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Blue Note Records discography
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Blue Note Records is a historic New York, NY jazz label founded in 1939.
7000 / 1200 series
[edit]7000 series
[edit]The "traditional series" of 10" LPs consisted of new recordings and reissues of material from the 78 era. Some of this material was repackaged in the short-lived 1200 series of 12" LPs.
| Catalogue number | Year | Artist | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BLP 7001 | 1951 | Sidney Bechet's Blue Note Jazzmen with "Wild Bill" Davison | ||
| BLP 7002 | 1951 | Sidney Bechet | Jazz Classics, Vol. 1 | |
| BLP 7003 | 1952 | Jazz Classics, Vol. 2 | ||
| BLP 7004 | 1952 | Art Hodes and His Chicagoans | The Best in 2 Beat | |
| BLP 7005 | 1952 | Art Hodes' Hot Five with Sidney Bechet and "Wild Bill" Davison | ||
| BLP 7006 | 1952 | Art Hodes' Blue Note Jazz Men | Dixieland Jubilee | |
| BLP 7007 | 1952 | Edmond Hall / Sidney DeParis | Jamming in Jazz: Hall-DeParis' Blue Note Jazz Men | |
| BLP 7008 | 1952 | Sidney Bechet / Bunk Johnson | Days Beyond Recall | |
| BLP 7009 | 1952 | Sidney Bechet and His Blue Note Jazz Men with "Wild Bill" Davison | ||
| BLP 7010 | 1952 | George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers | Echoes of New Orleans | AKA George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers, Vol. 1 |
| BLP 7011 | 1953 | James P. Johnson | Rent Party | |
| BLP 7012 | 1953 | James P. Johnson's Blue Note Jazzmen | Jazz Band Ball | |
| BLP 7013 | 1953 | George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers | Echoes of New Orleans | AKA George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers, Vol. 2 |
| BLP 7014 | 1953 | Sidney Bechet's Blue Note Jazzmen with "Wild Bill" Davison, Vol. 2 | ||
| BLP 7015 | 1953 | Art Hodes' Hot Seven with Max Kaminsky and Bujie Centobie | Dixieland Clambake | |
| BLP 7016 | 1953 | Sidney DeParis' Blue Note Stompers with Jimmy Archey and Omer Simeon | ||
| BLP 7017 | 1953 | Albert Ammons Memorial Album | Boogie Woogie Classics | |
| BLP 7018 | 1953 | Meade Lux Lewis | Boogie Woogie Classics | |
| BLP 7019 | 1953 | Pete Johnson | Boogie Woogie Blues and Skiffle | |
| BLP 7020 | 1953 | The Fabulous Sidney Bechet and His Hot Six with Sidney DeParis | ||
| BLP 7021 | 1953 | Art Hodes' Back Room Boys | Out of the Back Room | |
| BLP 7022 | 1953 | Sidney Bechet | Port of Harlem Six | |
| BLP 7023 | 1953 | Mezz Mezzrow and His Band Featuring Lee Collins and Zutty Singleton | ||
| BLP 7024 | 1953 | Sidney Bechet | Jazz Festival Concert, Paris 1952, Vol. 1 | |
| BLP 7025 | 1954 | Jazz Festival Concert, Paris 1952, Vol. 2 | ||
| BLP 7026 | 1954 | Sidney Bechet | Dixie by the Fabulous Sidney Bechet | |
| BLP 7027 | 1955 | George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers | George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers, Vol. 3 | |
| BLP 7028 | 1955 | George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers, Vol. 4 | ||
| BLP 7029 | 1955 | Sidney Bechet | Olympia Concert, Paris 1954, Vol. 1 | |
| BLP 7030 | N/A | Olympia Concert, Paris 1954, Vol. 2 | Unissued |
1200 series
[edit]| Catalogue number | Year | Artist | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BLP 1201 | 1955 | Sidney Bechet | Jazz Classics, Volume 1 | |
| BLP 1202 | 1955 | Jazz Classics, Volume 2 | ||
| BLP 1203 | 1955 | Sidney Bechet | Giants of Jazz, Volume 1 | |
| BLP 1204 | 1955 | Giants of Jazz, Volume 2 | ||
| BLP 1205 | 1955 | George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers | George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers, Volume One | |
| BLP 1206 | 1955 | George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers, Volume Two | ||
| BLP 1207 | 1958 | Sidney Bechet | The Fabulous Sidney Bechet | |
| BLP 1208 | 1959 | George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers | Concert! | |
| (F) BLP 1209 | 1983 | Albert Ammons, Pete Johnson | Boogie Woogie Classics |
Modern Jazz Series
[edit]Modern Jazz 5000 series
[edit]The Blue Note Modern Jazz Series began late in 1951 with the following 10" monaural LPs. Some of these LPs were later reissued as part of the Blue Note 1500 Series of 12" LPs. At first, recordings were made in various studios in New York (Reeves Sound Studio, WOR Studios, Apex Studios, Audio Video Studios). Beginning in October 1953, however, most Blue Note sessions took place in Rudy Van Gelder's home studio in Hackensack, New Jersey. The sessions were produced by Alfred Lion and engineered by Van Gelder, and many LP covers featured photographs by Lion's partner in Blue Note Francis Wolff.
| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title | Date recorded | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BLP 5001 | 1952 | Various artists | Mellow the Mood | 2/5/44, 6/18/44, 9/25/44, 7/17/45, 5/31/46, 1/31/55 | |
| BLP 5002 | 1952 | Thelonious Monk | Genius of Modern Music | 10/15/47, 11/21/47, 7/2/48 | reissued on BLP 1510/11 |
| BLP 5003 | 1952 | The Amazing Bud Powell | The Amazing Bud Powell | 1949-08-08, 1951-05-01 | reissued on BLP 1503/04 |
| BLP 5004 | 1952 | Fats Navarro / Tadd Dameron | Fats Navarro Memorial Album | 9/26/47, 9/13/48, 10/11/48, 8/8/49 | reissued on BLP 1531/32 |
| BLP 5005 | 1952 | James Moody | James Moody with Strings | 7/13/51 | conducted by André Hodeir |
| BLP 5006 | 1952 | James Moody and His Modernists | James Moody and His Modernists | 10/18/48, 10/25/48 | |
| BLP 5007 | 1952 | Erroll Garner | Overture to Dawn, Volume 1 | 12/14/44 | |
| BLP 5008 | Overture to Dawn, Volume 2 | 12/26/44 | |||
| BLP 5009 | 1952 | Thelonious Monk | Genius of Modern Music, Vol. 2 | 1947-10-15, -24, -11-21, 1948-07-02, 1951-07-23 | reissued on BLP 1510/11 |
| BLP 5010 | 1952 | Max Roach Quintet and Art Blakey's Band | New Sounds | 12/22/47, 4/30/49, 5/15/49 | |
| BLP 5011 | 1952 | Milt Jackson | Wizard of the Vibes | 1951-07-23, 1952-04-07 | reissued on BLP 1509 |
| BLP 5012 | 1952 | Howard McGhee's All-Stars | The McGhee / Navarro Boptet | 1948, 1/23/50 | |
| BLP 5013 | 1953 | Miles Davis | Young Man with a Horn | 1952-05-09 | reissued on BLP 1501/02 |
| BLP 5014 | 1953 | Erroll Garner | Overture to Dawn, Volume 3 | 11/24/44, 12/23/44, 12/25/44 | |
| BLP 5015 | Overture to Dawn, Volume 4 | 11/16/44, 12/20/44, 12/23/44, 12/25/44 | |||
| BLP 5016 | Overture to Dawn, Volume 5 | 12/14/44, 12/26/44 | |||
| BLP 5017 | 1953 | Dizzy Gillespie | Horn of Plenty | 3/2/47, 4/11/52 | |
| BLP 5018 | 1953 | Horace Silver Trio | New Faces – New Sounds | 1952-10-09, -20 | reissued on BLP 1520 |
| BLP 5019 | 1953 | The Swinging Swedes / The Cool Britons | New Sounds from the Old World | 7/29/50, 9/5/51 | |
| BLP 5020 | 1953 | Gil Mellé Quintet/Sextet | New Faces – New Sounds | 3/2/52, 1/31/53 | |
| BLP 5021 | 1953 | Lou Donaldson Quintet / Quartet | New Faces – New Sounds | 1952-06-20, -11-19 | reissued on BLP 1537 |
| BLP 5022 | 1953 | Miles Davis | Miles Davis, Vol. 2 | 1953-04-20 | reissued on BLP 1501/02 |
| BLP 5023 | 1953 | Kenny Drew Trio | New Faces – New Sounds | 1953-04-16 | |
| BLP 5024 | 1953 | Howard McGhee | Howard McGhee, Volume 2 | 1953-05-20 | |
