Bop Listening List For Kids

In honor of the opening, this past week, of the SFJAZZ Center, the Presidential inauguration, and anything else that might chase the midwinter blues, we present a list of jazz classics from the BeBop era and beyond. Any one of these tunes will lift your spirits. All seven? Time to throw a party.

1. Waltz for Debby, by Bill Evans. Sung by Al Jarreau: A swinging waltz for Evans’ young niece to lyrics that speak across generations.

2. A Tisket, A Tasket: Ella Fitzgerald’s calling card, it takes a nursery rhyme and turns it into a famed jazz classic, simply through vocal magic.

3. On Broadway: A fine pop tune gets the jazz treatment from George Benson, including a funk groove that shows how jazz incorporates other styles.

4. Grazing in the Grass: The breakthrough hit of legendary South African trumpeter Hugh Masekela, it’s one of the originals of what came to be known as “township jazz.”

5. Song for my Father: Pianist Horace Silver’s treatment of his jazz classic, which has been covered dozens of times. Puts you in that happy place from the opening riff.

6. Doodlin’: The jazz vocal group Lambert, Hendricks and Ross in a sparkling, impeccably arranged tune that just pops with energy and dizzy, funny lyrics.

7. Take Five: The Dave Brubeck Quintet’s greatest hit hides its complexity within a swinging groove that, once it gets into you, won’t let you go.