Saturday, May 28, 2016

Quincy Jones (b. March 14, 1933): Legendary, iconic, and innovative musician, composer, songwriter, arranger, conductor, orchestrator, producer, music theorist, ensemble leader, teacher, and social and cultural activist

  SOUND PROJECTIONS

AN ONLINE QUARTERLY MUSIC MAGAZINE

EDITOR:  KOFI  NATAMBU

  SPRING, 2016

  VOLUME TWO           NUMBER THREE

WAYNE SHORTER


Featuring the Musics and Aesthetic Visions of:


LEO SMITH
March 26-April 1

AHMAD JAMAL
April 2-8

DIONNE WARWICK
April 9-15

LEE MORGAN
April 16-22

BILL DIXON
April 23-29

SAM COOKE
April 30-May 6

MUHAL RICHARD ABRAMS
May 7-13

BILLY HARPER
May 14-20

SISTER ROSETTA THARPE
May 21-27

QUINCY JONES
May 28-June 3


BESSIE SMITH
June 4-10

ROBERT JOHNSON
June 11-17




http://www.allmusic.com/artist/quincy-jones-mn0000378624/biography



QUINCY JONES 
(b. March 14, 1933)

Artist Biography by


In a musical career that has spanned seven decades, Quincy Jones has earned his reputation as a renaissance man of American music. Jones has distinguished himself as a bandleader, a solo artist, a sideman, a songwriter, a producer, an arranger, a film composer, and a record label executive, and outside of music, he's also written books, produced major motion pictures, and helped create television series. And a quick look at a few of the artists Jones has worked with suggests the remarkable diversity of his career -- Miles Davis, Frank Sinatra, Count Basie, Lesley Gore, Michael Jackson, Peggy Lee, Ray Charles, Paul Simon, and Aretha Franklin


This Is How I Feel About Jazz
 
Jones was born in Chicago, Illinois, on March 14, 1933. When he was still a youngster, his family moved to Seattle, WA, and he soon developed an interest in music. In his early teens, Jones began learning the trumpet, and started singing with a local gospel group. By the time he graduated from high school in 1950, Jones had displayed enough promise to win a scholarship to Boston-based music school Schillinger House (which later became known as the Berklee School of Music). After a year at Schillinger, Jones relocated to New York City, where he found work as an arranger, writing charts for Count Basie, Cannonball Adderley, Tommy Dorsey, and Dinah Washington, among others. In 1953, Jones scored his first big break as a performer; he was added to the brass section of Lionel Hampton's orchestra, where he found himself playing alongside jazz legends Art Farmer and Clifford Brown. Three years later, Dizzy Gillespie tapped Jones to play in his band, and later in 1956, when Gillespie was invited to put together a big band of outstanding international musicians, Diz chose Quincy to lead the ensemble. Jones also released his first album under his own name that year, a set for ABC-Paramount appropriately entitled This Is How I Feel About Jazz
 
It Might as Well Be Swing
In 1957, Jones moved to Paris in order to study with Nadia Boulanger, an expatriate American composer with a stellar track record in educating composers and bandleaders. During his sojourn in France, Jones took a job with the French record label Barclay, where he produced and arranged sessions for Jacques Brel and Charles Aznavour, as well as traveling American artists, including Billy Eckstine and Sarah Vaughan. Jones' work for Barclay impressed the management at Mercury Records, a American label affiliated with the French imprint, and in 1961, he was named a vice president for Mercury, the first time an African-American had been hired as an upper-level executive by a major U.S. recording company. Jones scored one of his first major pop successes when he produced and arranged "It's My Party" for teenage vocalist Lesley Gore, which marked his first significant step away from jazz into the larger world of popular music. (Jones also freelanced for other labels on the side, including arranging a number of memorable Atlantic sides for Ray Charles.) In 1963, Jones began exploring what would become a fruitful medium for him when he composed his first film score for Sidney Lumet's controversial drama The Pawnbroker; he would go on to write music for 33 feature films, including In Cold Blood, In the Heat of the Night, Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, and The Getaway. In 1964, Jones' work with Count Basie led him to arrange and conduct sessions for Frank Sinatra's album It Might as Well Be Swing, recorded in collaboration with Basie and his orchestra; he also worked with Sinatra and Basie again as an arranger for the award-winning Sinatra at the Sands set, and would produce and arrange one of Sinatra's last albums, L.A. Is My Lady, in 1984. 
 