| BLP 5025 | 1953 | Wynton Kelly Trio | New Faces – New Sounds | 7/25/51, 8/1/51 | |
| BLP 5026 | 1953 | Various artists | Memorable Sessions | 1/25/44, 2/5/51 | |
| BLP 5027 | 1953 | Various artists | Swing Hi – Swing Lo | 1/31/45, 7/17/45, 11/21/45, 9/23/46 | |
| BLP 5028 | 1953 | Jay Jay Johnson | Jay Jay Johnson | 1953-06-22 | AKA Jay Jay Johnson with Clifford Brown; reissued on BLP 1505/06 |
| BLP 5029 | 1953 | Elmo Hope Trio | New Faces – New Sounds | 6/53 | |
| BLP 5030 | 1953 | Lou Donaldson–Clifford Brown | New Faces – New Sounds | 1953-06-09 | reissued on BLP 1526 |
| BLP 5031 | 1953 | Wade Legge Trio | New Faces – New Sounds | 2/27/53 | |
| BLP 5032 | 1953 | Clifford Brown | New Star on the Horizon | 1953-08-28 | reissued on BLP 1526 |
| BLP 5033 | 1954 | Gil Mellé Quintet | Gil Mellé Quintet, Vol. 2 | 3/25/53 | |
| BLP 5034 | 1954 | Horace Silver Trio | Horace Silver Trio and Art Blakey, Vol. 2 | 1953-11-23 | AKA Horace Silver Trio, Volume 2 / Art Blakey – Spotlight on Drums; reissued on BLP 1520 |
| BLP 5035 | 1954 | Sal Salvador Quintet | Sal Salvador Quintet | 12/24/53 | |
| BLP 5036 | 1954 | Urbie Green Septet | New Faces – New Sounds | 12/27/53 | |
| BLP 5037 | 1954 | Art Blakey Quintet | A Night at Birdland, Vol. 1 | 1954-02-21 | live at Birdland; reissued on BLP 1521/22 |
| BLP 5038 | A Night at Birdland, Vol. 2 | ||||
| BLP 5039 | A Night at Birdland, Vol. 3 | ||||
| BLP 5040 | 1954 | Miles Davis | Miles Davis, Vol. 3 | 1954-03-06 | reissued on BLP 1501/02 |
| BLP 5041 | 1954 | The Amazing Bud Powell | The Amazing Bud Powell, Vol. 2 | 1953-08-14 | reissued on BLP 1503/04 |
| BLP 5042 | 1954 | Tal Farlow Quartet | Tal Farlow Quartet | 4/11/54 | |
| BLP 5043 | 1954 | Frank Foster Quintet | New Faces – New Sounds | 5/5/54 | |
| BLP 5044 | 1954 | Elmo Hope Quintet | New Faces – New Sounds, Vol. 2 | 6/54 | |
| BLP 5045 | 1954 | George Wallington and His Band | George Wallington and His Band | 5/12/54 | |
| BLP 5046 | 1954 | Lionel Hampton | Jazztime Paris | 9/28/53 | |
| BLP 5047 | 1954 | Clifford Brown Quartet | Clifford Brown Quartet | 10/15/53 | |
| BLP 5048 | 1954 | Gigi Gryce / Clifford Brown Sextet | Gigi Gryce / Clifford Brown Sextet | 10/8/53 | |
| BLP 5049 | 1954 | Gigi Gryce / Clifford Brown | Jazztime Paris, Volume 1 | 9/26/53, 9/28/53, 9/29/53 10/9/53, 10/10/53, 10/11/53 | |
| BLP 5050 | Jazztime Paris, Volume 2 | ||||
| BLP 5051 | N/A | Jazztime Paris, Volume 3 | |||
| BLP 5052 | 1954 | The Cool Britons | New Sounds from Olde England | 5/13/54, 5/15/54 | |
| BLP 5053 | 1954 | Julius Watkins Sextet | New Faces – New Sounds | 8/54 | AKA Julius Watkins Sextet |
| BLP 5054 | 1954 | Gil Mellé Quartet | New Faces – New Sounds, Volume 3 | 9/5/54 | |
| BLP 5055 | 1954 | Lou Donaldson Sextet | Lou Donaldson Sextet, Volume 2 | 1954-08-22 | reissued on BLP 1537 |
| BLP 5056 | 1954 | Jutta Hipp Quintet | New Faces, New Sounds from Germany | 4/24/54 | |
| BLP 5057 | 1955 | The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson | The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Vol. 2 | 1954-09-24 | reissued on BLP 1505/06 |
| BLP 5058 | 1955 | Horace Silver Quintet | Horace Silver Quintet, Vol. 3 | 1954-11-13 | reissued on BLP 1518 |
| BLP 5059 | 1955 | Various artists | Best from the West, Volume 1 | 12/31/54, 1/55 | |
| BLP 5060 | Best from the West, Volume 2 | ||||
| BLP 5061 | 1955 | The Swinging Fats Sadi Combo | The Swinging Fats Sadi Combo | 1954 | |
| BLP 5062 | 1955 | Horace Silver Quintet | Horace Silver Quintet, Vol. 4 | 1955-02-06 | reissued on BLP 1518 |
| BLP 5063 | 1955 | Gil Mellé Quintet | Five Impressions of Color | 2/27/55 | AKA Gil Mellé Quintet, Vol. 4 |
| BLP 5064 | 1955 | Julius Watkins Sextet | Julius Watkins Sextet, Volume 2 | 3/20/55 | |
| BLP 5065 | 1955 | Kenny Dorham Octet | Afro-Cuban | 1955-03-29 | reissued as BLP 1535 |
| BLP 5066 | 1955 | Hank Mobley Quartet | Hank Mobley Quartet | 1955-03-27 | |
| BLP 5067 | 1955 | Lou Mecca Quartet | Lou Mecca Quartet | 3/25/55 | |
| BLP 5068 | 1955 | The Prophetic Herbie Nichols | The Prophetic Herbie Nichols, Vol. 1 | 1955-05-06 | |
| BLP 5069 | The Prophetic Herbie Nichols, Vol. 2 | 1955-05-13 | |||
| BLP 5070 | 1955 | The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson | The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Vol. 3 | 1955-06-06 | reissued on BLP 1505/06 |
| BN 5071 | 2014 | Miles Davis | Enigma | 1952-05-09, 1953-04-20 |
Modern Jazz 1500 series
[edit]Blue Note made the switch to 12" albums late in 1955.[citation needed] The Modern Jazz Series (see the 5000 series below) continued with the following 12" LPs. Many of these were issued in both monaural versions (BLP series) and stereo versions (BST 81500 series), sometimes in electronically rechanneled stereo. In certain cases, the stereo versions of recordings from 1957 onwards only appeared many years later. Beginning in 1956 with BLP 1509, Reid Miles designed most of the Blue Note LP covers. The 1500 series has been systematically reissued by Toshiba-EMI in Japan ("Blue Note Works 1500" series, 20-bit 88.2 kHz CDs); the catalog numbers are TOCJ-1501, etc. In addition, originally unissued material from these dates was made available of Toshiba's 1600 series (20-bit 88.2 kHz CDs).
Modern Jazz 4000 series
[edit]The Modern Jazz Series continued into the 1970s with the LPs listed below. Many were issued in both monaural versions (BLP series) and stereo versions (BST 84000 series). Beginning with 4258 all subsequent LPs (with three exceptions: 4263, 4264, and 4265) were issued only in stereo. Most of the first 300 numbers of the 4000 series have been reissued by Toshiba-EMI in Japan ("Blue Note Works 4000" series); the catalog numbers are TOCJ-4###.
4000 series
[edit]4100 series
[edit]4200 series
[edit]4300 series
[edit]| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title | Date recorded | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BST 84301 | The 3 Sounds | Elegant Soul | 9/19/68, 9/20/68 | ||
| BST 84302 | Kenny Cox | Introducing Kenny Cox | 12/9/68 | ||
| BST 84303 | Andrew Hill | Grass Roots | 8/5/68 | ||
| BST 84304 | Larry Young | Heaven on Earth | 2/9/68 | ||
| BST 84305 | Elvin Jones | The Ultimate | 9/6/68 | ||
| BST 84306 | John Patton | Understanding | 10/25/68 | ||
| BST 84307 | McCoy Tyner | Time for Tyner | 5/17/68 | ||
| BST 84308 | Duke Pearson | Now Hear This | 12/2/68, 12/3/68 | ||
| BST 84309 | Horace Silver | You Gotta Take a Little Love | 1/10/69, 1/17/69 | ||
| BST 84310 | Grant Green | Goin' West | 11/30/62 | ||
| BST 84311 | Don Cherry | Where Is Brooklyn? | 11/11/66 | ||
| BST 84312 | Lee Morgan | Charisma | 9/29/66 | ||
| BST 84313 | Lonnie Smith | Turning Point | 1/3/69 | ||
| BST 84314 | Booker Ervin | unissued | 5/24/68 | ||
| BST 84315 | Stanley Turrentine | Common Touch | 8/30/68 | ||
| BST 84316 | Frank Foster | unissued | 1/31/69 | ||
| BST 84317 | Reuben Wilson | Love Bug | 3/21/69 | ||
| BST 84318 | Lou Donaldson | Hot Dog | 4/25/69 | ||
| BST 84319 | Donald Byrd | Fancy Free | 5/9/69, 6/6/69 | ||
| BST 84320 | Eddie Gale | Black Rhythm Happening | 5/2/69 | ||
| BST 84321 | Herbie Hancock | The Prisoner | 4/18/69, 4/21/69, 4/23/69 | ||
