There aren’t many record labels that have become synonymous with a genre, like Blue Note has with jazz. The label’s famed quality control has led to an impressive catalogue with its high point in the 1950s and 1960s, when they churned out future classics by the dozen. But let’s not forget that Blue Note is still relevant to this very day and has remained a true force of innovation. We’ve asked experts, writers, musicians, artists and industry insiders to send us lists of their favourite Blue Note albums – here’s the cumulative result.


What do you think? Drop us a line to tell us how you’d do it info@everythingjazz.com.

85. Nduduzo Makhathini

In the Spirit of Ntu. 2022.

The visionary South African pianist and composer’s milestone record.

Album cover for DOMi & JD DECK - Not Tight.

84. Not Tight

DOMi & JD BECK. 2022.

Hyper-complex, tight jazz fusion from two Gen Z prodigies.

Spontaneous Inventions album cover by Bobby McFerrin.

83. Spontaneous Inventions

Bobby McFerrin. 1986.

Brilliant live recording of the vocal jazz and scat legend.

82. A Night in Tunisia

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers. 1961.

One of the greatest line-ups of the hard bop finishing school.

81. Heavy Soul

Ike Quebec. 1962.

Warm and swinging soul jazz session from tenor saxophonist Ike Quebec.

Cornbread album cover by Lee Morgan.

80. Cornbread

Lee Morgan. 1967.

Following on the heels of his massive success with The Sidewinder.

Album cover for Immanuel Wilkins - The 7th Hand.

79. The 7th Hand

Immanuel Wilkins. 2022.

Powerful and striking modern jazz, featuring a remarkable quartet.

Album cover for Herbie Hancock - Empyrean Isles.

78. Empyrean Isles

Herbie Hancock. 1964.

Another early showcase of the pianist’s full breadth of artistry.

Album cover of Andrew Hill - Black Fire.

77. Black Fire

Andrew Hill. 1965.

An acknowledged masterpiece of modern post-bop jazz.

A New Perspective album cover by Donald Byrd.

76. A New Perspective

Donald Byrd. 1964.

An uplifting and deeply soulful album featuring a vocal choir.

Album cover of Jimmy Smith - Back at the Chicken Shack.

75. Back At The Chicken Shack

Jimmy Smith. 1960/1963.

A soulful classic from the Hammond B-3 innovator.

Album cover of Miles Davis - Vol. 1

74. Vol. 1 & Vol. 2

Miles Davis. 1956.

The master in his early days; from blazing bebop to beautiful ballads.

Marlena album cover by Marlena Shaw.

73. Marlena

Marlena Shaw. 1972.

Gorgeous vocal jazz incorporating elements of R&B and soul.

Dialogue album cover by Bobby Hutcherson.

72. Dialogue

Bobby Hutcherson. 1965.

The vibraphonist’s most adventurous, daring album.

Album cover of Meshell Ndegeocello - The Omnichord Real Book.

71. The Omnichord Real Book

Meshell Ndegeocello. 2023.

A visionary album evoking the history of Black American Music.

Album cover of Sam Rivers - Contours.

70. Contours

Sam Rivers. 1965.

A post-bop classic with avant-garde elements.

Album cover for Tony Williams - Life Time.

69. Life Time

Tony Williams. 1965.

Prodigious drummer goes bandleader on stellar debut album.

Album cover of Stanley Turrentine - Blue Hour.

68. Blue Hour

Stanley Turrentine with The Three Sounds. 1961.

Deeply soulful and swinging hard bop.

67. Evolution

Grachan Moncur III. 1963.

Dark and intriguing avant-jazz from the post-bop period.

Album cover of Big John Patton - Along Came John.

66. Along Came John

Big John Patton. 1963.

Patton and Grant Green with a slice of heavy soul jazz.

Album cover for Kenny Dorham - Whistle Stop.

65. Whistle Stop

Kenny Dorham. 1961.

More classic hard bop from the 1960s vaults.

Album cover for Herbie Hancock - Speak Like A Child.

64. Speak Like A Child

Herbie Hancock. 1968.

The influential pianist and composer in his early prime.

Pianism album cover by Michael Petrucciani.

63. Pianism

Michel Petrucciani. 1986.

One of his generation’s most accomplished pianists.

Album cover for Wayne Shorter - Demons Dance

62. Demon’s Dance

Jackie McLean. 1967.

Angular, modal avant-bop for explorers.

