Is that all you've heard, or are there albums you've heard and not liked/not liked so much?
Off the top of my head, some Jazz 101 albums you didn't mention (though as a disclaimer, jazz is kind of blessed and kind of cursed in that its most highly regarded albums are mostly quite experimental and often quite challenging ones, not that many are "easy" listens when you're new to the genre and still gaining your footing)
- Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers - Moanin' - alongside Kind of Blue and Time Out, probably the most easily likable jazz album ever made.
- Something by Mingus. I started with Blues and Roots, and I still feel that was a very lucky choice. Mingus is pretty weird, yet at the same time extremely listenable
- Something by Monk, though I hate to admit I can't help you there, Monk is the gaping hole in my jazz library
- Ornette Coleman - The Shape of Jazz to Come, Free Jazz - basically the foundations of avant garde and free jazz. Shape of Jazz is baby steps compared to what came later, but was a big move in its day, and is a really cool listen now. Free Jazz is, well, free jazz.
- John Coltrane - Ascension - Coltrane jumping in the deep end after A Love Supreme. This album is quite blatantly Free Jazz 2, but the ideas have been extended a bit further, and it's also better.
- Eric Dolphy - Out to Lunch - like Coleman's stuff, this is an awesome gateway avant garde album
- Pharoah Sanders - Karma - if Ascension is Free Jazz 2, then Karma is A Love Supreme 2. Again, some extension of ideas, though probably not better.
- Miles Davis - Bitches Brew, In A Silent Way - the albums that "broke" jazz and started fusion (a mix of jazz, rock, funk, "world" music, etc), though they're in a category of their own
- Herbie Hancock - Headhunters - funkiest jazz album ever
- Mahavishnu Orchestra - The Inner Mounting Flame - blistering hard-rocking fusion album. I tried all the fusion I could, and pretty much nothing even touches this
and if there's one album from the last forty years to place alongside those ones, it would be Yoko Kanno and the Seatbelts' Cowboy Bebop Soundtrack 1.