As one of the most well respected American art forms, jazz has shaped the music industry spawning both the careers of various musical geniuses, and an abundance of elemental new music genres. Jazz was developed in the late 19th century and early 20th century as American and European classical music was mixed with African and slave folk songs. These songs were played to a syncopated rhythm, and from this emerged ragtime, then Dixieland and subsequently Big Band, what many consider to be the beginning of modern jazz. There is obvious West African influence, visible in terms of how the music is written and played; swing rhythm, polyrhythm, improvisation and syncopation are all prominent examples which are almost exclusively characteristics of jazz music. Over the course of the 20th century, this art form has been changing drastically as new artists bring on new influence and new sound. Dixieland became big-band, which became be-bop, which became fusion, Latin and free jazz, which, in turn, established their own separate styles like funk, acid-jazz, hard-bop, smooth jazz, cool jazz, etc. The musicians behind this ever growing phenomena are recognized as some of the best musicians of all time. Compiled here are who I believe are the best of the best, and the most influential all throughout the history of jazz music.
Art Tatum was a jazz pianist and virtuoso who was nearly blind. He is acknowledged by many to be one of the greatest pianists of all time, revolutionizing the role piano played in jazz. Tatum drew upon stride piano to build up a style uniquely his own, playing with swinging pulse and futuristic improvisational abilities. His approach to jazz music completely changed the way piano was played: He reharmonized melodies by altering the underlying chord structure, used innovative chord extensions, and dissonance to his benefit. All of these were characteristics of bebop music, happening some 10 years before the first bebop records were even made. He was noted also for having exquisite technique, to a point where he was able to play some of the most difficult passages at high velocity, and still present the illusion that he was hardly moving his hands.
Some of the most complex and dissonant harmonies can be found in the repertoire of pianist and composer Thelonious Monk, one of the most important contributers to bebop music. His somewhat eccentric persona also helped popularize jazz. Known for his “hip” style in suits, hats and sunglasses, Monk, in essence, personified the uniqueness and idiosyncrasy that was his music. His novel, improvisational approach helped to create a plethora of jazz standards like “Epistrophy,” “Blue Monk,” “Straight, No Chaser,” “I Mean You,” and “Well, You Needn’t.” Monk’s style was commonly characterized by his innovative approach to piano playing which included percussive attacks and abrupt pauses. He often got up from the piano during performances and danced a bit while the other members of the band continued playing. Thelonious Monk remains one of the most celebrated and renown pianists in any genre.
An acclaimed bass virtuoso, composer, bandleader, and occasional pianist, Charles Mingus was one of the most creative musicians in the jazz scene. He developed a completely unique style, embracing elements of gospel, hard bop, free jazz, and classical music. Mingus was called the “heir apparent to Duke Ellington” because of his fantastic writing for medium-sized ensembles. His compositions showcased the skill of each of his players, whom he made sure were not only talented, but characteristically unique like himself. Mingus was feared for his temper, both on and offstage. He once punched trombonist Jimmy Knepper in the face, breaking off a crowned tooth and essentially ruining Knepper’s embouchure. Mingus suffered from clinical depression and refused to compromise his musical integrity, which resulted in on-stage eruptions and often the threatening of other band mates. Despite this, Mingus is one of the most important figures in bebop, bass and jazz history.
Art Blakey was a famous American drummer and bandleader who revolutionized the way jazz drums were played. His unique approach to drumming incorporated bits of swing, blues, funk and hard bop; a style which is heard today in drummers everywhere. Along with Max Roach and Kenny Clarke, he is considered to have invented the modern bebop style of drumming. For over 30 years, his band The Jazz Messengers launched the careers of a multitude of famous jazz artists, like Benny Golson, Wayne Shorter, Clifford Brown, Curtis Fuller, Horace Silver, Freddie Hubbard, Keith Jarrett, Wynton Marsalis and countless others. The Jazz Messengers not only produced phenomenal music, but served as a proving ground of sorts for young musicians, similar to Miles Davis’ band. Art Blakey’s style changed the way jazz sounded, and the way drums were played in modern bebop.