| BST 84322 | Brother Jack McDuff | Down Home Style | 6/10/69 | ||
| BST 84323 | Duke Pearson | Merry Ole Soul | 2/25/69, 8/19/69 | ||
| BST 84324 | Blue Mitchell | Bantu Village | 5/22/69, 5/23/69 | ||
| BST 84325 | Horace Silver | The Best of Horace Silver | Various dates | compilation | |
| BST 84326 | Lonnie Smith | Move Your Hand | 8/9/69 | ||
| BST 84327 | Grant Green | Carryin' On | 10/3/69 | ||
| BST 84328 | Jack Wilson | Song for My Daughter | 9/28/68, 12/16/68, 4/23/69 | ||
| BST 84329 | Hank Mobley | The Flip | 7/12/69 | ||
| BST 84330 | Andrew Hill | Lift Every Voice | 5/16/69 | ||
| BST 84331 | Elvin Jones | Poly-Currents | 9/26/69 | ||
| BST 84332 | Wayne Shorter | Super Nova | 8/29/69, 9/2/69 | ||
| BST 84333 | Bobby Hutcherson | Now! | 11/5/69 | ||
| BST 84334 | Brother Jack McDuff | Moon Rappin' | 12/1/69, 12/2/69 | ||
| BST 84335 | Lee Morgan | The Sixth Sense | 11/10/67 | ||
| BST 84336 | Stanley Turrentine | Another Story | 3/3/69 | ||
| BST 84337 | Lou Donaldson | Everything I Play Is Funky | 8/22/69 | ||
| BST 84338 | McCoy Tyner | Expansions | 8/23/68 | ||
| BST 84339 | Kenny Cox | Multidirection | 11/26/69 | ||
| BST 84340 | John Patton | Accent on the Blues | 8/15/69 | ||
| BST 84341 | The 3 Sounds | Soul Symphony | 9/26/69 | ||
| BST 84342 | Grant Green | Green Is Beautiful | 1/30/70 | ||
| BST 84343 | Reuben Wilson | Blue Mode | 12/12/69 | ||
| BST 84344 | Duke Pearson | How Insensitive | 4/11/69, 4/14/69, 5/5/69 | ||
| BST 84345 | Jackie McLean | Demon's Dance | 12/22/67 | ||
| BST 84346 | The Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra | Consummation | 1/20/70, 1/21/70, 1/28/70, 5/25/70 | ||
| BST 84347 | Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers | Roots & Herbs | 2/18/61 | ||
| BST 84348 | Brother Jack McDuff | To Seek a New Home | 3/23/70, 3/24/70, 3/26/70 | ||
| BST 84349 | Donald Byrd | Electric Byrd | 5/15/70 | ||
| BST 84350 | Jimmy McGriff | Electric Funk | 9/??/69 | ||
| BST 84351 | Lonnie Smith | Drives | 1/2/70 | ||
| BST 84352 | Horace Silver | That Healin' Feelin' | 4/8/70, 6/18/70 | ||
| BST 84353 | Chick Corea | The Song of Singing | 4/7/70, 4/8/70 | ||
| BST 84354 | Jeremy Steig | Wayfaring Stranger | 2/11/70 | ||
| BST 84355 | Joe Williams | Worth Waiting For | 5/5/70 | ||
| BST 84356 | Ornette Coleman | Love Call | 4/29/68, 5/7/68 | ||
| BST 84357 | Candido Camero | Beautiful | 10/20/70, 10/27/70 | ||
| BST 84358 | Jack McDuff | Who Knows What Tomorrow's Gonna Bring? | 12/1-3/70 | ||
| BST 84359 | Lou Donaldson | Pretty Things | 1/9/70, 6/12/70 | ||
| BST 84360 | Grant Green | Alive! | 8/15/70 | ||
| BST 84361 | Elvin Jones | Coalition | 7/17/70 | ||
| BST 84362 | Bobby Hutcherson | San Francisco | 7/15/70 | ||
| BST 84363 | Wayne Shorter | Odyssey of Iska | 8/26/70 | ||
| BST 84364 | Jimmy McGriff | Something to Listen To | 9/??/70 | ||
| BST 84365 | Reuben Wilson | A Groovy Situation | 9/18/70, 9/25/70 | ||
| BST 84366 | John Patton | unissued | 10/2/70 | ||
| BST 84367 | N/A | Hank Mobley | Thinking of Home | 7/31/70 | unreleased; issued as LT 1045 |
| BST 84368 | Horace Silver | Total Response | 11/15/70, 1/29/71 | ||
| BST 84369 | Elvin Jones | Genesis | 2/12/71 | ||
| BST 84370 | Lou Donaldson | Cosmos | 7/16/71 | ||
| BST 84371 | Lonnie Smith | unissued | 5/21/70 | ||
| BST 84372 | Richard Groove Holmes | Comin' On Home | 5/19/71 | ||
| BST 84373 | Grant Green | Visions | 5/21/71 | ||
| BST 84374 | Jimmy McGriff | Black Pearl | 2/??/71 | ||
| BST 84375 | Ornette Coleman | unissued | |||
| BST 84376 | Bobby Hutcherson | Head On | 7/1/71, 7/3/71 | ||
| BST 84377 | Reuben Wilson | Set Us Free | 7/23/71 | ||
| BST 84378 | Gene Harris | The 3 Sounds | 7/26-27/71, 8/2-3/71 | ||
| BST 84379 | Bobbi Humphrey | Flute-In | 9/30/71, 10/1/71 | ||
| BST 84380 | Donald Byrd | Ethiopian Knights | 8/25/71, 8/26/71 | ||
| BST 84381 | Lee Morgan | unissued | 9/17/71, 9/18/71 | ||
| BST 84382 | Ronnie Foster | Two Headed Freap | 1/20/72, 1/21/72 | ||
| BST 84383–84400 | N/A | Not used | Not used | Not used |
4400 series
[edit]| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title | Date recorded | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BST 84401–84412 | N/A | Not used | Not used | Not used | |
| BST 84413 | 1972 | Grant Green | Shades of Green | 11/23/71, 11/24/71 | |
| BST 84414 | 1972 | Elvin Jones | Merry-Go-Round | 12/15/71 | |
| BST 84415 | 1972 | Grant Green | The Final Comedown | 12/13/71, 12/14/71 | |
| BST 84416 | 1972 | Bobby Hutcherson | Natural Illusions | 3/2/72, 3/3/72 | |
| BST 84417 | N/A | Hank Mobley | Thinking of Home | 7/31/70 | unreleased; issued as LT 1045 |
| BST 84418 | N/A | John Patton | Memphis to New York Spirit | 10/2/70 | unreleased; issued 1996 |
| BST 84419 | N/A | McCoy Tyner | Extensions | 2/9/70 | unreleased; issued as LA 006-F |
| BST 84420 | 1972 | Horace Silver | All | 1/17/72, 2/14/72 | |
| BST 84421 | 1972 | Bobbi Humphrey | Dig This! | 7/20/72, 7/21/72 | |
| BST 84422 | 1972 | Marlena Shaw | Marlena | 8/10/72, 8/11/72, 8/16/72 | |
| BST 84423 | 1972 | Gene Harris | Gene Harris of the Three Sounds | 6/29/72, 6/30/72 |
Modern Jazz New 4400 series
[edit]| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title | Date recorded |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BST 84424 | 1985 | Stanley Turrentine | ZT's Blues | 9/13/61 |
| BST 84425 | 1985 | Hank Mobley | Far Away Lands | 5/26/67 |
| BST 84426 | 1984 | Lee Morgan | The Rajah | 11/29/66 |
| BST 84427 | 1984 | Jackie McLean | Tippin' the Scales | 9/28/62 |
| BST 84428 | 1984 | Clifford Brown | Alternate Takes | 6/9/53, 6/20/53, 8/28/53 |
| BST2 84429 | 1984 | Various artists | The Best of Blue Note, Volume 1 | Various dates |
| BST 84430 | 1985 | Bud Powell | Alternate Takes | 8/8/49, 8/14/53, 8/3/57, 5/28/58, ... |
| BST 84431 | 1985 | Hank Mobley | Another Workout | 3/26/61, 12/5/61 |
| BST 84432 | 1985 | Grant Green | Born to Be Blue | 3/1/62, 12/23/61 |
| BST2 84433 | 1986 | Various artists | The Best of Blue Note, Volume 2 | Various dates |
| BST 84434 | 1986 | The 3 Sounds | Babe's Blues | 8/13/61 |
| BST 84435 | 1986 | Hank Mobley | Straight No Filter | 3/7/63, 2/5/65, 6/17/66 |
Modern Jazz New 89900 series
[edit]| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| BST 89901 | 1967 | Jimmy Smith | Jimmy Smith's Greatest Hits! |
| BST 89902 | 1969 | Various artists | Blue Note's Three Decades of Jazz, Volume 1: 1939–1949 |
| BST 89903 | Blue Note's Three Decades of Jazz, Volume 2: 1949–1959 | ||
| BST 89904 | Blue Note's Three Decades of Jazz, Volume 3: 1959–1969 | ||
| BST 89905 | 1970 | Various artists | Jazz Wave, Ltd., Volume 1: On Tour |
| BST 89906 | 1971 | Lee Morgan | Live at the Lighthouse |
| BST 89907 | 1973 | Herbie Hancock | The Best of Herbie Hancock |
BN-LA / LT series
[edit]BN-LA series
[edit]12" LP's issued during the 1970s using the numbering sequence of parent company United Artists Records with an extra prefix. The suffix is a code for the list price of the album and whether it is a two-disc set. In this series there are many reissues from earlier series, "Best of" albums, live albums and compilations, as well as new studio albums.
