So, it's the mid-50s and we've got MANY styles happening at once - Cool, modal, bossa/afro-cuban, pre-free, and the solidified bebop known as:
Hard Bop!
The antithesis of cool, hard bop was tight, sharp, and funky. Developing the harmonic vocabulary of bop and augmenting the composing and arranging importance, hard bop continues to be a favorite style for many jazz listeners.
Pioneered in the late 1950s, hard bops inception can be traced to an ensembles led by Art Blakey, Horace Silver, and Benny Golson. These ensembles (piano, bass, drums, tenor sax, trumpet, trombone?) would serve as a blueprint for many (any) hard bop combo to come.
Art Blakey

Hard bops heaviest drummer, led his pivotal
Jazz Messengers for over 30 years. A jazz proving ground, Blakey took hot young instrumentalists honed their skills during their stints with the Messengers. Upon maturation, once ready to start leading their own ensembles, the musicians moved on, and Blakey easily found replacements. MANY extremely influential musicians were members: Lee Morgan, Wayne Shorter, Freddie Hubbard, Curtis Fuller, Hank Mobley, Bobby Timmons, Jackie McLean, Woody Shaw, Chuck Mangione; even Keith Jarrett, Wynton Marsalis, Branford Marsalis, Mulgrew Miller, Terence Blanshard amongst modern jazz stars.
The early bands were wildly influential for instrumentalists to follow - the stylings of hard bop soloists would become (and, to be honest, still is) the benchmark of musicianship in jazz for younger musicians. Below are some of the heaviest innovators.
John Coltrane was another serious leader in hard bop - though he quickly moved on to modal jazz - his records Blue Train, and Giant Steps are pinnacles of virtuosic improvisations and writing.
ALSO,
Thelonious Monk was one of the leading composers of the time. I don't really consider him hard bop, but rather a strange bridge between hard bop and free jazz. Anyway - he's a black sheep who's not easily pigeon-holed, but sooooo heavy.
- Lee Morgan - (photo above) HUGELY influential trumpet soloist, worked with Blakey, Coltrane.
- Miles Davis - it's Miles. He invented everything. Including hard bop - the records Walkin', Workin' and Relaxin' are all classic examples
- Clifford Brown - another widely imitated trumpeter, sadly, he was killed in a car accident at the young age of 26.
- Wayne Shorter - tenor soloist and composer, still influential in jazz today
- John Coltrane - ...it's Coltrane. Duh.
- Sonny Rollins - tenor sax, another very distinct voice, very lengthy career (the guy is still touring!)
- Curtis Fuller - trombonist with the Messengers, and Coltrane, and a super-nice guy.
- JJ Johnson - superb trombone stylist, his Eminent records are great hard bop specimens.
- Horace Silver - similar to Blakey in concept, hiring young players and developing a hip, unique sound.
See also:
Joe Henderson,
Johnny Griffin,
Bobby Timmons,
Paul Chambers,
Red Garland,
Hank Mobley,
Blue Mitchell,
Freddie Hubbard,
Hard bop absorbed a lot of the current musical trends, the afro-cuban influence being quite obvious with Horace Silver and Art Blakey, and one record label in particular is synonymous with hard bop - and great jazz in general:
Blue Note Records.
...but anyway, watch & listen.
[Youtubey goodness]
Clifford Brown - a great musical mind, died much too young in a tragic car accident.
Jazz Messengers - Short clip of the Messengers featuring Lee Morgan,
Benny Golson.
More Messengers - Blues March - Lee Morgan, Wayne Shorter, classic messengers.
Curtis Fuller - solos on
Children of the Night, with Art Blakey.
Horace Silver - Cool Eyes. Featuring hip trumpeter Blue Mitchell.
Thelonious Monk - Rhythm-a-ning. With tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse - a long-time Monk comrade.
Thelonious Monk - 'Round Midnight. Classic...like, holy crap!
[Listen]
John Coltrane - Locomotion - from the classic record Blue Train.
Lee Morgan's Solo on Locomotion - possibly the greatest trumpet solo of
all time. Listen to that shit....soooo hip!
Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers - Free For All[/url], from Free For All. Lee Morgan, Wayne Shorter...classic.
Curtis Fuller Jazztet - Alright With Me (with Benny Golson).
Benny Golson - Blues on Down - from The Modern Touch, also featuring JJ Johnson.
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I'll also mention here,
Soul Jazz. The funkier nephew of hard bop - many musicians flipflopped back and forth, and each style has similar characteristics. Soul jazz being slightly more funky...more soulful, if you will. Slight more of a gospel edge to it...dig:
See artists like:
Lou Donaldson - alto sax
Cannonball Adderley - alto sax, major player of hard bop, modal and soul jazz...
Jimmy McGriff - organ
Stanley Turrentine - tenor sax
Jimmy Smith - (photo above) organ
[Youtube]
Jimmy Smith - Walk on the Wild Side.
[Listening]
Lee Morgan - The Sidewinder - from the 1963 album of the same name, with Joe Henderson, tenor sax. Bridging the gap between soul and hard bop.
Lou Donaldson - Everything I Do Gonh Be Funky.
Cannonball Adderly - Sticks - from Mercy, Mercy, Mercy! Soul...yeah! Dig
Nat Adderly on the cornet...
Enough for now....