Contemporary Jazz / Cool
Contemporary cool jazz combines sophistication and relaxation, inheriting from swing and bebop while integrating modern influences.
Subdued atmospheres, flexible tempos, and subtle improvisations create a listening experience that is both sophisticated and accessible.
It can be found in intimate clubs as well as on large stages. It's the perfect opportunity to drop the needle and let the music soothe your daily life.
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New
Après Ravel - Marco Sinopoli & Extradiction
Released: April 24, 2026 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Jazz contemporain / Cool Label: PARCO DELLA MUSICA Format: CD -
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Passion Congo
Released: April 24, 2026 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Jazz contemporain / Cool Label: ONE DROP Format: CD -
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Jubila 432
Released: April 24, 2026 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Jazz contemporain / Cool Label: FULL RHIZOME Format: CD -
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Evanscape
Released: April 24, 2026 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Jazz contemporain / Cool Label: BONSAÃ MUSIC Format: CD -
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Out Loud
Released: April 24, 2026 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Jazz contemporain / Cool Label: LA SAUGRENUE Format: CD -
In My Dreams
Released: February 27, 2026 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Jazz contemporain / Cool Label: UNIVERSAL MUSIC Format: CD -
The Return Of The Durutti Column
Released: November 28, 2025 Genres: Jazz/Blues and Jazz contemporain / Cool Label: LONDON RECORDS LTD Format: CD
Cool jazz, the art of subtlety that reveals its full magic on vinyl
The origins of cool: a hushed revolution in the late 1940s
Born in reaction to the blistering tempos and sometimes overwhelming virtuosity of bebop, cool jazz emerged in the late 1940s on both coasts of the United States. Miles Davis laid the foundation with the Royal Roost sessions, later compiled as Birth of the Cool (1957), where orchestrations borrowed from Debussy and Ravel as much as from Duke Ellington's big bands. The movement soon migrated to California, carried by Chet Baker, Gerry Mulligan, Dave Brubeck, and the Modern Jazz Quartet, giving rise to West Coast jazz, a more cerebral, subdued approach where melody and space took precedence over New York's frenetic energy.
Leading figures and landmark albums: the essentials
No cool jazz collection is complete without Dave Brubeck's Time Out (1959), the first jazz album to top mainstream charts, driven by the immortal Take Five in 5/4 time. Chet Baker defined the genre with Chet Baker Sings (Pacific Jazz, 1956) and his heartbreaking rendition of My Funny Valentine. On the East Coast, Lennie Tristano and Lee Konitz explored more abstract paths on Subconscious-Lee (1950); Stan Getz delivered Focus (1961), a masterpiece orchestrated by Eddie Sauter. The Modern Jazz Quartet, with Django (1956), blended jazz and chamber music with timeless elegance, while Bill Evans's impressionistic piano on Waltz for Debby (1961) extended the cool spirit toward the sublime.
Legendary labels, sought-after pressings, and the contemporary legacy
Pacific Jazz, with its iconic William Claxton covers, remains the sanctuary of West Coast jazz. Blue Note, under Rudy Van Gelder's meticulous engineering, captured the genre's nuances with obsessive care, alongside Riverside and Lester Koenig's Contemporary Records, a true audiophile treasure trove. Collectors hunt for Blue Note deep groove originals, Columbia 'six-eye' mono first pressings, or high-end reissues from Analogue Productions and Tone Poet. Vinyles.com, as a price comparison platform, helps you find the best deal among specialist retailers, from rare Japanese pressings to audiophile reissues. In the 1990s and 2000s, a new contemporary scene, Brad Mehldau, Avishai Cohen, Tord Gustavsen, often on ECM or ACT, revived this aesthetic of restraint, proving that cool has never stopped shaping the jazz of today.