American jazz trumpet player, singer, composer and bandleader, Gillespie was very significant in the development of bebop and modern jazz. His trumpet playing influenced such players as Miles Davis, Clifford Brown and Fats Navarro. After spending time in Cuba and coming back to America, Gillespie also greatly helped in the advancement of Afro-Cuban Jazz. He was characterized by his horn rimmed glasses, bent trumpet and uniquely puffy cheeks when playing. A great improviser, Dizzy added a certain layer of harmonic complexity to his music, something previously unknown in jazz. Songs like “Salt Peanuts” and “Goovin’ High” were very different, both harmonically and rhythmically, when compared with the sounds of his contemporaries. Remaining true to bebop his entire career, Gillespie is remembered as one of the most influential trumpet players in history.
Max Roach is considered to be one of the greatest drummers in history, and was a renowned bebop pioneer. He is, along with a select few, essentially responsible for the modern style of jazz drumming. Roach was also involved greatly in the Civil Rights movement, creating an album with Oscar Brown Jr. and Coleman Hawkins called “We Insist! – Freedom Now,” commemorating the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation. Roach performed with amazing style, able to play entire shows solo, showing that, given his incredible skill, he could play and completely satisfy an entire audience while fulfilling the requirements of a solo performance. Roach, completely in-tune with the bebop scene, played with artists like Clifford Brown, Miles Davis, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Duke Ellington and Charles Mingus, ensuring a vibrant and successful career.
“Lady Day” was perhaps the most exceptional popular music singer of the 20th century. She wrote few songs, but when she sang, she took on a deep, personal and intimate approach. Her vocal style and intonation was inspired greatly by the sound of the instruments she heard and was filled with a profound intensity. In that manner, she developed a new style, incorporating the manipulation of phrasing and tempo. Her recording of the song “Strange Fruit” is considered one of the most important songs in history, because of it’s powerful theme and topic, and because of Holiday’s powerful performance. She received multiple posthumous Grammy Hall of Fame awards and Grammy Best Historic Album awards for her work. Although her delivery may have been somewhat thin and her range fairly limited, there is no doubt that her voice was more powerful than any at the time could have hoped to be.
John Coltrane is virtually synonymous with the word “cool.” At the forefront of hard bop, Coltrane, a composer and saxophone virtuoso, made serious headway into becoming one of the most important figures in jazz music. Coltrane had a harsh, strident sound and played with extreme intensity. He was able to solo and improvise with astounding power, creating “sheets of sound.” Playing tenor and soprano sax, Coltrane could either play with a smooth melodic sound, or an unmatched intensity. His compositions, along with Miles Davis, helped redefine be-bop, with the introduction of modal harmony, and the “Coltrane Changes.” Coltrane, a figurehead of avant-garde jazz, was also prolific in his recordings, making about 50 albums in his career as band leader. He has been recognized extensively, with an induction in the Downbeat Jazz Hall of Fame, a Grammy Lifetime Achievement award, a Grammy for “Best Jazz Solo Performance,” and a church which worships him as a saint.
Groundbreaking pianist, organist, composer and bandleader, Count Basie led one of the most successful bands in history. For 50 years the Count Basie Orchestra, an incredibly popular group of musicians who included players like Lester Young, Sweets Edison, Buck Clayton and Joe Williams, maintained a reputation of one of the most swingin’ and hardhittin’ bands in America. Winner of nine Grammy awards, Basie introduced multiple generations of listeners to the big band sound. He wrote numerous standards like “April in Paris” and “One O’Clock Jump,” which, for years, have been covered by countless other artists. Basie is also remembered by his colleagues as being considerate, modest, relaxed and enthusiastic. Without Basie’s crucial presence on the scene, popular and big band music would be drastically different, and undoubtedly less influential than it has become.