| Catalogue number | Year | Artist | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BN-LA 006-F | 1972 | McCoy Tyner | Extensions | |
| BN-LA 007-G | 1972 | Moacir Santos | Maestro | |
| BN-LA 014-G | Wayne Shorter | Moto Grosso Feio | ||
| BN-LA 015-G2 | Elvin Jones | Live at the Lighthouse | ||
| BN-LA 024-G | Lou Donaldson | Sophisticated Lou | ||
| BN-LA 037-G2 | Grant Green | Live at the Lighthouse | ||
| BN-LA 047-F | 1973 | Donald Byrd | Black Byrd | |
| BN-LA 054-F | 1973 | Horace Silver | In Pursuit of the 27th Man | |
| BN-LA 059-F | 1973 | Alphonse Mouzon | The Essence of Mystery | |
| BN-LA 098-G | 1973 | Ronnie Foster | Sweet Revival | |
| BN-LA 099-G | 1973 | Mickey Tucker / Roland Hanna | The New Heritage Keyboard Quartet | |
| BN-LA 109-F | 1973 | Lou Donaldson | Sassy Soul Strut | |
| BN-LA 110-F | 1973 | Elvin Jones | Mr. Jones | |
| BN-LA 140-F | 1973 | Donald Byrd | Street Lady | |
| BN-LA 141-G2 | 1973 | Gene Harris | Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow | |
| BN-LA 142-G | 1973 | Bobbi Humphrey | Blacks and Blues | |
| BN-LA 143-F | 1973 | Marlena Shaw | From the Depths of My Soul | |
| BN-LA 152-F | Herbie Hancock / Willie Bobo | Succotash | ||
| BN-LA 158-G2 | Various artists | Decades of Jazz, Vol. 1 | ||
| BN-LA 159-G2 | Decades of Jazz, Vol. 2 | |||
| BN-LA 160-G2 | Decades of Jazz, Vol. 3 | |||
| BN-LA 169-F | Cannonball Adderley | Somethin' Else | ||
| BN-LA 170-G2 | The Jazz Crusaders | Tough Talk | ||
| BN-LA 171-G2 | Les McCann | Fish This Week | ||
| BN-LA 222-G | 1974 | Alphonse Mouzon | Funky Snakefoot | |
| BN-LA 223-G | 1974 | McCoy Tyner | Asante | |
| BN-LA 224-G | 1974 | Lee Morgan | Memorial Album | |
| BN-LA 237-G2 | 1974 | Grant Green | Grant Green | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 249-G | 1974 | Bobby Hutcherson | Live at Montreux | |
| BN-LA 250-G | 1974 | Ronnie Foster | Live at Montreux | |
| BN-LA 251-G | 1974 | Marlena Shaw | Live at Montreux | |
| BN-LA 252-G | 1974 | Bobbi Humphrey | Live at Montreux | |
| BN-LA 257-G | 1974 | Bobby Hutcherson | Cirrus | |
| BN-LA 258-G | 1974 | Don Minasi | When Joanna Loved Me | |
| BN-LA 259-G | 1974 | Lou Donaldson | Sweet Lou | |
| BN-LA 260-G | 1974 | Moacir Santos | Saudade | |
| BN-LA 261-G | 1974 | Ronnie Foster | On the Avenue | |
| BN-LA 267-G | 1974 | Clifford Brown | Brownie Eyes | |
| BN-LA 313-G | 1974 | Gene Harris | Astral Signal | |
| BN-LA 317-G | 1974 | Duke Pearson | It Could Only Happen with You | |
| BN-LA 344-G | 1974 | Bobbi Humphrey | Satin Doll | |
| BN-LA 356-H2 | 1975 | Freddie Hubbard | Freddie Hubbard | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 368-G | 1975 | Donald Byrd | Stepping into Tomorrow | |
| BN-LA 369-G | 1975 | Bobby Hutcherson | Linger Lane | |
| BN-LA 370-G | 1975 | The Waters | Waters | |
| BN-LA 392-H2 | 1975 | The Thad Jones / Mel Lewis Orchestra | Thad Jones/Mel Lewis | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 393-H2 | 1975 | Dexter Gordon | Dexter Gordon | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 394-H2 | 1975 | Stanley Turrentine | Stanley Turrentine | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 395-H2 | 1975 | Chick Corea | Chick Corea | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 397-G | 1975 | Marlena Shaw | Who Is This Bitch, Anyway? | |
| BN-LA 398-G | 1975 | Alphonse Mouzon | Mind Transplant | |
| BN-LA 399-H2 | 1975 | Herbie Hancock | Herbie Hancock | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 400-H2 | 1975 | Jimmy Smith | Jimmy Smith | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 401-H2 | 1975 | Sonny Rollins | Sonny Rollins | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 402-H2 | 1975 | Horace Silver | Horace Silver | compilation; The Blue Note Reissue Series |
| BN-LA 406-G | 1975 | Horace Silver | Silver 'n Brass | |
| BN-LA 425-G | 1975 | Ronnie Foster | Cheshire Cat | |
| BN-LA 426-G | 1975 | Don Minasi | I Have the Feeling I've Been Here Before | |
| BN-LA 451-H2 | 1975 | Paul Chambers / John Coltrane | High Step | |
| BN-LA 452-G | 1975 | Ronnie Laws | Pressure Sensitive | |
| BN-LA 453-H2 | 1975 | Sam Rivers | Involution | |
| BN-LA 456-H2 | 1975 | Lester Young | The Aladdin Sessions | |
| BN-LA 457-H2 | 1975 | Jackie McLean | Jacknife | |
| BN-LA 458-H2 | 1975 | Cecil Taylor | In Transition | |
| BN-LA 459-H2 | 1975 | Andrew Hill | One for One | |
| BN-LA 460-H2 | 1975 | McCoy Tyner | Cosmos | |
| BN-LA 461-H2 | 1975 | Gil Evans | Pacific Standard Time | compiles New Bottle Old Wine (1958) and Great Jazz Standards (1959), originally released on World Pacific |
| BN-LA 462-G | 1975 | Carmen McRae | I Am Music | |
| BN-LA 463-G | 1975 | Moacir Santos | Carnival of the Spirits | |
| BN-LA 464-G | 1975 | Eddie Henderson | Sunburst | |
| BN-LA 472-H2 | 1975 | Chick Corea | Circling In | |
| BN-LA 473-J2 | Art Blakey | Live Messengers | ||
| BN-LA 474-H2 | Horace Silver | The Trio Sides | ||
| BN-LA 475-H2 | 1975 | Sonny Rollins | More from the Vanguard | |
| BN-LA 483-H2 | Jackie McLean | Hipnosis | ||
| BN-LA 485-H2 | 1975 | Herbie Nichols | The Third World | |
| BN-LA 488-H2 | Booker Ervin | Back from the Gig | ||
| BN-LA 496-H2 | Freddie Hubbard | Here to Stay | ||
| BN-LA 506-H2 | Elvin Jones | The Prime Element | ||
| BN-LA 507-H2 | 1975 | Fats Navarro | Prime Source | |
| BN-LA 519-G | 1975 | Gene Harris | Nexus | |
| BN-LA 520-H2 | 1975 | Chico Hamilton | Peregrinations | |
| BN-LA 521-H2 | 1975 | Johnny Griffin / John Coltrane / Hank Mobley | Blowin' Sessions | |
| BN-LA 529-H2 | 1975 | Paul Horn | Paul Horn in India | |
| BN-LA 530-H2 | 1975 | The Jazz Crusaders | The Young Rabbits | |
| BN-LA 531-H2 | 1975 | Wes Montgomery | Beginnings | |
| BN-LA 532-H2 | 1975 | Gerry Mulligan / Lee Konitz | Revelation | |
| BN-LA 533-H2 | 1975 | T-Bone Walker | Classics of Modern Blues | |
| BN-LA 534-G | 1975 | Jimmy Witherspoon | Spoonful | |
| BN-LA 541-G | 1975 | John Lee / Gerry Brown | Mango Sunrise | |
| BN-LA 549-G | 1975 | Donald Byrd | Places and Spaces | |
| BN-LA 550-G | 1975 | Bobbi Humphrey | Fancy Dancer | |
| BN-LA 551-G | 1975 | Bobby Hutcherson | Montara | |
| BN-LA 579-H2 | 1976 | Thelonious Monk | The Complete Genius | |
| BN-LA 581-G | 1976 | Horace Silver | Silver 'n Wood | |
| BN-LA 582-J2 | Lee Morgan | The Procrastinator | ||
| BN-LA 584-G | 1976 | Alphonse Mouzon | The Man Incognito | |
| BN-LA 590-H2 | 1976 | Milt Jackson | All Star Bags | |
| BN-LA 591-H2 | 1976 | Art Pepper | Early Art | |
| BN-LA 596-G | 1976 | Earl Klugh | Earl Klugh | |
| BN-LA 598-H2 | 1976 | Randy Weston | Little Niles | |
| BN-LA 606-G | 1976 | Marlena Shaw | Just a Matter of Time | |
| BN-LA 615-G | 1976 | Bobby Hutcherson | Waiting | |
| BN-LA 622-G | 1976 | Chico Hamilton | Chico Hamilton and the Prayers | |
| BN-LA 628-H | 1976 | Ronnie Laws | Fever | |
| BN-LA 632-H2 | 1976 | Jean-Luc Ponty | Cantaloupe Island | |
| BN-LA 633-G | 1976 | Donald Byrd | Caricatures | |
| BN-LA 634-G | 1976 | Gene Harris | In a Special Way | |
| BN-LA 635-G | 1976 | Carmen McRae | Can't Hide Love | |
| BN-LA 636-G | 1976 | Eddie Henderson | Heritage | |
| BN-LA 645-G | 1976 | Barbara Carroll | Barbara Carroll | |
| BN-LA 663-J2 | 1976 | Various artists | Blue Note Live at the Roxy | |
| BN-LA 664-G | Robbie Krieger | Robbie Krieger and Friends | ||
| BN-LA 667-G | 1976 | Earl Klugh | Living Inside Your Love | |
| BN-LA 690-J2 | War | Platinum Jazz | ||
| BN-LA 699-G | 1976 | Bobbi Humphrey's Best | ||
| BN-LA 700-G | 1976 | Donald Byrd's Best | ||
| BN-LA 701-G | 1976 | John Lee / Gerry Brown | Still Can't Say Enough | |
| BN-LA 708-G | 1977 | Horace Silver | Silver 'n Voices | |
| BN-LA 709-H2 | 1977 | Carmen McRae | Carmen McRae at the Great American Music Hall | |
| BN-LA 710-G | 1977 | Bobby Hutcherson | The View from the Inside | |
| BN-LA 711-G | 1977 | Willie Bobo | Tomorrow Is Here | |
| BN-LA 730-H | 1977 | Ronnie Laws | Friends & Strangers | |
| BN-LA 736-H | 1977 | Noel Pointer | Phantazia | |
| BN-LA 737-H | 1977 | Earl Klugh | Finger Paintings | |
| BN-LA 738-G | 1977 | Maxi Anderson | Maxi | |
| BN-LA 760-H | 1977 | Gene Harris | Tone Tantrum | |
| BN-LA 789-G | 1977 | Bobby Hutcherson | Knucklebean | |
| BN-LA 819-H | 1977 | Rico Rodriguez | Man from Wareika | |
| BN-LA 853-H | 1978 | Horace Silver | Silver 'n Percussion | |
| BN-LA 870-H | 1978 | Various artists | Blue Note Meet the L.A. Philharmonic | |
| BN-LA 882-J2 | 1978 | Chick Corea | Circulus | |
| BN-LA 883-J2 | 1978 | Stanley Turrentine | Jubilee Shout!!! | |
| BN-LA 945-H | 1979 | Horace Silver | Sterling Silver |
LT series
[edit]After EMI acquired United Artists Records, Blue Note LPs continued to appear with catalog numbers taken from the main numbering sequence of UA and its successor, the revived Liberty Records. This is effectively a continuation of the BN-LA series without UA's letter codes. Albums in this series appeared in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title | Date recorded |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LT-987 | 1979 | Lee Morgan | Sonic Boom | 4/14/67, 4/28/67 |
| LT-988 | 1979 | Wayne Shorter | The Soothsayer | 3/4/65 |
| LT-989 | 1979 | Dexter Gordon | Clubhouse | 5/27/65 |
| LT-990 | 1979 | Grant Green | Solid | 6/12/64 |
| LT-991 | 1979 | Donald Byrd | Chant | 4/17/61 |
| LT-992 | 1979 | Jimmy Smith | Confirmation | 8/25/57, 2/25/58 |
| LT-993 | 1979 | Stanley Turrentine | New Time Shuffle | 2/17/67, 6/23/67 |
| LT-994 | 1979 | Jackie McLean | Consequence | 12/3/65 |
| LT-995 | 1979 | Hank Mobley | A Slice of the Top | 3/18/66 |
| LT-996 | 1979 | Bobby Hutcherson | Spiral | 4/3/65, 11/11/68 |
