Blue and cool is the mood as we spin the dial back to the 1950s — a decade of chrome, tailfins, Cold War tension, Beat poetry, and late-night cigarette smoke curling toward the ceiling of a dimly lit club. Beneath the middle class culture of the day, there was a restless heartbeat of jazz. This was the era when bebop matured into cool, hard bop caught fire, and modal explorations began reshaping the language of improvisation. Artists like Miles Davis refined understatement into revolution, John Coltrane stretched harmony toward spiritual searching, Thelonious Monk bent notes and expectations alike, and Ella Fitzgerald turned the human voice into a virtuosic instrument. Jazz in the ’50s wasn’t background music — it was conversation, protest, poetry, and possibility. Dave’s selected some important landmarks and deep tracks that take you into those dusty digital bins of jazz and improvisation this morning on Deeper Roots.
No.
1
Artist
Title
Album
Buy
2
George Shearing Quintet Feat. Nancy Wilson
Lullaby Of Birdland
The Swingin's Mutual!
3
Charlie Parker
Blues For Alice
Confirmation: The Best Of The Verve Years
4
Charlie Parker
Au Privave
Confirmation: The Best Of The Verve Years
5
Horace Silver & The Jazz Messengers
Doodlin'
Ken Burns Jazz [Disc 4]
6
Sal Salvador
Round Trip
Capitol Jazz 50th Anniversary Collection [Disc 3]
7
The Modern Jazz Quartet
Django
Django
8
Chet Baker
My Funny Valentine
Closer Than A Kiss: Crooner Classics
9
Erroll Garner Trio
Misty
Your Hit Parade – 1954
10
Clifford Brown & Max Roach
I Get A Kick Out Of You
Ken Burns Jazz [Disc 4]
11
Sonny Rollins
St. Thomas
Saxophone Colossus
12
Sonny Rollins
Oleo
Prestige Profiles Bonus
13
Eddie Heywood
Soft Summer Breeze
Great Instrumental Hits Of The 50s-80s (10 Songs)
14
Thelonious Monk
Nice Work If You Can Get It
The Original Jazz Masters Series – Vol. 4 [Disc 5]