The tenor saxophone is iconic of bebop and jazz music in general; and there is one person accountable for this: Coleman Hawkins. Hawkins innovation in swing and big band music was vital in the development of bebop in the mid 1940s. His contribution to the saxophone made the careers of people like John Coltrane, Sonny Rollins and Dexter Gordon possible. Hawkins’ original recording of “Body and Soul” in 1939 is considered a standard to which all tenor saxophonists set themselves. People like Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis and Max Roach can essentially attribute their successful careers to their early work with the “Hawk.” His ability to improvise led him to cover completely new ground, previously untouched by his contemporaries; it is because of this that the tenor sax is now such an important improvisational element of jazz music.
Few can match the swingin’ sounds of Goodman’s Big Band. Benny Goodman, known as the “King of Swing,” led one of the most popular bands of the early 20th century. His 1938 concert at Carnegie hall is considered to be one of the most important live shows in American music history, as it showcased jazz’ coming to prominence as a respectable art form. Despite being a major player of big-band swing music, Goodman also helped the advancement of be-bop. Having a one of the first racially-integrated music groups and being a strong opposer of Jim Crow Laws, Goodman promoted racial-equality by not touring the Southern States. Goodman was both an important influence in popular and jazz music, as well as a prominent Civil Rights activist.
One of the central figures of jazz in the 20th century, Miles Davis was at the forefront of multiple musical developments and the emergence of a plenitude of styles. He spearheaded the emergence of be-bop, hard bop, cool jazz, free jazz, fusion, funk and techno music. Keeping ahead of the game and consistently reinventing his musical style, the various lineups of his band, all of which were very successful, were always full of young brilliant players. Because of his success, many other artists were propelled to high levels of fame. Some of the famous jazz artists who owe their success to Miles include John Coltrane, Herbie Hancock, J.J. Johnson, Cannonball Adderley, Keith Jarrett, Bill Evans, Wayne Shorter and Chick Corea. Davis received various rewards in his lifetime, including eight Grammy Awards and a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction. Miles Davis was one of the best, most innovative, popular and influential musicians of the 20th Century.
When one thinks of jazz, they think “Charlie Parker.” Known simply as “Bird,” Charlie Parker was a pioneering jazz alto-saxophone player, bebop musician and composer. His fast, virtuosic playing, clean tone, and improvisational abilities greatly influenced other musicians at the time. His innovation in writing songs, using complex chord progressions and revolutionary harmonic form, changed the standards for composition and greatly influenced other jazz artists. Parker helped to contribute to the hipster persona associated with jazz, as well as the idea that jazz musicians were artists and intellectuals rather than simply entertainers. At the time a huge amount of other artists tried to copy Parker’s style, and often his solos and licks exactly. His influence is seen in almost every other contemporary musician and renowned jazz composer, many of whom named some choice standards after the “Bird.”
Duke Ellington was a hugely popular pianist, composer and big-band leader. He was one of the most important band leaders in music. Although known for his pioneering in jazz, Ellington also excelled in a variety of other genres, including gospel, blues, classical, popular and soundtrack. Because of his charisma and inventive use of his orchestra, Ellington is essentially responsible for making jazz an art form, similar to classical music. He received a large variety of awards and honors including 13 Grammy awards, a Pulitzer prize, a Presidential Medal of Freedom, a NAACP Spingarn Medal and Commemorative U.S. quarter to name a few. A considerable amount of musicians have been inspired by the “Duke,” including: Thelonius Monk, Sonny Stitt, Tony Bennett, Dizzy Gillespie, Oscar Peterson, Earl Hines and Joe Pass, as Ellington has proved to be one of the most important figures in jazz and music in general.
