- Jazz Currents
UPDATED PLAYLIST
Jazz Currents
Apple Jazz
Tracking new directions in the world of modern jazz.
- Listen in Spatial Audio
- Butcher Brown
- Nduduzo Makhathini
- Ezra Collective
- Apple Jazz
- Updated Playlist
- Recommended Playlist
- Playlist We Like
- Apple Jazz
- Recommended Playlist
- New Playlist
- Listen in Spatial Audio
- Apple Jazz
- Songs We’re Loving
- That tender, melancholy mood.
- Just As Though You Were Here (feat. John Patitucci & Billy Hart)
- Yotam Silberstein
- tenderness
- Snowpoet
- Found A Light (Beale Street)
- BADBADNOTGOOD & V.C.R
- Inside (feat. Cynthia Abraham)
- Anne Pacéo
- All The Things You Are
- Shai Maestro
- You & I
- CROOKS INC.
- The Creator Has A Master Plan (feat. Tomoki Sanders)
- Tyreek McDole
- VIII. The Prophet
- Isaiah J. Thompson
- Power
- Don Glori
- Walnut and Western
- Béla Fleck, Edmar Castañeda & Antonio Sánchez
- Sa Ké Alé
- Jacques Schwarz-Bart & Grégory Privat
- Eu sei que vou te amar (feat. Clément Daldosso & Gautier Garrigue)
- Simon Chivallon
- On A Clear Day (feat. Bill Frisell, Tony Scherr & Rudy Royston)
- Chris Cheek
- Not Everyone Can Go
- Braxton Cook
- Robin Hood Rat (feat. Simon Mavin, Alon Ilsar, Laneous)
- Brainchip
- Grow (feat. Tawiah & Marysia Osu)
- Hector Plimmer
- Cram 'N Exam (feat. John Patitucci, Horacio "El Negro" Hernandez & Chris Potter) [Hard Bop - Jazz Secrets]
- Arkadia Jazz All-Stars, Joanne Brackeen & Nicholas Payton
- Shai Maestro
- Iiro Rantala & Stefano Bollani
- Dieter Ilg
- Butcher Brown
- Cyrus Chestnut
- Emil Brandqvist Trio
- Chiquita Magic
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Jazz
- Joe Armon-Jones
- Katie Thiroux
- John Stein
- Jack Jezzro
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Music
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Jazz
- Shai Maestro
- Gerald Clayton
- Sullivan Fortner
- Keith Jarrett, Gary Peacock & Paul Motian
- Aaron Parks
- Randy Ingram, Drew Gress & Billy Hart
- Melody Gardot
- WILLOW
- Nicole Zuraitis
- Blake Aaron
- Paula Atherton
- Steve Cole
- David P Stevens
- Apple Jazz
- Soak in her soulful classics—and the greatness they inspired.
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Jazz
- A pioneering jazz musician's compositions—and what they inspired.
- New Playlist
- Recommended Playlist
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Music
- Apple Jazz
- Apple Jazz
- Rich in rhythm and melodic tension, beauty and complexity.
- Fabiano do Nascimento
- Keith Jarrett, Gary Peacock & Paul Motian
- Michel Petrucciani, Gary Peacock & Roy Haynes
- Al Jarreau & NDR Bigband
- Robert Glasper
Stations
- Apple Music Jazz
- Apple Music Jazz
- Apple Music Jazz
- Miles Davis
- Stan Getz & João Gilberto
- Chet Baker
- Diana Krall
- Oscar Peterson Trio
- Miles Davis
- Bill Evans & Jim Hall
- Herbie Hancock
- Herbie Hancock
- TuneIn
- TuneIn
About
Forged in the multicultural melting pot of early 20th-century New Orleans—a place where the blues of the Deep South collided with European classical music and Caribbean rhythms—jazz began as a fundamentally African American expression and was quickly embraced by the world. The music grew up in speakeasies and barrooms, where singular geniuses like Louis Armstrong displayed a new improvisatory language, and it was transported to ballrooms and dancefloors with the sophisticated compositions and arrangements of Duke Ellington and Fletcher Henderson. The music was refined and popularised in the ’30s as the swinging sounds of Benny Goodman and Count Basie entertained dancing masses in ballrooms and on the radio. At the same time, tunes from popular songwriters like George and Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter and Irving Berlin were reimagined by vocalists like Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald. Early jazz styles spoke with regional accents—particularly in hotbeds like Harlem, Kansas City and Chicago—but as time passed, the language emerged in France, Japan, Brazil and beyond. This constantly evolving diaspora—connecting people, cities and countries across the globe—fuels the genre’s unique energy. The ’40s and ’50s saw jazz take some of its most ambitious artistic leaps, placing improvisation and free expression at its centre. Smaller ensembles became nimble vehicles for fearless solos from the likes of bebop pioneer and alto saxophonist Charlie “Bird” Parker, trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and pianist Bud Powell. While Dave Brubeck became a sensation on college campuses in the ’50s, Miles Davis’ mid-century trajectory—from his cool-jazz landmark Kind of Blue to the rock fusion of Bitches Brew—encapsulated many of the changes happening within the music for the next 30 years. The restless experimentation of Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane in the ’60s took jazz to new artistic heights and challenged audiences as it never had before. Straight-ahead jazz reemerged in the ’80s thanks to traditionalists like Wynton Marsalis and others, while the genre mingled with ’70s R&B-flavoured pop to create smooth jazz. Broadly appealing singers like Diana Krall and Harry Connick, Jr. kept the repertoire of standards alive at the end of the century, while other artists embraced a newly ascendent art form: hip-hop. Jazz in the new millennium continues to do what it has always done, by reflecting the complexity of our times in the work of musicians who know their history but aren’t bound by it.