Jazz musician Chuck Mangione offers up N.Y. co-op near Central Park

Found in a red-brick building called Park Royal, the two-bedroom unit expands to a 40-foot terrace overlooking the city. (MWStudio/Udom Surangsophon)

Chuck Mangione is tuning into the Manhattan real estate market. The jazz musician ā€” who received a Grammy nomination for his 1977 single ā€œFeels So Goodā€ ā€” just listed his New York City home near Central Park for $2.25 million.

The unit is tucked into a corner of the Park Royal, a prewar, red-brick co-op spanning 15 stories in the Upper West Side.

It holds two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a handful of clean living spaces with gallery white walls and hardwood floors. The main highlight, however, comes outside, where a 40-foot terrace takes in views of the city.

The kitchen boasts a breakfast bar, and the primary bedroom features walls of built-ins and a custom bathroom with green tile and an Aston Matthews clawfoot tub.

Mangione, 79, has owned the home since the turn of the century. A native of New York, heā€™s released 30 albums since 1960 and also played in Art Blakey's band. Heā€™s been nominated for five Grammys and won two, including one for the opening song he composed for the 1978 drama film ā€œThe Children of Sanchez.ā€

Tamer Howard of Douglas Elliman holds the listing.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.