Album cover for Wayne Shorter - Juju.

61. Juju

Wayne Shorter. 1964.

A marvel in the saxophonist’s formidable discography.

Album cover for Donald Byrd - Ethiopian Knights.

60. Ethiopian Knights

Donald Byrd. 1971.

Trumpeter evolving from hard bop maverick to fusion pioneer.

Album cover for Greg Osby - Symbols of Light.

59. Symbols of Light (A Solution)

Greg Osby. 2001.

Jazz group meets classical string quartet – Third Stream sound that works.

Album cover for Birelli Lagrene - Foreign Affairs.

58. Foreign Affairs

Bireli Lagrene. 1988.

Jazz-rock fusion, masterfully executed.

Album cover for Bob Belden - Black Dahlia

57. Black Dahlia

Bob Belden. 2001.

An extended story-telling, romantic and fatalistic suite.

Album cover for Freddie Hubbard - Open Sesame.

56. Open Sesame

Freddie Hubbard. 1960.

The auspicious debut album from the legendary trumpeter.

Album cover for Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - Indestructable.

55. Indestructible

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers. 1964/1966.

The last Messengers session for Wayne Shorter, Reggie Workman and Cedar Walton.

Album cover for Horace Silver - Blowin The Blues Away.

54. Blowin’ The Blues Away

Horace Silver. 1959.

Timeless originals from the hard bop juggernaut.

Album cover for Julian Lage - The Layers.

53. The Layers

Julian Lage. 2023.

One of the virtuoso guitarist’s best albums to date.

Album cover for Eddie Gale - Ghetto Music

52. Eddie Gale’s Ghetto Music

Eddie Gale. 1968.

A seamless blend of jazz, gospel, soul and the blues.

Album cover for Pete La Roca - Basra

51. Basra

Pete LaRoca. 1965.

Dark, innovative, forward-thinking avant-jazz at its best.

Album cover for Booker Ervin - Tex Book Tenor

50. Tex Book Tenor

Booker Ervin. 1968.

The definitive statement of the saxophonist as bandleader and composer.

Album cover for Duke Pearson - How Insensitive.

49. How Insensitive

Duke Pearson. 1969.

A record full of extravagant, layered arrangements.

Album cover for Freddie Hubbard - Blue Spirits.

48. Blue Spirits

Freddie Hubbard. 1965.

The last of an astounding run of recordings for Blue Note.

Album cover for Joe Henderson - Inner Urge.

47. Inner Urge

Joe Henderson. 1966.

The tenor saxophonist and composer in full artistic stride.

Album cover for Clifford Brown - Memorial Album.

46. Memorial Album

Clifford Brown. 1953.

Ascending two set album from the incomparable trumpeter.

Album cover for Charles Lloyd- The Sky Will Still Be Here Tomorrow.

45. The Sky Will Still Be Here Tomorrow

Charles Lloyd. 2024.

Elder jazz statesman still at the peak of his powers.

Album cover for Sonny Rollins - A Night at the Village Vanguard

44. A Night at the “Village Vanguard“

Sonny Rollins. 1958.

One of jazz’s greatest tenor saxophonists at his peak – a truly magical live recording.

43. Destination… Out!

Jackie McLean. 1963.

A vivid document of early 1960s jazz exploration.

Herbie Hancock Takin Off Album Cover

42. Takin’ Off

Herbie Hancock. 1962.

The impressive debut album of a master jazz composer.

Album Cover for Sonny Rollins - Newk's Time

41. Newk’s Time

Sonny Rollins. 1959.

Stellar hard bop and the start of the Blue Note 4000 series.

40. The Phantom

Duke Pearson. 1963.

Underrated gem from the pianist-composer’s catalogue.

Ronnie Foster / Two Headed Freap album cover

39. Two-Headed Freap

Ronnie Foster. 1972.

Funky jazz fusion, immortalized by cratediggers.

38. One Flight Up

Dexter Gordon. 1964.

More goodness from Gordon’s best period.

Album cover for Ambrose Akinmusire - When The Heart Emerges Glistening

37. When The Heart Emerges Glistening

Ambrose Akinmusire. 2011.

A redefining force of American jazz.

36. Mode for Joe

Joe Henderson. 1965.

An album bursting with vigor and vitality.

Album cover for Gene Harris - Astral Signal

35. Astral Signal

Gene Harris. 1974.

A fresh, spirited and varied journey.