Walking in Space
While Jones maintained a busy schedule as a composer, producer, and arranger through the 1960s, he also re-emerged as a recording artist in 1969 with the album Walking in Space, which found Jones recasting his big-band influences within the framework of the budding fusion movement and the influences of contemporary rock, pop, and R&B sounds. The album was a commercial and critical success, and kick started Jones' career as a recording artist. At the same time, he began working more closely with contemporary pop artists, producing sessions for Aretha Franklin and arranging strings for Paul Simon's There Goes Rhymin' Simon, and while Jones continued to work with jazz artists, many hard-and-fast jazz fans began to accuse Jones of turning his back on the genre, though Jones always contended his greatest allegiance was to African-American musical culture rather than any specific style. (Jones did, however, make one major jazz gesture in 1991, when he persuaded Miles Davis to revisit the classic Gil Evans arrangements from Miles Ahead, Sketches of Spain, and Porgy and Bess for that year's Montreux Jazz Festival; Jones coordinated the concert and led the orchestra, and it proved to be one of the last major events for the ailing Davis, who passed on a few months later.) 
 
Body Heat

In 1974, Jones suffered a life-threatening brain aneurysm, and while he made a full recovery, he also made a decision to cut back on his schedule to spend more time with his family. While Jones may have had fewer projects on his plate in the late '70s and early '80s, they tended to be higher profile from this point on; he produced major chart hits for the Brothers Johnson and Rufus & Chaka Khan, and his own albums grew into all-star productions in which Jones orchestrated top players and singers in elaborate pop-R&B confections on sets like Body Heat, Sounds...And Stuff Like That!!, and The Dude. Jones' biggest mainstream success, however, came with his work with Michael Jackson; Jones produced his breakout solo album, Off the Wall, in 1979, and in 1982 they teamed up again for Thriller, which went on to become the biggest-selling album of all time. Jones was also on hand for Thriller's follow-up, 1987's Bad, and the celebrated USA for Africa session which produced the benefit single "We Are the World" (written by Jackson and Lionel Richie), and he produced a rare album in which Jackson narrated the story of the film E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial. 
  Having risen to the heights of the recording industry, in 1985 Jones moved from scoring films to producing them; his first screen project was the screen adaptation of Alice Walker's novel The Color Purple, which was directed by Steven Spielberg and starred Whoopi Goldberg. In 1991 he moved into television production with the situation comedy The Fresh Prince of Bel Air, which gave Will Smith his first starring role. Jones' production company also launched several other successful shows, including In the House and Mad TV. He also produced a massive concert to help commemorate the 1993 inauguration of president Bill Clinton, and at the 1995 Academy Awards won the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, a prize that doubtless found its place beside Quincy's 26 Grammy awards. In 1996 Jones performed at the Montreux Jazz Festival to celebrate his 50th anniversary in the music business. The concert was captured on video and released as a DVD by Eagle Rock. Jones spent the rest of the '90s and first decade of the new century concentrating on his music publishing business and being an "unofficial" cultural ambassador for the United States. 


Q: Soul Bossa Nostra

In 2004 he helped to launch the We Are the Future (WAF) project, benefiting children in conflict-inhibited situations all over the globe. The program is the result of a strategic partnership between the Glocal Forum, the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation, and Hani Masri, with the support of the World Bank, UN agencies, and corporations. Jones personally lobbied President Barack Obama to create a secretary of the arts position in his cabinet. He also spent considerable time in Brazil, and in 2009 announced his plans for a film about Carnival and some of the nation's musicians and producers. In 2010 Jones released Q: Soul Bossa Nostra through his Qwest imprint, his first album in 15 years. The set featured appearances by popular vocalists Amy Winehouse, Usher, Tyrese, Tevin Campbell, and LL Cool J, among others. Ludacris and Naturally 7 reprised Jones' 1962 hit "Soul Bossa Nova"; the album's lead single/video was a cover of "Strawberry Letter 23" with lead vocals from Akon. In 2013, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a recipient of the Ahmet Ertegun Award.


https://rockhall.com/inductees/quincy-jones/bio/


Quincy Jones

(producer, conductor, arranger, composer;
born March 14, 1933)



Quincy Jones has had one of the longest, most successful careers in popular music. He is a record producer, conductor, arranger, film composer, television producer and trumpeter. He has worked with such artists as Michael Jackson, Lionel Hampton, Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Charles, Frank Sinatra, Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Duke Ellington and Miles Davis, to name just a few. He has been nominated for a record 79 Grammys – and won 27 – and in 1991, he received the Grammy Legend Award.

Quincy Jones was born in Chicago on March 14, 1933. When he was 10, his family moved to Bremerton, Washington. He began playing trumpet, and, in Seattle, he met Ray Charles, who was three years older than him. In 1951, he won a scholarship to what is now the Berklee College of Music. He moved to Boston to attend the school, but he soon wound up taking an offer from Lionel Hampton to tour with his band as a trumpet player. While on the road with Hampton, Jones began showing talent as a song arranger. He left Hampton’s band in 1953 and moved to New York, where he arranged songs for several artists, including Count Basie, Dinah Washington, Sarah Vaughan, Tommy Dorsey and Ray Charles, with whom he had become a close friend.

