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My Year in Review 2023 - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Year in Review 2023
Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Year in Review 2022 - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Year in Review 2022
Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Year in Review 2021 - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Year in Review 2021
Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Year in Review 2020 - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Year in Review 2020
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My Top Songs 2025 - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Top Songs 2025
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My Top Songs 2024 - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Top Songs 2024
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My Recent Plays and More - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Recent Plays and More
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My Frequent Plays - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
My Frequent Plays
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Best of Tenth Avenue North - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
Best of Tenth Avenue North
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Best of Skillet - Created with FreeYourMusic.com where you can transfer playlists to Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and others
Best of Skillet
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Rekommendationer

Jazz Piano Essentials - The piano has enjoyed a place of prominence throughout jazz history. Pianists' intrepid shifts and innovations provide a road map of the genre's twists and turns, tracing the early swing of Fats Waller and Count Basie, the bebop of Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk, and the hard bop of Red Garland and Horace Silver. The piano thrives in a solo setting, where musicians can revel in its rhythmic, melodic, and harmonic qualities simultaneously. In big bands, it plays the essential role of directing the flow of traffic while adding mutable textures. And as a microcosm of jazz’s tireless trajectory, it simply can't be beat.
Jazz Piano Essentials
The piano has enjoyed a place of prominence throughout jazz history. Pianists' intrepid shifts and innovations provide a road map of the genre's twists and turns, tracing the early swing of Fats Waller and Count Basie, the bebop of Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk, and the hard bop of Red Garland and Horace Silver. The piano thrives in a solo setting, where musicians can revel in its rhythmic, melodic, and harmonic qualities simultaneously. In big bands, it plays the essential role of directing the flow of traffic while adding mutable textures. And as a microcosm of jazz’s tireless trajectory, it simply can't be beat.
Jazz Vintage - Everyone gets the concept of pairing wine with food, but what about pairing it with music? Barbecues, backyard hangs, informal get-togethers: Here’s a playlist inspired by 1976, a moment when Napa Valley wineries like Chateau Montelena and Stag’s Leap helped bring big, new-world wines into serious conversation, and hybrid artists from George Benson and Weather Report to Joni Mitchell and Steely Dan blended jazz tradition with new pop forms. Because even greats evolve. Our editors regularly update this playlist to highlight celebrated vintages in jazz and wine history, so if you hear something you like, add it to your library.
Jazz Vintage
Everyone gets the concept of pairing wine with food, but what about pairing it with music? Barbecues, backyard hangs, informal get-togethers: Here’s a playlist inspired by 1976, a moment when Napa Valley wineries like Chateau Montelena and Stag’s Leap helped bring big, new-world wines into serious conversation, and hybrid artists from George Benson and Weather Report to Joni Mitchell and Steely Dan blended jazz tradition with new pop forms. Because even greats evolve. Our editors regularly update this playlist to highlight celebrated vintages in jazz and wine history, so if you hear something you like, add it to your library.
Mal Waldron: The Session Musicians - Mal Waldron was the ultimate singer's pianist, providing the kind of delicate, atmospheric backdrop that allowed frontwomen like Lady Day to tear into their songs with stunning emotion (his version of “Willow Weep for Me” with Holiday is a must-hear). But he was also a musician's musician, gleefully poking holes in jazz convention with fellow mavericks such as Eric Dolphy on serpentine tracks like “Fire Waltz.”
Mal Waldron: The Session Musicians
Mal Waldron was the ultimate singer's pianist, providing the kind of delicate, atmospheric backdrop that allowed frontwomen like Lady Day to tear into their songs with stunning emotion (his version of “Willow Weep for Me” with Holiday is a must-hear). But he was also a musician's musician, gleefully poking holes in jazz convention with fellow mavericks such as Eric Dolphy on serpentine tracks like “Fire Waltz.”
West Coast Jazz Essentials - While the jazz scenes in Los Angeles and San Francisco were often overlooked compared to their East Coast and Midwest counterparts during the '40s and '50s, the West Coast has long produced a kaleidoscope of fantastic pioneering music. West Coast jazz often refers to the lighter sounds of cool jazz, which thrived in L.A. during the '50s, but the city was also an early base for beboppers like Charlie Parker and Howard McGhee, and it was where Ornette Coleman first formulated his paradigm-shifting free jazz in the late '50s. Big-band leaders Stan Kenton and Shorty Rogers forged a complex sound that moved away from the dance floor, while small-group leaders like Chico Hamilton and Jimmy Giuffre experimented with classical influences. Up in the Bay Area, pianist Dave Brubeck pioneered his metrically complex sound, eventually topping the charts with <I>Time Out</I> in 1959. The region continues to be a jazz hotbed, proven by the epic spirituality of Kamasi Washington or the hip-hop-drenched sounds of Terrace Martin.
West Coast Jazz Essentials
While the jazz scenes in Los Angeles and San Francisco were often overlooked compared to their East Coast and Midwest counterparts during the '40s and '50s, the West Coast has long produced a kaleidoscope of fantastic pioneering music. West Coast jazz often refers to the lighter sounds of cool jazz, which thrived in L.A. during the '50s, but the city was also an early base for beboppers like Charlie Parker and Howard McGhee, and it was where Ornette Coleman first formulated his paradigm-shifting free jazz in the late '50s. Big-band leaders Stan Kenton and Shorty Rogers forged a complex sound that moved away from the dance floor, while small-group leaders like Chico Hamilton and Jimmy Giuffre experimented with classical influences. Up in the Bay Area, pianist Dave Brubeck pioneered his metrically complex sound, eventually topping the charts with <I>Time Out</I> in 1959. The region continues to be a jazz hotbed, proven by the epic spirituality of Kamasi Washington or the hip-hop-drenched sounds of Terrace Martin.