| LT-1028 | 1980 | Lou Donaldson | Midnight Sun | 7/22/60 |
| LT-1030 | 1980 | Andrew Hill | Dance with Death | LT-10/11/68 |
| LT-1031 | 1980 | Lee Morgan | Taru | 2/15/68 |
| LT-1032 | 1980 | Grant Green | Nigeria | 1/13/62 |
| LWB-1033 | 1980 | Horace Silver | Silver 'n Strings Play the Music of the Spheres | LT-11/3/78, 11/10/78, 10/26/79, 11/2/79 |
| LT-1037 | 1979 | Stanley Turrentine | In Memory Of | 6/3/64 |
| LT-1038 | 1980 | Larry Young | Mother Ship | 2/7/69 |
| LT-1044 | 1980 | Bobby Hutcherson | Patterns | 3/14/68 |
| LT-1045 | 1980 | Hank Mobley | Thinking of Home | 7/31/70 |
| LT-1046 | 1980 | The Jazz Crusaders | Live Sides | |
| LT-1051 | 1980 | Dexter Gordon | Landslide | 5/9/61, 5/5/62, 6/25/62 |
| LT-1052 | 1980 | Ike Quebec | With a Song in My Heart | 2/5/62, 2/13/62 |
| LT-1053 | 1980 | Joe Pass | The Complete "Catch Me!" Sessions | |
| LT-1054 | 1980 | Jimmy Smith | Cool Blues | 4/7/58 |
| LT-1055 | N/A | Vic Dickenson / Bobby Hackett | Mainstreamin' | not released |
| LT-1056 | 1980 | Wayne Shorter | Et Cetera | 6/14/65 |
| LT-1057 | 1980 | Harold Land | Take Aim | 7/25/60 |
| LT-1058 | 1980 | Lee Morgan | Tom Cat | 8/11/64 |
| LT-1064 | 1981 | Art Pepper | Omega Alpha | 4/1/57 |
| LT-1065 | 1981 | Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers | Once Upon a Groove | 1/14/57, 2/11/57 |
| LT-1075 | 1980 | Stanley Turrentine | Mr. Natural | LT-9/4/64 |
| LT-1076 | 1980 | Leo Parker | Rollin' with Leo | LT-10/12/61, 10/20/61 |
| LT-1081 | 1981 | Hank Mobley | Third Season | 2/24/67 |
| LT-1082 | 1980 | Blue Mitchell | Step Lightly | 8/13/63 |
| LT-1085 | 1980 | Jackie McLean | Vertigo | 5/2/59, 6/14/62, 2/11/63 |
| LT-1086 | 1980 | Bobby Hutcherson | Medina | 8/11/69 |
| LT-1088 | 1981 | Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers | Africaine | LT-11/10/59 |
| LT-1089 | 1981 | Ike Quebec | Congo Lament | 1/20/62 |
| LT-1091 | 1981 | Lee Morgan | Infinity | LT-11/16/65 |
| LT-1092 | 1981 | Jimmy Smith | On the Sunny Side | 8/25/57, 6/15/58, 6/16/59, 4/25/60 |
| LT-1095 | 1981 | Stanley Turrentine | Ain't No Way | 5/10/68, 6/23/69 |
| LT-1096 | 1981 | Donald Byrd | The Creeper | LT-10/6/61 |
| LT-1100 | 1981 | Bob Brookmeyer / Bill Evans | As Time Goes By | 3/12/59 |
| LT-1101 | 1981 | Gerry Mulligan | Freeway | 6/10/52, 7/9/52, 8/16/52, 10/15/52 |
| LT-1102 | 1981 | Jean-Luc Ponty | Live at Donte's | 3/11/69, 3/12/69 |
| LT-1103 | 1981 | Joe Pass | Joy Spring | 2/6/64 |
Manhattan 85100 series
[edit]Series of new studio albums as well as a few reissues released c. 1985–87, following Blue Note's reestablishment.
| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| 85101 | 1985 | Stanley Jordan | Magic Touch |
| 85102 | 1985 | McCoy Tyner / Jackie McLean | It's About Time |
| 85103 | 1985 | George Russell | The African Game |
| 85104 | Charles Lloyd | A Night in Copenhagen | |
| 85105 | 1985 | Stanley Turrentine | Straight Ahead |
| 85106 | 1985 | Kenny Burrell / Grover Washington Jr. | Togethering |
| 85107 | 1985 | Bennie Wallace | Twilight Time |
| 85108 | 1985 | Charlie Parker | At Storyville |
| 85109 | 1985 | James Newton | The African Flower |
| 85110 | Bobby McFerrin | Spontaneous Inventions | |
| 85111 | 1985 | Bill Evans | The Alternative Man |
| 85112 | 1985 | Dexter Gordon | Nights at the Keystone |
| 85113 | 1985 | Various artists | One Night with Blue Note, Vol. 1 |
| 85114 | One Night with Blue Note, Vol. 2 | ||
| 85115 | One Night with Blue Note, Vol. 3 | ||
| 85116 | One Night with Blue Note, Vol. 4 | ||
| 85117 | 1985 | Various artists | One Night with Blue Note, Preserved |
| 85118 | 1985 | Out of the Blue | OTB |
| 85119 | 1985 | Tony Williams | Foreign Intrigue |
| 85120 | N/A | Unissued | Unissued |
| 85121 | 1986 | Freddie Hubbard / Woody Shaw | Double Take |
| 85122 | 1986 | Don Pullen / George Adams | Breakthrough |
| 85123 | 1986 | Joe Henderson | The State of the Tenor Live at the Village Vanguard, Vol. 1 |
| 85124 | 1986 | Michel Petrucciani | Pianism |
| 85125 | 1986 | Jimmy Smith | Go for Whatcha Know |
| 85126 | Joe Henderson | The State of the Tenor Live at the Village Vanguard, Vol. 2 | |
| 85127 | 1986 | Blue Note '86 | A New Generation of Jazz |
| 85128 | 1986 | Out of the Blue | Inside Track |
| 85129 | 1986 | Duke Ellington | Money Jungle |
| 85130 | 1986 | Stanley Jordan | Standards, Vol. 1 |
| 85131 | Eric Dolphy | Other Aspects | |
| 85132 | George Russell | So What | |
| 85133 | Michel Petrucciani | Power of Three | |
| 85134 | James Newton | Romance and Revolution | |
| 85135 | Dexter Gordon | The Other Side of Round Midnight | |
| 85136 | 1987 | James "Blood" Ulmer | America – Do You Remember the Love? |
| 85137 | 1987 | Kenny Burrell and the Jazz Guitar Band | Generation |
| 85138 | 1987 | Tony Williams | Civilization |
| 85139 | 1987 | Freddie Hubbard | Life Flight |
| 85140 | 1987 | Stanley Turrentine | Wonderland |
| 85141 | 1987 | Out of the Blue | Live at Mt. Fuji |
Other series
[edit]1600 series
[edit]These CDs make available originally unissued material from the sessions from the 1500 series. They were manufactured by Toshiba-EMI and use 20-bit, 88.2 kHz recording technology.
| Catalog number | Artist | Title | Date recorded |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1601 | Various artists | Blue Trails: The Rare Tracks | |
| 1602 | Art Blakey | A Night in Birdland, Volume 3 | 2/21/54 |
| 1603 | The Jazz Messengers | At the Cafe Bohemia, Volume 3 | 11/23/55 |
| 1604 | Thelonious Monk | Genius of Modern Music, Volume 3 | 10/15/47, 10/24/47, 11/21/47, 7/23/51, 5/30/52 |
| 1605 | Clifford Brown | More Memorable Tracks | 6/9/53, 8/28/53 |
| 1606 | Kenny Dorham | 'Round About Midnight at the Cafe Bohemia Volume 2 | 5/31/56 |
| 1607 | 'Round About Midnight at the Cafe Bohemia Volume 3 | ||
| 1608 | Herbie Nichols | Herbie Nichols Trio, Volume 2 | 8/7/55, 4/19/56 |
| 1609 | Kenny Burrell | Kenny Burrell, Volume 3 | 3/12/56, 5/29/56, 5/31/56 |
| 1610 | Jimmy Smith / Lou Donaldson | Jimmy Smith Trio + LD | 7/4/57 |
| 1611 | Hank Mobley / Sonny Clark | Curtain Call | 8/18/57 |
| 1612 | Jimmy Smith | Cherokee | |
| 1613 | Sonny Rollins | A Night at the Village Vanguard, Volume 2 | 11/3/57 |
| 1614 | A Night at the Village Vanguard, Volume 3 | ||
| 1615 | Jimmy Smith | Lonesome Road | |
| 1616 | Tina Brooks | Minor Move | 3/16/58 |
| 1617 | Sonny Clark Trio | The 45 Sessions | 9/13/57, 11/16/58 |
| 1618 | Sonny Clark | Blues in the Night | 12/7/58 |
| 1619 | Bennie Green | The 45 Session | 11/23/58 |
| 1620 | Hank Mobley | Poppin' | 10/20/57 |
9000 series
[edit]An experimental and short-lived vocal jazz series; only two albums were released in this series:
| Catalogue number | Year | Artist | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| BLP 9001 | 1963 | Dodo Greene | My Hour of Need |
| BLP 9002 | 1963 | Sheila Jordan | Portrait of Sheila |
King Records
[edit]GXF 3000 series
[edit]| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| GXF-3023 | 1978 | Lee Morgan All-Star Sextet | |
| GXF-3024 | 1978 | Lee Morgan Sextet | |
| GXF-3051 | 1979 | Sonny Clark | Blues in the Night |
| GXF-3052 | 1979 | Kenny Burrell | K.B. Blues |
| GXF-3053 | 1979 | Grant Green | Matador |
| GXF-3054 | 1979 | Wayne Shorter | The Soothsayer |
| GXF-3055 | 1979 | Dexter Gordon | Clubhouse |
| GXF-3056 | 1979 | Sonny Clark | My Conception |
| GXF-3057 | 1979 | Kenny Burrell | Freedom |
| GXF-3058 | 1979 | Grant Green | Gooden's Corner |
| GXF-3059 | 1979 | Wayne Shorter | The Collector |
| GXF-3060 | 1979 | Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers | Pisces |
| GXF-3061 | 1979 | Bobby Hutcherson | Oblique |
| GXF-3062 | 1979 | Jackie McLean | Tippin' the Scales |
| GXF-3063 | 1980 | Bennie Green | Minor Revelation |
| GXF-3064 | 1980 | Curtis Fuller | Two Bones |
| GXF-3065 | 1980 | Grant Green | Oleo |
| GXF-3066 | 1980 | Hank Mobley | Poppin' |
| GXF-3067 | 1980 | Jackie McLean, Tina Brooks | Street Singer |
| GXF-3068 | 1980 | Lou Donaldson | Sweet Slumber |
| GXF-3069 | 1980 | Sonny Clark | The Art of the Trio |
| GXF-3070 | 1980 | Kenny Burrell | Swingin' |
| GXF-3071 | 1980 | Grant Green | Remembering |
| GXF-3072 | 1980 | Tina Brooks | Minor Move |
| GXF-3073 | 1980 | Bobby Hutcherson | Inner Glow |
| GXF-3074 | not released | Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers | The Jazz Messengers at the Cafe Bohemia, Volume 3 |
| GXF-3075 | not released | Grant Green | Born to Be Blue |
| GXF-3076 | not released | The 3 Sounds | D.B. Blues |
| GXF-3077 | not released | Kenny Dorham | 'Round About Midnight at the Cafe Bohemia, Vol. 2 |
| GXF-3078 | not released | Jimmy Smith | Lonesome Road |
| GXF-3079 | not released | Hank Mobley | Another Workout |
| GXF-3080 | not released | Andrew Hill | Chained |
GP 3100 series
[edit]| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| GP-3186 | 1979 | Tommy Flanagan | Lonely Town |
K18P-9200 series
[edit]| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| K18P-9271 | 1983 | Elmo Hope Trio/Elmo Hope Quintet | |
| K18P-9272 | 1983 | Herbie Nichols Trio | |
| K18P-9273 | 1983 | Julius Watkins Sextet | |
| K18P-9274 | 1983 | Howard McGhee All Stars/Howard McGhee Sextet | |
| K18P-9275 | 1983 | Gil Melle Quintet/Gil Melle Sextet | |
| K18P-9276 | 1983 | George Wallington and His Band/Hank Mobley Quartet | |
| K18P-9277 | 1983 | Sonny Rollins | A Night at the Village Vanguard, Volume 2 |
| K18P-9278 | 1983 | Sonny Rollins | A Night at the Village Vanguard, Volume 3 |
| K18P-9279 | 1983 | Sonny Clark | Cool Struttin', Vol. 2 |
| K18P-9280 | 1983 | Jimmy Smith | The Singles |
King Records BONUS DY 5800 series