34. Into Somethin’

Larry Young. 1965.

The modal exploration of a Hammond B-3.

Album cover for McCoy Tuner Expansions.

33. Expansions

McCoy Tyner. 1968.

Pushing from modal into spiritual jazz territory.

32. Blacks & Blues

Bobbi Humphrey. 1973.

An utterly delightful jazz-funk classic.

31. Idle Moments

Grant Green. 1965.

An impressive display of the masterful guitarist’s skills.

30. Come Away With Me

Norah Jones. 2002.

The arrival of a major talent in jazz, soul and pop.

29. True Blue

Tina Brooks. 1960.

An often overlooked jewel in the catalogue.

28. Now

Bobby Hutcherson. 1969.

One of the his most adventurous recordings.

madlib - shades of blue - album cover

27. Shades of Blue

Madlib. 2003.

Revisiting jazz classics from a hip-hop digger’s perspective.

Album cover for Don Cherry - Complete Communion.

26. Complete Communion

Don Cherry. 1966.

True 1960s avant-garde jazz classic.

25. Ten

Jason Moran . 1963.

One of the most important groups in modern jazz.

24. The Real McCoy

McCoy Tyner. 1962.

Tyner’s masterpiece as a bandleader.

23. Midnight Blue

Kenny Burrell. 1963.

A deep wade into the blues.

22. San Francisco

Bobby Hutcherson & Harold Land. 1962.

Early fusion with a relentless groove.

21. Cool Struttin’

Sonny Clark. 1958.

A timeless hard bop classic for the ages.

Robert Glasper Experiment / Black Radio cover image

20. Black Radio

Robert Glasper. 2012.

Laid out a new paradigm for creative music reaching across jazz, hip-hop and soul music.

Album cover for Thelonious Monk Quartet and John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall.

19. At Carnegie Hall

John Coltrane & Thelonious Monk. 1957/2005.

The definition of a classic live recording.

18. Soul Station

Hank Mobley. 1960.

The crystalline six-song set is the ultimate showcase for Mobley’s lyrical flow.

Cecil Taylor - Unit Structures - Album Cover

17. Unit Structures

Cecil Taylor. 1966.

Scaling the pinnacle of the mid-1960s jazz avant-garde with awe-inspiring performances.

Album cover for Jackie McLean - Let Freedom Ring.

16. Let Freedom Ring

Jackie McLean. 1962.

A melding of the bluesy language of hard bop with the bristling energy of The New Thing.

15. Point of Departure

Andrew Hill. 1963.

A masterpiece of an album that was looking decades into the future of post-bop jazz.

Album cover for Jimmy Smith - A New Sound, A New Star.

14. A New Sound… A New Star…

Jimmy Smith. 1956.

The debut of an organist who changed the way his instrument was played.

13. The Sidewinder

Lee Morgan. 1963.

A comeback and a coronation.

12. Go!

Dexter Gordon. 1962.

A showcase of Gordon’s limitless creativity on hard-swinging numbers.

11. Places & Spaces

Donald Byrd. 1975.

The culmination of the legendary trumpeter’s vibrant latter Blue Note years.

10. Blue Light Til Dawn

Cassandra Wilson. 1993.

An alluring tapestry from one of the most distinctive voices in modern jazz.

9. The Amazing Bud Powell Vol. 1

Bud Powell. 1952.

Bebop piano genius Bud Powell with his best recording for Blue Note.

8. Moanin’

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers. 1959.

Widely recognised as the quintessential hard bop record.

7. Out to Lunch!

Eric Dolphy. 1964.

A genius artist of startling originality with a formidable quintet of modern jazz visionaries.

6. Song For My Father

Horace Silver. 1964.

The enduring jewel in Horace Silver’s catalogue.

5. Somethin’ Else

Cannonball Adderley. 1959.

Adderley’s only album for Blue Note includes the legendary Miles Davis as sideman.

4. Genius of Modern Music, Vol. 1&2

Thelonious Monk. 1951/1952.

An essential slice of early bebop with timeless compositions.

3. Maiden Voyage

Herbie Hancock. 1965.

A standout achievement of the great pianist’s career.

Wayne Shorter / Speak No Evil album cover

2. Speak No Evil

Wayne Shorter. 1966.

A transcendent masterpiece of six Shorter originals.

1. Blue Train

John Coltrane. 1957.

A must-have for all jazz fanatics.