Thank you all for your great insights. I have a large collection of recorded jazz, both on CD and vinyl.
Among my favorites available from Red Trumpet in better quality CD releases are:
Alto Sax
Art Pepper, Gettin Together (earlier period)
Big Band (avante garde)
Mingus, Mingus, Mingus, Mingus (if you like Au Um, listen to this)
Drums
Art Blakey, A Night at Birdland (with Clifford Brown) (timeless bop)
Piano
Bill Evans, Portrait in Jazz (great sound, one of his best)
Herbie Nichols, Blue Note recordings (see Spellman, Four Lives)
Tenor Sax
Johnny Griffin, A Blowing Session (wtih Coltrane and Hank Mobley) (terrific)
Sonny Rollins, Saxophone Colossus; Way out West (classic bop)
Vocals
Armstrong and Ellington, Complete Sessions (also issued as Great Reunion) (if you have never heard this, you will be blown away)
Ella Fitzgerald, Ella in Berlin (includes famous rendition of Mack the Knife)
Sarah Vaughan, In the Land of Hi Fi (beautiful voice, great record)
Other terrific recordings that are among my favorites, which you may wish to consider, include
Alto sax:
Sidney Bichet, The Fabulous (New Orleans style)
Art Pepper, Straight Life (later period, incredible)
Sonny Stitt, Plays Bird (hard blowing bop)
Big Band
Count Basie, At Birdland
Charles Mingus, Au Um; Pethecanthropus Erectus
Oliver Nelson, Blues and the Abstract Truth (a classic)
Ella and Basie, On the Sunny Side of the Street (one of Ellas best)
Ellingotn, At Newport
Piano
Ellington, This OneÂs for Blanton (also the original Ellington/Blanton duets)
Bill Evans, Sunday at the Villiage Vanguard; Waltz for Debby
Jay McShann, Tribute to Fats Waller
Theloneous Monk, Solo Monk; At the Five Spot
Herb Nichols (see above-if you like Monk, listen to this)
Bud Powell, The Essen Jazz Festival Concert (inspired)
Horace Silver, Blowin the Blues Away
Ralph Sutton, At the Café des Copains (incredible stride piano)
Tenor Sax
John Coltrane, Coltrane and Hartman; Bags and Trane; with Ellington; A Love Supreme; My Favorite Things (soprano sax); Giant Steps
Stan Getz, Happy 50th
Dexter Gordon, Lullaby for a Monster; A Swingin Affair, Go, Stable Mable
Charlie Parker, Savoy Sessions
Trumphet:
Louis Armstrong, Hot Fives and Hot Sevens (New Orleans style, important timeless music)
Clifford Brown, At Basin Street; Clifford Brown and Max Roach; and Best of Clifford Brown and Max Roach in Concert (I love Clifford Brown)
Miles Davis, Kind of Blue; Someday My Prince Will Come; Box Set
Lee Morgan, Sidewinder
Vocals
Armstrong and Ellington (see above)
Bob Dorough, Yardbird Suite (sings Charlie Parker music, very interesting)
Ella Fitzgerald (see above: Ella and Basie; Ella in Berlin-two of her best)
Johnny Hartman, (see above: Coltrane and Hartman-a classic); Once in Every Life
Billie Holliday, All or Nothing at All
Helen Humes, 1947 (incredible); Songs I Like to Sing
Alberta Hunter, Amtrack Blues
Eddie Jefferson, The Jazz Singer
Helen Merrill with Clifford Brown (wonderful music)
Carmen McRae, Carmen Sings Monk; Lover Man and other Billie Holliday Classics
Anita OÂDay, Anita Sings the Most; Pick Yourself Up
Maxine Sullivan, With Her Swedish All Stars Vols 1-3 (hard to find, but great)
Sarah Vaughn, with Clifford Brown (also, see above-In the Land of Hi Fi) (essential music)
Dinah Washington, Dinah Jams (contains one of the greatest trumpet solos); The Swigin Miss ÂDÂ
Believe it or not, I actually tried to keep this list as short as possible. It is not intended to be anything but a personal list of some of my favorite recordings.