Arguably one of the most important figures in American history, Louis Armstong, known as “Satchmo” or “Pops” was an incredibly influential jazz trumpet player and singer from New Orleans. He is recognized as one of the greatest musicians of all time having a major role in the creation of modern jazz. With his virtuosic abilities on the trumpet, he is largely accountable for the recognition of the trumpet as a solo instrument in jazz music. He is also one of the first scat singers and is responsible for its popularization. His singing influenced people like Frank Sinatra and Bing Crosby, while his trumpet playing inspired the likes of Miles Davis and Dizzy Gillespie. His influence on music as a whole is almost immeasurable, both in terms of his singing and trumpet playing which have earned him a variety of honors and awards.
Notable Exclusions: J.J. Johnson, Wes Montgomery, Django Reinhardt, Ron Carter, Ella Fitzgerald, Paul Chambers, Elvin Jones, Herbie Hancock, Lester Young, Ray Brown, Gene Krupa, Frank Sinatra, Dave Brubeck, Freddie Hubbard, Earl Hines, Buddy Rich, Bill Evans, Red Garland, Clifford Brown, Dexter Gordon, Sonny Rollins, and Oscar Peterson.




















@Joe13 (49): Hahahaha it’s a shame isn’t it
@EmergingAire (24):
being influential has noting to do with being a teacher, it just means that their music and style influenced the future generation of musicians.
kick ass list by the way
no Astor Piazzolla?
You shold have mentioned that in the Benny Goodman video, that was Gene Krupa on the drums and the great Harry James on the trumpet.
Thank God no one has said “No Kenny G???”
Forgive the bias, as he was one of my teachers, but Ellis Marsalis should be considered as a notable exclusion. His childrens’ influence, not to mention the monsters who studied under him (Blanchard, Connick, etc), show the footprint he’s left on modern jazz.
Great list but you forgot Mr. Cab Calloway !!!!!
@Luisa (67):
I hate it when people declare that the list creator “forgot” something, as if these things were really so objectively apparent that the list creator must have obviously been in error not to include whatever was omitted.
People are so obnoxiously arrogant these days; they’ve now become unable to distinguish between personal opinion and objective fact.
This applies to everyone here *****ing about omissions, not just Luisa’s (although Luisa’s was the last straw that prompted me to write this).
I like this list. The names readers are mentioning and saying should have been included I haven’t even heard of. The list only fits 15, ok? He had to pick 15 and those were the guys and they’re all big names.
@Matt (68): You are absolutely right. I hereby retract my earlier comment (18) and hang my head in shame for being so foolish as to comment on an omission. Bad me… oh so very baaaad!
Does that make you feel better?
Louis Armstrong wasn’t influential; he was beloved. Coletrane, Parker, Hawkins, Hancock, even Dameron, changed jazz. Without a doubt, one of the most influential jazz musicians (if you actually consider their effect on other jazz musicians, which this list seems to be ignoring, focusing solely on popularity) was Horace Silver.
You also state that The Jazz Messengers launched the career of Silver. Strike that, reverse it. Silver started the Messengers then left, when Blakey took over. I guess Silver was, rightly so, miffed that Blakey couldn’t distinguish between rhythm and melody.
@pynch (71): Are you kidding? Armstrong was so influential! He did things with a trumpet that no one else had dared to do before. While so many players just sort of toyed around with music, Armstrong took it by the neck and wrestled with it for kicks. It may seem like what he did isn’t too remarkable now, since jazz has definitely shifted to appreciate the more daring soloist, like Armstrong, but back then, it was amazing. It’s kind of like Citizen Kane. The cinematography is not that fantastic now, but for the time, it was amazing
You might think he’s too recent but… where is Jaco Pastorius? He is surely one of the most influential musicians of all times, and not only in jazz.
His sound can be heard in every bass player.
thank you, great list to get started on jazz!
It was great to see Charlie Parker ranked so high. His rendition of “Summertime” is one of the *****iest songs ever composed. No matter your gender or *****ual orientation, if you put that on, fireworks.
Hey, why am I not on this list? XD
Great list, ClassyKoehler, you’ve provided me with some wonderful listening.
