The trio w/Richard Davis & Roy Haynes, hey.
Also like the early 70s Prestige sides, and the CTI side as well. Burrell's sound lent itself well to Rhodes and/or CTI, although ironically, Burrell had some "classic" albums on Verve produced by Taylor that don't have the immediate impact of his CTI album. I mean, ok, Guitar Forms has Gil Evans and some really diverse and excellent plecteral presentations, but nothing on there comes up and says HERE WE ARE like "Be Yourself", and oh btw, look out for the helicopter.
Of the Prestige sides, 'Round Midnight has already been mentioned, and yes, I love the dark, rich sound there of, not just Burrell but of the record itself, and the synergy with that provided by the cover photo. But perhaps even more fun to me are the two albums w/Jerome Richardson on board - Up The Street, Around The Corner, Down The Block and, especially Sky Street. After that period, it seemed that he started getting a little "retro"-ish, which, ok, but..
As for older things (retro before it had time to turn retro), a real gem that is not commonly known is a thing for Argo- Here's Love yet another "jazz plays songs from a Broadway show" thing, and the songs are...yeah, sure, whatever, but the group is Burrell, Hank Jones, Milt Hinton, and Elvin Jones, and as always, Elvin plays the gig and brings Elvin to the mix. The whole thing swings like hell and the tunes become a non-factor in your jazz listening pleasure. Check it out!