Freddie Hubbard: The Session Musicians - In addition to his own celebrated solo career, trumpeter Freddie Hubbard backed a host of legendary jazz artists, from John Coltrane and Herbie Hancock, to his three-year tenure with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers alongside Wayne Shorter and Curtis Fuller. The best of these collaborations, including tracks with Oliver Nelson, Eric Dolphy, and McCoy Tyner, are featured in this wide-ranging set.
Freddie Hubbard: The Session Musicians
In addition to his own celebrated solo career, trumpeter Freddie Hubbard backed a host of legendary jazz artists, from John Coltrane and Herbie Hancock, to his three-year tenure with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers alongside Wayne Shorter and Curtis Fuller. The best of these collaborations, including tracks with Oliver Nelson, Eric Dolphy, and McCoy Tyner, are featured in this wide-ranging set.
Lee Morgan: The Session Musicians - Beginning his career at the tender age of 19, trumpet prodigy Lee Morgan became a go-to sideman from moment one. A trusted associate of Art Blakey, Jimmy Smith, Joe Henderson, Grachan Moncur III, and Wayne Shorter, Morgan collaborated with some of the most innovative names in jazz before his life was tragically cut short at age 34.
Lee Morgan: The Session Musicians
Beginning his career at the tender age of 19, trumpet prodigy Lee Morgan became a go-to sideman from moment one. A trusted associate of Art Blakey, Jimmy Smith, Joe Henderson, Grachan Moncur III, and Wayne Shorter, Morgan collaborated with some of the most innovative names in jazz before his life was tragically cut short at age 34.
Third Stream Essentials - On paper, the idea of Third Stream is simple: jazz and classical music, mixed together—not in a way meant to supersede jazz or classical but as, in the words of composer Gunther Schuller, “another option amongst many for today’s creative musicians.” Of course, those musicians took a simple concept and used it as a launchpad to create records that are deep, dynamic, and complex, exploring new possibilities for melody and improvisation. Schuller coined the term in 1957, but this playlist starts earlier, beginning the story of Third Stream with the orchestral innovations of hybrid composers like George Gershwin and Duke Ellington. The Modern Jazz Quartet, meanwhile, take center stage, emerging from Dizzy Gillespie’s rhythm section in the early ’50s, using John Lewis’s subtly swinging piano and Milt Jackson’s unpredictable vibraphone to explore new possibilities in fusion, crossing from the conservatory to the nightclub and back again.
Third Stream Essentials
On paper, the idea of Third Stream is simple: jazz and classical music, mixed together—not in a way meant to supersede jazz or classical but as, in the words of composer Gunther Schuller, “another option amongst many for today’s creative musicians.” Of course, those musicians took a simple concept and used it as a launchpad to create records that are deep, dynamic, and complex, exploring new possibilities for melody and improvisation. Schuller coined the term in 1957, but this playlist starts earlier, beginning the story of Third Stream with the orchestral innovations of hybrid composers like George Gershwin and Duke Ellington. The Modern Jazz Quartet, meanwhile, take center stage, emerging from Dizzy Gillespie’s rhythm section in the early ’50s, using John Lewis’s subtly swinging piano and Milt Jackson’s unpredictable vibraphone to explore new possibilities in fusion, crossing from the conservatory to the nightclub and back again.
Herb Alpert: Deep Cuts - The ingenious trumpeter continues to explore pop-jazz fusion in the 21st century. Drum 'n' bass beats crop up on “Dorita,” and on his adaptation of “Human Nature”—a song made famous by Michael Jackson—he prominently includes turntable scratches. But Alpert never leaves traditional touches behind: Hear his affection for Latin-jazz styles on cuts like “Slinky.”
Herb Alpert: Deep Cuts
The ingenious trumpeter continues to explore pop-jazz fusion in the 21st century. Drum 'n' bass beats crop up on “Dorita,” and on his adaptation of “Human Nature”—a song made famous by Michael Jackson—he prominently includes turntable scratches. But Alpert never leaves traditional touches behind: Hear his affection for Latin-jazz styles on cuts like “Slinky.”
Charlie Rouse & Orrin Keepnews: The Producers - One of the founders of Riverside Records, producer Orrin Keepnews worked with some of the greatest names in post-war jazz, recording hundreds of albums over his career. Known for his warm sound and live-in-the-studio style, Keepnews could handle everything from hard bop to free jazz, and this collection features classics he produced for legends like Thelonious Monk, Bill Evans, and Wes Montgomery.
Charlie Rouse & Orrin Keepnews: The Producers
One of the founders of Riverside Records, producer Orrin Keepnews worked with some of the greatest names in post-war jazz, recording hundreds of albums over his career. Known for his warm sound and live-in-the-studio style, Keepnews could handle everything from hard bop to free jazz, and this collection features classics he produced for legends like Thelonious Monk, Bill Evans, and Wes Montgomery.
Chick Corea: Deep Cuts - This pianist is famous for the eclectic nature of his many groups—and even within a collaboration, he can produce varied styles. Return to Forever are known for rock-influenced jazz, though they deliver prog fusion on “No Mystery.” A union with fiercely swinging bassist Christian McBride resulted in the brisk “Tango Improvisation #1.” Corea was even game to play drums on Wayne Shorter's frenetic “Super Nova.”
Chick Corea: Deep Cuts
This pianist is famous for the eclectic nature of his many groups—and even within a collaboration, he can produce varied styles. Return to Forever are known for rock-influenced jazz, though they deliver prog fusion on “No Mystery.” A union with fiercely swinging bassist Christian McBride resulted in the brisk “Tango Improvisation #1.” Corea was even game to play drums on Wayne Shorter's frenetic “Super Nova.”

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