Great question. Here are a few tunes to get you started:
Louis Armstrong - Now You Has Jazz (
Mack The Knife / 168 bpm)
Ruth Brown - He's A Real Gone Guy (
Live In London / 169 bpm)
Ray Bryant - Hit It (instrumental) (
Madison Time / 206 bpm)
Jeannie & Jimmy Cheatham - Gud Nuz Bluz (
Gud Nuz Bluz / 168 bpm)
Ella Fitzgerald - Mack The Knife (
Ella & Duke at the Cote D'azur, 167 bpm)
Johnny Hodges - Good Queen Bess (
Live In Atlantic City / 173 bpm)
Louis Jordan - Onion (
Louis Jordan & His Tympani Five / 170 bpm)
King Pleasure - Jazz Jump (
Moody's Mood for Love [Blue Note] / 204 bpm)
Diana Krall - Hit That Jive Jack (
All For You / 222 bpm)
Jimmy McGriff - Swingin' The Blues (
Tribute To Basie / 172 bpm)
Johnny Nocturne - Little Slam (
Wild & Cool / 202 bpm)
Johnny Otis w/ Jackie Payne - Jumpin' The Blues (
Spirit of the Black Territory Bands / 180 bpm)
Oscar Peterson Trio w/ Clark Terry - Mumbles (
Oscar Peterson Trio Plus One / 187 bpm)
Lou Rawls - I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water (
Anthology / 192 bpm)
Doc Severinsen w/ Barbara Morrison - The Hucklebuck (
Swingin' The Blues / 167 bpm)
Lavay Smith - Now or Never (
Everybody's Talkin' Bout Miss Thing / 174 bpm)
Buster Smith - Buster's Tune (
Legendary Buster Smith / 182 bpm)
Slam Stewart - Moten Swing (
Slam Bam / 162 bpm)
Van Morrison w/ Georgie Fame - Heathrow Shuffle (
How Long Has This Been Going On / 182 bpm)
Joe Williams - Roll 'Em Pete (
Count Basie Swings -- Joe Williams Sings / 185 bpm)
Jimmy Witherspoon w/ Panama Francis' Savoy Sultans - Sent For You Yesterday (
The Definitive Black & Blue Sessions / 177 bpm)
As for Gene Harris, I carry very little in my books that is over 150 bpm, so it's quite easy to forget him while trying to answer this specific question.
Jesse