallic invention in Coltrane's sound at this point, but still moves in his own direction, sticking very close to the blues and the hard, even relentless, swing provided by Williams on the kit. The true visionary compositions here are Moncur's "Frankenstein" and "Ghost Town." Their unconventional solo-horn melodic statements are followed by two horn choruses that use Hutcherson's vibes as a contrapuntal element as he spreads his chords so wide that he comes off like a pair of pianos playing complementary harmonic strategies, and it's revolutionary. Add to this Moncur's insistence on soloing inside the changes as McLean moves through the register and becomes increasingly dissonant, and you have a true doppelgänger effect -- but one that swings like mad. One Step Beyond may have been the first volley McLean fired in the direction of the new jazz, and played it safe enough to ride out the hard bop he helped to create, but he cannot be faulted as a bandleader, as this music still sounds fresh, vital, and full of grainy mystery. - Thomas Jurek
Tracks
01. Saturday And Sunday (Jackie McLean)
02. Frankenstein (Grachan Moncur III)
03. Blue Rondo (Jackie McLean)
04. Ghost Town (Grachan Moncur III)
05. Saturday And Sunday (Alternate take)
GRACHAN MONCUR III trombone
JACKIE McLEAN alto sax
BOBBY HUTCHERSON vibes
EDDIE KHAN bass
ANTHONY WILLIAMS drums
Recorded April 30, 1963 at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
Blue Note Records - BST 84137 / RVG Edition 50999 2 65139 2 8