Stylish hip-hop! A roundup of classic albums in Western jazzy hip-hop
Even among music lovers, there are probably many people who, based on a vague image, feel something like, “Hip-hop—or rather rap—isn’t really my thing…” Of course everyone has their likes and dislikes, but if you change your point of entry, you might be surprised to find yourself getting into it.
With that hope in mind, this article focuses on overseas “jazzy hip-hop”! As the name suggests, it’s hip-hop influenced by jazz—generally called “jazz rap” abroad—a subgenre of hip-hop that blossomed in the 1990s.
Even if you’re not into hip-hop, please enjoy these classic albums with stylish tracks and grooves that are easy to listen to and will get your heart dancing!
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Stylish Hip-Hop! A roundup of classic Western Jazzy Hip-Hop albums (21–30)
SmileHocus Pocus

If you can quickly name a few artists or bands when someone mentions French hip-hop, you’re probably a serious hip-hop fan.
While we’ve mainly introduced many acts from the genre’s homeland, the U.S., the group featured here, Hocus Pocus, is a French hip-hop outfit that, like The Roots, centers its sound around a live band.
Formed around MC/producer 20syl, the six-piece includes guitar, bass, drums, keyboards, and a DJ.
They’re highly popular in Japan as well, having performed at major festivals like Asagiri JAM and Fuji Rock.
Their second album, Place 54, is a hybrid masterpiece: rooted in mellow jazz grooves yet seamlessly blending soul, funk, R&B, and world music through refined taste and skilled musicianship.
With contributions from artists like Omar and jazz legend Fred Wesley, it offers a rich sonic world that transcends the boundaries of hip-hop—definitely worth experiencing.
The Music feat. SIENNAFunky DL

From the moment you see the album title “Blackcurrent Jazz,” you can sense a rich jazz aroma wafting through.
Hailing from the UK, Funky DL is a quintessential rapper-producer known for his jazzy hip-hop.
He’s enjoyed success in the U.S.
as well, producing for major artists like Missy Elliott, and in Japan he’s widely known for his close association with the late Nujabes.
A prolific artist who continues to release music energetically, Funky DL’s standout work—and the one we’ll introduce here—is the classic “Blackcurrent Jazz.” If you’re into jazz rap, this is a must-hear, and it’s also highly recommended as the perfect first entry into Funky DL’s music.
As noted at the outset, this is a straightforwardly jazz-themed project, offering a sophisticated mellowness that seamlessly bridges jazz and hip-hop—an endlessly pleasant, blissful listening experience that will appeal not only to jazz fans but also to lovers of R&B.
It’s not just “kinda jazzy” for the vibe; it’s the sound of an artist with jazz firmly rooted in his background, and it’s outstanding.
As an aside, this work has become a series, with three albums released as of 2022.
In All the Wrong PlacesKero One

While the golden age of jazzy hip-hop was the 1990s, there have of course been many artists since the 2000s who fuse jazz and hip-hop to present their own distinctive styles.
The star of this piece, the Korean-American Kero One, is a rapper and producer whose weapon is an inventive sound that moves freely between hip-hop and jazz.
It was Japanese music fans who first recognized Kero One, who had been pursuing DIY music activities in the underground scene; even before his album debut he had already performed in Japan, an experience that greatly influenced the rest of his career.
In addition to his MC and track-making skills, Kero One is multitalented, including in graphic design, and his landmark debut album, Windmills of the Soul, stands as a monument of jazzy hip-hop that serves as a culmination of everything he achieved through DIY.
From the very first track, Windmills Intro—with its semi-acoustic guitar arpeggios and tasteful beat—you can sense that the album’s success is all but guaranteed.
The tracks, which use not only jazz loops but also live instruments, are mellow and groovy, offering listeners a superb vibe whether as a soundtrack to daily life or as lounge music.
There’s also an instrumental version, Windmills Of The Soul Inst., which is recommended for those who want to focus on the tracks themselves.
ResurrectionCommon

When it comes to legendary Chicago rappers, it has to be Common—the Grammy-winning artist who also took home an Academy Award for Best Original Song.
He began his career under the name Common Sense before shortening it to “Common,” and has since continued to release notable works that venture beyond hip-hop into various genres, while also staying active as a film actor.
As mentioned, the last album he released under the name Common Sense—and his second overall—was 1994’s sophomore effort Resurrection, a must-listen classic for anyone interested in jazzy hip-hop.
From the opening title track alone—with its looping piano phrase, impeccably scratched hook, and Common’s skillful rapping that favors lyrical poignancy over shock value—you can tell the album’s excellence is assured.
The record is packed with classic tracks that carry mellow, jazzy grooves, including the masterpiece I Used to Love H.E.R., which samples George Benson’s The Changing World.
The production was handled by No I.D., for whom this album, like for Common, became a breakthrough.
While it didn’t achieve commercial success at the time, it received high critical acclaim and cemented its place in history as a work that put Chicago hip-hop on the map in a scene then dominated by New York and Los Angeles.
Loungin’Guru

If what you want is thoroughly jazz-soaked hip-hop, I highly recommend the solo album series Jazzmatazz by Guru, the MC of the legendary hip-hop duo Gang Starr.
Released under the title Guru’s Jazzmatazz, the series spans four volumes, and a best-of compilation, The Best of Guru’s Jazzmatazz, came out in 2008.
Here, we’re focusing on the landmark first installment from 1993, Guru’s Jazzmatazz, Vol.
1.
As you can tell from Guru’s calm words over the wistful trumpet on the opening track, Introduction, this is not just hip-hop with a jazz flavor—it’s a project born from the aim of fusing jazz and hip-hop as authentic Black music.
True to that statement, the album features veteran and up-and-coming artists from hip-hop, R&B, and jazz across the U.S.
and Europe, and first-time listeners will be astonished by its cool, cutting-edge sound.
The de facto opening number, Loungin’, features Donald Byrd on trumpet, and right from the start the boundary between jazz and hip-hop dissolves, letting you fully savor the richness of Black music.
With contributions from British artists as well, the contemporaneous acid-jazz sophistication and groove are irresistibly stylish!


