Ghosthouse, I got into jazz in the Summer of 1956 when I lived with my older cousin on the South side of Chicago. That's when the "Southside" was like a city unto itself, and a Mecca for jazz; you could just walk down a neighborhood street and hear the sounds of jazz coming out of open windows. (No AC's; walk peacefully down streets)
My cousin purchased the best available current jazz every week. That was my introduction to jazz. The reason I mention this is to illustrate how long I have avidly been listening to jazz. After listening to so many great jazz musicians for so long, a lot of what has followed sounds "Stereotypical" to me; meaning that it sounds like so much that I've heard before, even when it's very good, and what you presented was very good.
Tony Williams is a fantastic drummer, but the music sounds like so much jazz that I've heard before.
Somehow "Ahmad Jamal" manages to quite often get past sounding like what I've heard before. Ironically, he headed the house band, exactly 3 blocks from where I was living on the South Side of Chicago.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gOAepSLbohs