[edit]| Catalog number | Year | Artist | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| DY-5801-01 | 1983 | Grant Green | Am I Blue |
| DY-5801-02 | 1983 | Leo Parker | Let Me Tell You 'Bout It |
| DY-5805-01 | 1983 | Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers | The Jazz Messengers at the Cafe Bohemia, Volume 3 |
| DY-5806-01 | 1983 | Jutta Hipp Quintet | New Faces-New Sounds from Germany |
Other
[edit]| Year | Artist | Title |
|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Us3 | Hand on the Torch |
| 1996 | Various artists | The New Groove: The Blue Note Remix Project |
| 1997 | Us3 | Broadway & 52nd |
| 2003 | Madlib | Shades of Blue: Madlib Invades Blue Note |
| Various artists | Untinted: Sources for Madlib's Shades of Blue | |
| 2003 | Various artists | Blue Note Trip Series |
| 2004 | Various artists | Blue Note Revisited |
| 2015 | Various artists | Supreme Sonacy, Vol. 1 |
| 2020 | Various artists | Blue Note Re:imagined |
| 2022 | Blue Note Re:imagined II |
References
[edit]- ^ Litweiler, John (1993). Ornette Coleman: A Harmolodic Life (1st ed.). William Morrow & Co. p. 111. ISBN 978-0688072124.
Bibliography
[edit]- Cohen, Frederick. Blue Note Records: A Guide for Identifying Original Pressings. ISBN 978-0-692-00322-0.
- Cook, Richard. Blue Note Records: A Biography. ISBN 1-932112-10-3.
- Cuscuna, Michael & Michel Ruppli. The Blue Note Label: A Discography. ISBN 0-313-31826-3 [2nd ed 2001]
- Marsh, Graham & Glyn Callingham. Blue Note: Album Cover Art. ISBN 0-8118-3688-6.
- Marsh, Graham Blue Note 2: The Album Cover Art: The Finest in Jazz Since 1939. ISBN 0-8118-1853-5 [US edition]
- Wolff, Francis et al. Blue Note Jazz Photography of Francis Wolff. ISBN 0-7893-0493-7.
Blue Note Records discography
View on GrokipediaEarly Releases
78 rpm Singles
Blue Note Records began issuing 78 rpm singles in 1939, founded by German immigrant Alfred Lion in New York City with initial financial support from pianist Max Margulis and later co-management by photographer Francis Wolff.[10][11] Inspired by the "From Spirituals to Swing" concert at Carnegie Hall in December 1938, Lion focused on capturing authentic expressions of hot jazz, boogie-woogie, and swing, recording artists in small New York studios to emphasize musical integrity over commercial gain.[10][11] These early shellac discs, typically 12-inch format to allow extended performances unlike the standard 10-inch, marked the label's entry into jazz documentation during a period of economic recovery and evolving musical styles.[10] The catalog progressed from BN 1 in early 1939 to approximately BN 1595 by 1952, encompassing over 1,500 releases that traced the evolution from traditional jazz to bebop.[12] The inaugural session on January 6, 1939, produced BN 1 ("Melancholy" b/w "Solitude" by Meade Lux Lewis) and BN 2 ("Boogie Woogie Stomp" b/w "Boogie Woogie Blues" by Albert Ammons), setting a boogie-woogie foundation with piano-driven energy.[12][11] Subsequent early releases, such as BN 4–6 in 1939 featuring additional boogie-woogie tracks by Ammons and Lewis, highlighted the label's commitment to stride and barrelhouse piano traditions.[12] By the mid-1940s, the series incorporated swing ensembles, and the postwar era saw a pivotal shift to bebop, exemplified by BN 506 (Thelonious Monk Quartet, 1948) and BN 542 ("Thelonious" b/w "Suburban Eyes" from Monk's October 15, 1947, session at WOR Studios).[10][12] Dexter Gordon's early tenor saxophone features, including his 1947 debut session tracks released in the late 1940s, further underscored this modern jazz turn.[10] Production of these 78 rpm singles involved limited pressings, often starting at 25–30 copies for initial runs, pressed by independent facilities and distributed through jazz enthusiasts like Milt Gabler.[11] Recordings occurred in rented New York venues such as a West Side studio (1939), WMGM (for Bechet's hits), Reeves Sound Studios (1940s), and WOR Studios (postwar), frequently scheduled late at night—sometimes beginning at 4:30 a.m.—to accommodate musicians' availability and foster relaxed, improvisational sessions.[10][11] This hands-off approach, with minimal interference from Lion and Wolff, prioritized artistic freedom, though wartime shellac shortages constrained output until the early 1950s.[13] Notable artist debuts on the 78 rpm series included clarinetist Sidney Bechet with BN 6 ("Summertime," recorded June 8, 1939, at WMGM Studios), which became an early commercial success blending soprano saxophone with swing backing.[10][11] Pianist James P. Johnson appeared in 1943 sessions featuring stride piano in small-group settings, reviving interest in Harlem's pre-swing heritage.[13] Thelonious Monk's 1947 debut introduced angular bebop compositions to the catalog, while Dexter Gordon's tenor work in the same period debuted a robust, narrative-driven style that influenced hard bop.[10] These debuts, alongside figures like Art Blakey and Bud Powell in the late 1940s, positioned Blue Note as a vanguard for jazz innovation before the format's decline with the rise of long-playing records around 1953.[13]| Catalog | Artist | Title(s) | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BN 1 | Meade Lux Lewis | Melancholy / Solitude | Jan. 1939 | Boogie-woogie piano debut; 12-inch format.[12] |
| BN 2 | Albert Ammons | Boogie Woogie Stomp / Boogie Woogie Blues | Jan. 1939 | Early hit establishing label's piano focus.[12] |
| BN 6 | Sidney Bechet and Port of Harlem Seven | Pounding Heart Blues / Summertime | Jun. 1939 | Soprano sax debut; first commercial success.[10][14] |
| BN 542 | Thelonious Monk Quartet | Thelonious / Suburban Eyes | Oct. 1947 | Bebop transition; WOR Studios recording.[10][12] |
| BN 506 | Thelonious Monk Quartet | Evidence / Misterioso | 1948 | Seminal bebop tracks from 1948 session.[12] |
10-inch LP Series
Blue Note Records began issuing 10-inch LPs in late 1951 as a bridge from 78 rpm singles to the emerging long-playing format, with the Modern Jazz 5000 series compiling prior sessions and introducing fresh material from hard bop pioneers. These releases, starting with BLP 5001 Mellow the Mood and expanding significantly in 1953, featured artists like Clifford Brown, Lou Donaldson, and Horace Silver, capturing the label's shift toward bebop and hard bop aesthetics. By 1953, the series included key debuts such as BLP 5030 New Faces, New Sounds by the Lou Donaldson Quintet with Clifford Brown, which drew from earlier 78 rpm recordings while showcasing new energy in the genre.[15] The 5000 series encompassed around 70 titles from BLP 5001 to BLP 5070, issued between 1951 and 1955, emphasizing concise programs of four to six tracks that highlighted improvisational depth over extended suites. A seminal example is BLP 5018 Introducing the Horace Silver Trio, recorded on October 9 and 20, 1952, at WOR Studios in New York City, with Horace Silver on piano, Gene Ramey on bass, and Art Blakey on drums; the album's tracks, including the original "Ecaroh" (Horace spelled backward), exemplified Silver's rhythmic innovations and blues-infused harmonies. Similarly, BLP 5030, recorded June 9, 1953, at the same studio, united Lou Donaldson on alto saxophone, Clifford Brown on trumpet, Elmo Hope on piano, Percy Heath on bass, and Philly Joe Jones on drums, blending fiery solos with tight ensemble work on standards like "Carvin' the Rock." These albums not only preserved vital sessions but also propelled Blue Note's reputation for discovering talent during the hard bop era.[15][16] Recording practices evolved with the format, as Blue Note enlisted engineer Rudy Van Gelder starting in 1953 for enhanced fidelity; his debut session for the label was the Gil Mellé Quintet on January 31, 1953, at Van Gelder's Hackensack, New Jersey studio, yielding BLP 5033 Gil Mellé Quintet, Vol. 1 and marking the onset of the label's signature warm, detailed sound. Artwork for these 10-inch LPs featured minimalist designs by John Hermansader and Paul Bacon, often incorporating black-and-white photography by Francis Wolff to evoke the intimacy of small-group jazz, setting a template later refined by Reid Miles upon the shift to 12-inch releases. The parallel 7000 series, from BLP 7001 to approximately BLP 7078 between 1951 and 1955, reissued traditional jazz on 10-inch format, such as BLP 7001 Sidney Bechet's Blue Note Jazz Men, contrasting the modern focus of the 5000 run. Early entries in the 5000 series, like BLP 5005 James Moody with Strings from a 1951 Paris session, served as 10-inch precursors, compiling orchestral arrangements that anticipated fuller 12-inch expansions. This period's output, bridging 78 rpm limitations to LP versatility, directly informed the Modern Jazz 1500 series' growth.[17][18][19][20]Classic 12-inch LP Series
1200 Series