I take issue with leaving Django off the list (he’s probably the most influential guitar player of all time, not just in jazz) but thanks for giving love to Benny Goodman. “Clarinet a la King” is one of the greatest songs ever written.
@ciremelf (70):
Talk about an empty rebuttal.
It’s one thing to suggest who you think would also be worthy of being on this list. It’s quite another to rebuke the list creator for “forgetting” something. In your case, it’s even worse when you accuse the list creator of forgetting people who were LISTED IN THE NOTABLE EXCLUSIONS at the very end of the list.
So yes, you SHOULD hang your head in shame for being so foolish. You do not deserve to be so pompously sarcastic.
@Matt (80): The notable exclusions was not there when I made my original comment. since you started commenting after it was added i just figured I would let you know. Thank you for understanding.
ok scratch my last comment…. my mistake. have a great night everyone.
Pretty cool list written by a high schooler…in my opinion.
In my opinion, Louis Jordan should have been on this list.
Another notable exclusion, Billy Cobham, is just awesome.
Sarah Vaughn
Oh, man! I love jazz! My favorite is Dizzy Gillespie. Awesome list, dude!
These are usually good lists but this has too many coloreds on it.
@ Woody
Yeah posting a comment like that on a list about Jazz?
Someones looking for attention.
Brubeck. No Brubeck, no list.
Wow… I play in a band with Mingus’ Nephew… It was really cool to see him on the list.
@AnotherEngine (20): it really is a shame to not see nina simone on this list. she doesn’t even make the “honorable mentions” list!
for someone whose songs are still heard rather often whether it be on television or radio, surely she was more influential than most of these guys who a lot of people wouldn’t have heard of.
maybe it's because the most influential music she did wasn't jazz
Man, i love Miles Davis in many of his phases… but saying he spearheaded the emergence of techno music sound a little ignorant about the history of techno.
Thank you very much for the very nice collection of videos, though. That made my afternoon happier.
Love It. Good work. I’d love to see one with modern artists. DiMeola. Chick Corea. Maybe Metheny. Coryell etc… Great list.
Stupid list. There are far too many musical artists who have played, or are playing jazz to list.
How come nobody mentions Bill Evans,
he transformed jazz into something completely new, together with George Russel, having a huge influence on Miles davis’ and Coltrane’s sounds. Plus…
I can’t beleive J.J. Johnson wasn’t included on this. He was a great composer and he single handedly turned the trombone into a bebop instrument. His improvisation and range on the trombone has far surpassed any trombone player that has ever lived.
I guess if this were a list of the best jazz musicians he’s be near the top.
i think coltrane should be way higher, maybe even first place. i mean he has influenced every single saxophone player in last 40 years. his range was so vast that because of his early recordings and playing with miles (kind of blue’ with it’s modal jazz introduction is probably the most influential jazz album ever) he has influenced all mainstream post-bop jazz (including narrow-minded wynton marsalis crew) and thanks to his later explorations he influenced all free-jazz avantgarde players, without it there would be no aacm, no downtown scene, no loft scene or any of the later free-jazz movements and innovations. he’s the only player ever to have such a commanding influence on both end of the mainstream – avantgarde opposition.
davis is right next since he has definitive influence on both post-bop and fusion , funk-jazz genre
and i agree also on bill evans – every piano trio after him was kinda post-evans style (including keith jarrett)
i would place benny goodman lower, sure he is point of reference to every clairnet player out there, but (sadly) since the swing era clarinet has never been so popular, giving it’s place to saxophone
pastorious changed the way el.bass was played but again, it’s less popular instrument in jazzso i wouldn’t put it in him
but one great omission is ornette coleman!!! come on, he has influenced so many!!!
and i’d like to see someone whose attitude to jazz was purely avant, i think cecil talyor could be called the most influential in that subject.
and one other thing – miles davis never played free jazz, in fact he had rather negative idea on ornette coleman music, or coltrane’s later recordings for that matter.
which doesn’t mean he haven’t influenced also free players, greatest example being wadada leo smith and his tribute project to miles fusion era
He might have felt that way in the start but listen to his later stuff, that was as free as you can get, 20 instruments going crazy how more free can it get?
