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Jazz Piano Masterpieces: From Classic Essentials to Contemporary Favorites

Among the many forms of jazz, Japanese listeners have an extraordinary fondness for piano-centered works—especially piano trios.

There are countless appeals to jazz piano, but when the piano—an instrument capable of everything from delicate phrasing to bold, daring play—teams up with the open-ended genre of jazz, the possibilities are truly limitless.

In this article, we’ve selected classic jazz albums with the piano at the forefront.

From timeless, history-making staples to popular releases by a new generation of pianists, and even works that take more unconventional approaches, we’ve covered a wide range.

Whether you’re new to jazz or looking to fall even deeper in love with piano jazz, this is a must-read!

Jazz Piano Masterpieces: From Classic Essentials to Contemporary Favorites (31–40)

Money Jungle

Money JungleDuke Ellington

Duke Ellington, often hailed as “the greatest musician in 20th-century jazz and popular music,” was a towering figure with a wide-ranging body of work and a brilliant career, and perhaps doesn’t get as many chances to be discussed purely as a pianist as one might expect.

The album being introduced here, Money Jungle, released in 1963, is in fact one of the relatively few piano trio recordings in Ellington’s catalog.

Precisely for that reason, it can be called an essential masterpiece for appreciating his appeal as a pianist.

Teaming up with the then-young, renowned players Charles Mingus and Max Roach, Ellington engages in an exchange of aggressively charged performances that truly merits the phrase “triumvirate rule”—it’s thrilling and incredibly cool.

In conclusion

Did this article help convey, even a little, that piano jazz isn’t just quiet and beautiful, but spans a wide range—from avant-garde approaches to sounds with rock-like dynamism? Whether it’s standard jazz numbers or original compositions, it’s fascinating how each pianist’s individuality comes through.

I hope you’ll enjoy listening with that in mind.