The 1200 series marked Blue Note Records' transition to 12-inch long-playing records in the mid-1950s, focusing primarily on reissues and compilations of traditional jazz from the label's earlier 78 rpm catalog. Launched in 1955, the series comprised approximately 8 original releases up to BLP 1208, though active production tapered off by the late 1950s as Blue Note shifted emphasis toward contemporary styles. These albums highlighted the roots of jazz through New Orleans-inspired ensembles and Dixieland revivalists, offering accessible, groove-oriented sessions that contrasted with the bebop innovations emerging in parallel series.[21][22] Key releases in the series drew from historic sessions recorded in the 1940s and early 1950s, often remastered for the LP format to capture the warm, swinging essence of traditional jazz. For instance, BLP 1203 Giant of Jazz Volume 1 by Sidney Bechet, released in 1955, featured the soprano saxophonist's clarinet and soprano saxophone leading small groups on standards like "Save It Pretty Mama" and "Way Down Yonder in New Orleans." Personnel included Bechet alongside cornetists, clarinetists, and rhythm sections from New York sessions circa 1940-1941, emphasizing collective improvisation and blues-inflected melodies. Similarly, BLP 1205 George Lewis and His New Orleans Stompers Volume 1, issued in 1955, showcased the clarinetist's ensemble on tracks such as "Walking with the King" and "Gettysburg March," with a lineup of trumpet, trombone, piano, banjo, and drums evoking authentic Crescent City polyphony recorded in 1940s New Orleans. These albums exemplified the series' soulful, danceable quality, rooted in gospel and blues influences that made traditional jazz appealing to broader audiences.[23][22] Production for the 1200 series maintained Blue Note's commitment to high-fidelity engineering, with Rudy Van Gelder handling remastering at his Hackensack studio to enhance the original mono recordings' clarity and dynamics. Album artwork, designed by Reid Miles, adopted the label's signature modernist photography, often featuring sepia-toned images of performers to evoke jazz's historical depth. Distribution remained under Blue Note's independent control until 1966, when Liberty Records acquired the label, prompting a reorganization of catalog numbering that integrated remaining traditional releases into expanded modern jazz lines. By this transition around 1966, the 1200 series had effectively concluded, having preserved over a dozen seminal traditional jazz sessions while paving the way for Blue Note's hard bop dominance. Artist crossovers, such as shared sidemen between traditional and emerging modern ensembles, briefly linked the 1200 series to the concurrent 1500 Modern Jazz releases.[23]Modern Jazz 1500 Series
The Modern Jazz 1500 Series initiated Blue Note Records' shift to 12-inch LPs in the mid-1950s, compiling and newly recording material that captured the transition from bebop and cool jazz to early hard bop, with releases spanning from BLP 1501 in 1955 to approximately BLP 1599 in 1958 and totaling 99 albums.[24] These mono pressings, denoted by the BLP prefix, emphasized straight-ahead jazz performances, often featuring small combos and emphasizing improvisational depth over orchestral arrangements.[25] Produced during the label's independent pre-Liberty era, the series benefited from engineering by Rudy Van Gelder at his Hackensack, New Jersey, studio starting in 1956, yielding the label's signature warm, detailed sound with prominent bass and drum presence. The inaugural release, BLP 1501 Miles Davis Volume 1 (1955), was a compilation of tracks from 1952–1953 sessions at WOR Studios in New York, showcasing Davis on trumpet alongside J.J. Johnson on trombone, Jackie McLean on alto saxophone, Gil Coggins on piano, Percy Heath on bass, and Kenny Clarke or Art Taylor on drums; key tracks included "Tempus Fugit" and "Compulsion," highlighting cool jazz's introspective lyricism. This approach of reissuing earlier material from 10-inch LPs and 78 rpm singles allowed Blue Note to build its modern jazz catalog economically while introducing listeners to foundational post-bop works.[26] Pivotal to the series' hard bop identity was Horace Silver's BLP 1518 Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers (1956), recorded November 13, 1956, at Van Gelder Studio with Silver on piano, Art Blakey on drums, Kenny Dorham on trumpet, and Hank Mobley on tenor saxophone; the session produced tracks like "The Preacher" and "Room 608," infusing bebop with gospel-tinged funk and rhythmic drive that became hallmarks of the style. Art Blakey further anchored the series through live and studio efforts, such as BLP 1507 The Jazz Messengers at the Cafe Bohemia Volume 1 (1956), captured December 1955 at the New York venue with Blakey on drums, Donald Byrd on trumpet, Jackie McLean on alto saxophone, Hank Mobley on tenor saxophone, Horace Silver on piano, and Doug Watkins on bass, emphasizing the group's explosive interplay. John Coltrane's sole Blue Note leader date, BLP 1577 Blue Train (1958), recorded September 15, 1957, at Van Gelder Studio, featured Coltrane on tenor saxophone, Lee Morgan on trumpet, Curtis Fuller on trombone, Kenny Drew on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Philly Joe Jones on drums; tracks such as the title cut and "Moment's Notice" demonstrated Coltrane's maturing modal explorations within a hard bop framework. Other representative releases included Jimmy Smith's organ innovations on BLP 1512 At the Organ Volume 1 (1956, recorded live August 25, 1956, at Small's Paradise in Harlem) and Thad Jones's trumpet-led Detroit-New York Junction (BLP 1513, 1956), both underscoring the series' diversity in instrumentation and venue. Visually, from BLP 1509 onward, the covers adopted Reid Miles's modernist designs—typically a deep blue background with stark white typography and cropped black-and-white photos by Francis Wolff—enhancing the albums' aesthetic appeal and cultural iconography.[25] While comprehensive catalogs exist, original pressings remain prized for their gatefold sleeves and detailed liner notes by Leonard Feather or Ira Gitler, with reissues limited to later stereo upgrades outside this mono-focused era.[26] The 1500 Series thus established Blue Note's reputation for artist development, briefly overlapping in personnel with the ensuing 4000 Series.[25]| Catalog | Artist | Title | Release Year | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BLP 1501 | Miles Davis | Volume 1 | 1955 | Compilation; cool jazz sextet sessions (1952–1953) |
| BLP 1518 | Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers | Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers | 1956 | Hard bop debut; Van Gelder, Nov. 13, 1956 |
| BLP 1507 | Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers | At the Cafe Bohemia Volume 1 | 1956 | Live bebop; Cafe Bohemia, Dec. 1955 |
| BLP 1577 | John Coltrane | Blue Train | 1958 | Hard bop sextet; Van Gelder, Sept. 15, 1957 |
| BLP 1512 | Jimmy Smith | At the Organ Volume 1 | 1956 | Organ jazz live; Small's Paradise, Aug. 25, 1956 |
Modern Jazz 4000 Series
The Modern Jazz 4000 Series marked a prolific expansion of Blue Note Records' catalog during the early to mid-1960s, solidifying the label's role as a cornerstone of hard bop while incorporating emerging modal jazz elements that foreshadowed broader stylistic evolutions. Launched in 1956 with initial reissues and new recordings, the series gained momentum from 1961 onward, encompassing approximately 250 albums by mid-1966, primarily in both mono (BLP) and stereo (BST) formats. Building briefly on the foundational bebop and early hard bop of the preceding 1500 Series, the 4000 Series shifted toward more mature ensemble explorations, featuring leaders like Art Blakey, Horace Silver, and Lee Morgan alongside rising talents such as Joe Henderson and Wayne Shorter. These releases captured the genre's vitality through intricate compositions and improvisational depth, often emphasizing rhythmic drive and blues-inflected harmonies characteristic of hard bop.[27] Central to the series' growth was its production under Blue Note's independent operation until the 1966 sale, with distribution handled directly by the label to maintain artistic control and focus on jazz enthusiasts. Key sessions occurred at engineer Rudy Van Gelder's facilities, transitioning from his Hackensack, New Jersey, home studio—used for early 4000 entries like Sonny Rollins' Newk's Time (BLP 4001, recorded September 22, 1957)—to the purpose-built Englewood Cliffs studio starting in 1960, which enhanced sonic clarity and spatial imaging for stereo releases. Album covers, photographed by co-founder Francis Wolff, became visually iconic, often featuring stark black-and-white portraits or atmospheric studio shots that complemented the music's intensity. This era produced over 180 original albums from 1961 to 1966, including extensive discographies for core artists: Horace Silver recorded seven leader dates, such as Further Explorations (BLP 4073, 1958, but recontextualized in the series' expansion), blending gospel and Latin influences; Lee Morgan issued eight albums, highlighted by The Sidewinder (BST 84157, 1964), a commercial breakthrough with its soulful title track; and Hank Mobley contributed nine sessions, like Soul Station (BST 84034, 1960), exemplifying tenor saxophone lyricism in quartet settings.[28][29][10] Iconic releases underscored the series' artistic peak, with full session details revealing meticulous preparation. Joe Henderson's debut Page One (BST 84139, released 1963) was recorded on December 21, 1963, at Van Gelder's Englewood Cliffs studio, featuring Henderson on tenor saxophone, Kenny Dorham on trumpet, Eddie Higgins on piano, Bob Cranshaw on bass, and Al Harewood on drums; its originals like "Blue Comet" highlighted Henderson's angular phrasing and the quintet's cohesive swing. Herbie Hancock's Maiden Voyage (BST 84187, 1965) emerged from a March 17, 1965, session at the same studio, uniting Hancock on piano, Freddie Hubbard on trumpet, George Coleman on tenor saxophone, Ron Carter on bass, and Tony Williams on drums; the album's modal structures, including the oceanic title suite, exemplified post-hard bop sophistication without overt fusion experimentation. Wayne Shorter's Speak No Evil (BST 84219, 1966), taped December 24, 1965, at Englewood Cliffs, brought together Shorter on tenor saxophone, Hubbard on trumpet, Hancock on piano, Carter on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums, delivering introspective themes like "Witch Hunt" that bridged hard bop's energy with abstract modalism. These works, among dozens, dominated the series' output, prioritizing ensemble interplay over solo virtuosity.[30][31][32] The 4000 Series reached its zenith amid Blue Note's creative autonomy, but the era concluded with the label's sale to Liberty Records in May 1966, prompted by founder Alfred Lion's health issues and the challenges of sustaining an artist-driven operation. This transaction led to a hiatus in original productions by late 1966, with the final pre-sale releases like Shorter's album marking the end of the independent phase; subsequent Liberty-era entries shifted toward commercial pressures, diluting the hard bop focus with more pop-oriented jazz. The series' legacy endures as the hard bop and modal jazz canon, with Van Gelder's engineering and Wolff's imagery preserving its aesthetic integrity across roughly 250 titles.[10][33]BN-LA and LT Series