Overall, this was a pretty good list. I’m developing an affinity for jazz as I age and it’s nice to see performers like Art Tatum and Max Roach listed here. However, i do think that John Coltrane should have been ranked higher. Where’s Jellyroll Morton? I agree with the posters who mentioned Dave Brubeck and Jaco Pastorius, as well.
For a future list…if you haven’t done so already…why not list rock performers who were heavily influenced by jazz? There are a number of them out there.
Be serious how can Jaco as good as he is be in a list of jazz legends? You might as well put Wynton, or Marcus Miller. You are weighting Jazz history and people who innovate and created stuff, not just people who are good on an instrument. I think Brubeck is over rated, he is White and he might even agree that is why he made Time Magazine before Elington
I really like the list, But where is Django Reinhardt and Nat King Cole?
Lester Young schooled a whole bunch of people 'ala "Bix & Tram", and Bill Evans was no slouch.
Good List.
This is great! It's your own opinion. We must respect it!
I think Miles Davis is the #1. He is the most influential Jazz musician for several decades.
From the Cool to the Fusion era and so one…..
Benny Goodman does not belong in this list, no way. He was popular he made no serious contribution to jazz. And anyway so many people would need mention before him like Sydney
Well you didn't exclude the obvious, but i think what i don't get is why all the bebopers are always included and their swing and dixie predecessors are seen as irrelevent… when bird does his take on a swing song and you haven't heard the swing song beforehand… it's just an unlikable sound
I think pioneers of other forms of jazz are often not given the credit they deserve – i don't want to do a list of names but originators like the original new orleans jass band and bunk johnson are never given the credit for actually developing and popularising jazz much more than John Coltrane
all great artists but im suprised not to see Ella Fitzgerald on here.
I love this. I play trumpet in jazz band and anything jazz related is all I’m about. Nice list =D
I love Herbie Han*****and Al Di Meola…Anyway’the list is great.
This video is amazing if your an Al Demiola fan – http://jonarditomusic.wordpress.com/2011/03/06/al…
ABSOLUTELY FABULOUS LIST! VERY INFORMATIVE
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Where’s Jelly Roll Morton? He invented jazz!
What about Ahmad Jamal? Good list by the way.
What a list. I guess its tough to include them all but this is a great step in the right direction
Fantastic list but Monk should’a been higher, in my opinion.
Nice list!
Great list! Theres soo many awesome artists, I personally would have liked to have seen Wes Montgomery & Oscar Peterson, but at the end of the day at least you noted them, you forgot to mention all the cool stuff like their drug habits and personality disorders though,,..
What about Joe Pass? He’s also one of the most influential jazz artists as well.
A few factual errors on an otherwise decent list- For one, Miles Davis DID NOT spearhead free jazz; that was alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman, who for that very reason should be cited as one of the 15 all time influential jazz musicians. Another thing, if you do your history on Louis Armstrong you’d be hard pressed not to cite him as THE MOST INFLUENTIAL JAZZ MUSICIAN OF THEM ALL. And finally, Wynton Marsalis should round off the top 15 for spearheading the “Young Lions” movement in the 1980s which helped re-ignite interest amongst younger musicians in playing hardcore acoustic jazz (in an era where the trite elevator music of Kenny G and Spyro Gyra became the layman’s notion of jazz).
Excellent observations. However I was so very upset when I had my Louis Armstrong bobblehead sitting out the other day and I was asked, “who is that?”
Why do people waste their ears on top 40 when we have all this incredible music?
NO NINA SIMONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!! YOUR ALL *****ING RETARTED!!
am not a jazz fan but i’ve heared it in Tom and jerry show Many times!!! its unique genre of music!!