The BN-LA series, initiated in 1972 under United Artists ownership following the label's acquisition by Liberty Records in 1966, represented Blue Note's pivot toward more commercial, fusion-oriented jazz during the early to mid-1970s.[22] This series, denoted by catalog numbers starting from BN-LA 006-F, emphasized recordings made in Los Angeles studios such as The Sound Factory and A&M, shifting away from the East Coast hard bop sound engineered by Rudy Van Gelder to a West Coast production style that incorporated electric instruments, synthesizers, and larger ensembles.[34] Artists like Donald Byrd and Bobbi Humphrey dominated the output, blending jazz with funk and soul elements to appeal to broader audiences amid the label's experimental phase.[35] Key releases in the BN-LA series highlighted this fusion evolution, often featuring producers like Larry Mizell who amplified rhythmic grooves and electronic textures. For instance, Donald Byrd's Black Byrd (BN-LA 047-F, 1973) became a commercial breakthrough with its title track showcasing electric piano and bass alongside Byrd's trumpet, marking one of the label's best-selling albums of the era.[34] Similarly, Eddie Henderson's Sunburst (BN-LA 464-G, 1975) exemplified the series' West Coast vibe through sessions at Paramount Recording Studios, incorporating Herbie Hancock-inspired fusion with Henderson's flugelhorn leading expansive arrangements.[34] Other notable entries included live recordings like Elvin Jones' Live at the Lighthouse (BN-LA 015-G, 1972), captured at the Hermosa Beach venue to reflect the era's vibrant club scene.[35] The series extended to compilations and reissues by 1975, curated by Michael Cuscuna and Charlie Lourie, drawing from Blue Note's vault to sustain momentum amid declining traditional jazz sales.[22]| Catalog Number | Artist | Title | Year | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BN-LA 047-F | Donald Byrd | Black Byrd | 1973 | Fusion hit with Mizell production; electric jazz emphasis.[34] |
| BN-LA 140-F | Donald Byrd | Street Lady | 1973 | Larger ensemble; funk-jazz hybrid recorded in LA.[34] |
| BN-LA 464-G | Eddie Henderson | Sunburst | 1975 | West Coast session; synthesizers and flugelhorn fusion.[34] |
| BN-LA 549-G | Donald Byrd | Places and Spaces | 1975 | Peak commercial fusion; Rhodes piano prominent.[35] |
| Catalog Number | Artist | Title | Year (Release) | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LT 987 | Lee Morgan | Sonic Boom | 1979 | Unreleased 1967 session; funky hard bop compilation.[36] |
| LT 988 | Wayne Shorter | The Soothsayer | 1979 | 1965 modal jazz vault release; tenor sax focus.[36] |
| LT 995 | Hank Mobley | A Slice of the Top | 1979 | 1968 big band unreleased; orchestral post-bop.[37] |
| LT 996 | Bobby Hutcherson | Spiral | 1979 | 1968 vibraphone-led session; McCoy Tyner collaboration.[36] |
| LT 1031 | Lee Morgan | Taru | 1980 | 1968 quintet tracks; posthumous hard bop archive.[22] |
Specialized and International Series
Manhattan 85100 Series
The Manhattan 85100 series represented a pivotal phase in Blue Note Records' mid-1980s revival, launching new studio albums, live recordings, and select reissues under EMI's ownership to reengage contemporary jazz audiences. Spanning 1984 to 1987, the series utilized catalog numbers from BT 85101 to BT 85141, emphasizing high-fidelity production and a mix of established and emerging artists to restore the label's prestige. This initiative blended innovative sessions with echoes of Blue Note's hard bop heritage, produced in advanced facilities to achieve superior sound quality.[38] EMI's 1979 acquisition of United Artists Records brought Blue Note under its umbrella, leading to limited activity until the 1984 revival spearheaded by executive Bruce Lundvall, who aimed to blend commercial viability with artistic integrity. The Manhattan imprint, an EMI jazz sublabel launched for upscale releases, provided the branding for this series, positioning it as a premium line within the broader jazz market. This transition marked Blue Note's shift from dormancy to active production, with the 85100 series serving as an initial vehicle for new talent acquisition and catalog expansion.[39][40] Recordings for the series were conducted in state-of-the-art studios like Van Gelder Studio, RCA Studios, and The Power Station, alongside live captures at venues such as the Village Vanguard, prioritizing clarity and dynamics in an era of advancing audio technology. Many titles received digital remastering for subsequent CD editions, enhancing accessibility and longevity. The limited run of approximately 40 releases reflected EMI's targeted commercial strategy to test market response before a full-scale Blue Note relaunch, focusing on marketable jazz fusions rather than exhaustive reissues. This approach helped reestablish the label's relevance, bridging to wider 1984 revival efforts with fresh content.[38] Key releases exemplified the series' blend of new material and classics, such as Stanley Jordan's innovative guitar work on Magic Touch (BT 85101, 1985), the collaborative energy of McCoy Tyner and Jackie McLean's It's About Time (BT 85102, 1985), and Michel Petrucciani's trio exploration on Pianism (BT 85124, 1986). Other highlights included Stanley Turrentine's tenor-driven Straight Ahead (BT 85105, 1985), and live sets like Joe Henderson's The State of the Tenor volumes (BT 85123 and BT 85126, 1986–1987), which captured evolving jazz improvisation. These selections underscored the commercial intent to attract both traditional fans and younger listeners through accessible yet sophisticated performances.[38] The complete catalog of the Manhattan 85100 series, with release years, highlights its scope and progression:| Catalog # | Artist | Title | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| BT 85101 | Stanley Jordan | Magic Touch | 1985 |
| BT 85102 | McCoy Tyner & Jackie McLean | It’s About Time | 1985 |
| BT 85103 | George Russell & The Living Time Orchestra | The African Game | 1985 |
| BT 85104 | Charles Lloyd Quartet | A Night In Copenhagen | 1984 |
| BT 85105 | Stanley Turrentine | Straight Ahead | 1985 |
| BT 85106 | Kenny Burrell, Grover Washington Jr. | Togethering | 1985 |
| BT 85107 | Bennie Wallace | Twilight Time | 1985 |
| BT 85108 | Charlie Parker | Charlie Parker At Storyville | 1985 |
| BT 85109 | James Newton | The African Flower | 1985 |
| BT 85110 | Bobby McFerrin | Spontaneous Inventions | 1986 |
| BT 85111 | Bill Evans | The Alternative Man | 1985 |
| BABB 85112 | Dexter Gordon | Nights At The Keystone | 1985 |
| BT 85113 | Various Artists | One Night With Blue Note Volume 1 | 1985 |
| BT 85114 | Various Artists | One Night With Blue Note Volume 2 | 1985 |
| BT 85115 | Various Artists | One Night With Blue Note Volume 3 | 1985 |
| BT 85116 | Various Artists | One Night With Blue Note Volume 4 | 1985 |
| BTDK 85117 | Various Artists | One Night With Blue Note, Preserved | 1985 |
| BT-85118 | Out Of The Blue | OTB | 1985 |
| BT 85119 | Tony Williams | Foreign Intrigue | 1985 |
| BT-85121 | Freddie Hubbard, Woody Shaw | Double Take | 1986 |
| BT 85122 | The Don Pullen-George Adams Quartet | Breakthrough | 1986 |
| BT 85123 | Joe Henderson | The State Of The Tenor: Live Vol. 1 | 1986 |
| BT 85124 | The Michel Petrucciani Trio | Pianism | 1986 |
| BT-85125 | Jimmy Smith | Go For Whatcha Know | 1986 |
| BT 85126 | Joe Henderson | The State Of The Tenor: Live Vol. 2 | 1987 |
| BQ 85127 | Various Artists | Blue Note 86: A New Generation Of Jazz | 1986 |
| BT 85128 | Out Of The Blue | Inside Track | 1986 |
| BT 85129 | Duke Ellington, Charlie Mingus, Max Roach | Money Jungle | 1986 |
| BT 85130 | Stanley Jordan | Standards Volume 1 | 1986 |
| BT 85131 | Eric Dolphy | Other Aspects | 1987 |
| BT 85132 | George Russell & The Living Time Orchestra | So What | 1986 |
| BT 85133 | Michel Petrucciani | Power Of Three | 1987 |
| BT 85134 | James Newton | Romance And Revolution | 1987 |
| BT 85135 | Dexter Gordon | The Other Side Of Round Midnight | 1986 |
| BT 85136 | James Blood Ulmer | America - Do You Remember The Love? | 1987 |
| BT 85137 | Kenny Burrell & The Jazz Guitar Band | Generation | 1987 |
| BT 85138 | Tony Williams | Civilization | 1987 |
| BT 85139 | Freddie Hubbard | Life Flight | 1987 |
| BT 85140 | Stanley Turrentine | Wonderland | 1987 |
| BT 85141 | Out Of The Blue | Live At Mt. Fuji | 1987 |