During the mid-Fifties, Jones served as musical director for Dizzy Gillespie. In 1956, he signed a deal with ABC-Paramount Records and began recording with his own band. Later in the Fifties and into the Sixties, he wrote charts and directed the orchestra for concerts and recording sessions by several singers, including Frank Sinatra, Billy Eckstine, Brook Benton, Johnny Mathis and his friend Ray Charles, helping him become a major force in American popular music. He was hired as musical director of Mercury Records’ New York division, and he was soon promoted to vice president, the first African-American to hold such an executive position with a white-owned record company.

Around that same time, Jones began writing film scores. At the invitation of director Sidney Lumet, he composed the music for The Pawnbroker (1965). It was the first of Jones' nearly 40 major–motion picture scores that would also include such classics as In Cold Blood (1967) and In the Heat of the Night (1967). He also wrote scores and composed music for hundreds of television shows, including the long-running Ironside series and Sanford and Son.

Jones continued arranging and producing records throughout the Sixties and Seventies. He produced four million-selling singles for Lesley Gore: “It’s My Party,” “Judy’s Turn to Cry,” “She’s a Fool” and “You Don’t Own Me.” He also continued working as a record executive. After leaving Mercury, he spent about a dozen years at A&M and then formed his own label, Qwest Records.

Despite suffering two brain aneurysms in 1974, Jones did not slow down. During the Seventies and Eighties, he produced albums for Aretha Franklin, George Benson, Michael Jackson, the Brothers Johnson and others. For Benson, he produced Give Me the Night, and he produced Off the Wall, Thriller and Bad for Jackson. As of 2013, Thriller has sold more than 110 million copies and is the best-selling album of all time.

In 1985, Jones used his influence and connections to convince many major artists to record the song "We Are the World" to raise money for the victims of Ethiopia's famine. To ensure that all of these big artists would be able to work together, Jones taped sign on the entrance to the studio that said: "Check Your Ego at the Door.”

A major film documentary, Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones, was released in 1991. A decade later, in 2001, Jones' autobiography, Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones, was published. Jones continues to work and make frequent appearances on TV shows and in documentaries about popular music.


http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/quincy-jones-the-story-of-an-american-musician/636/ 




Quincy Jones: In the Pocket 

The Story of an American Musician


http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/database/jones_q_timeline_flash.html
http://www.kennedy-center.org/artist/A3746


The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts   
Quincy Jones
(b. March 14, 1933)

Biography


As a composer, arranger, conductor, instrumentalist, record company executive, magazine founder, and record, film and television producer, Quincy Jones has had a spectacular influence on American culture for more than 50 years. 
  Artists from every era of American popular music, from bebop to hip hop, have turned to Quincy Jones to help them achieve their best: Dinah Washington, Sarah Vaughn, Nat King Cole, Count Basie, Frank Sinatra, Dizzy Gillespie, Andy Williams, Peggy Lee, Lesley Gore, Aretha Franklin, Ringo Starr, Michael Jackson, Chaka Khan, Donna Sommers, George Benson, and Barbra Streisand. "He's Doctor Fixit," said Dizzy Gillespie. "People go to him because he knows what he's doin'. He knows the sound you've got in you, and he's got the experience and the know-how to get it out.

He has won 26 Grammy Awards and been nominated 76 times, an all-time record. He has composed 33 major motion picture scores, has been nominated for seven Academy Awards, and was awarded the Academy's Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award. He has earned world-wide acclaim as conductor and producer of the historic "We Are the World" (the best-selling single of all time), and produced the best-selling album in the history of the recording industry: Michael Jackson's Thriller. As a creator of new music, he has shuffled pop, soul, hip-hop, jazz, classical, African and Brazilian music into a dazzling fusion all his own. In 1964, when he was named a vice-president of Mercury Records, he became the first African-American to hold a high-level executive position in a white-owned record company. And after composing the score for Sidney Lumet's The Pawnbroker in 1965, he was the first black composer embraced by the Hollywood establishment. This year, Ebony Magazine named Jones the most powerful black person in Hollywood. 

By 13, Quincy Jones, grandson of a Mississippi slave, had tried all the instruments in his school band in suburban Seattle before settling on the trumpet. His best friend was a local singer and pianist three years his senior named Ray Charles. Together, they played all kinds of music for all kinds of people--a situation that would be emblematic of his entire career. "At school, we were playing John Philip Sousa and classical concert-band music," says Jones. "We'd play dinner music at the white tennis clubs, and later we'd play hard rhythm and blues at the black social clubs. Then we'd go to the red-light district and play for strippers and comics, and then play bebop into the early morning-it was the greatest life in the world."

Eventually, Jones accepted an offer to go on the road with bandleader Lionel Hampton, and this stint led to works as arranger, and throughout the 50s he wrote charts for Tommy Dorsey, Gene Krupa, Sarah Vaughan, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Dinah Washington, Cannonball Adderley, and his old friend Ray Charles.

By 1956, Jones was performing as a trumpeter and music director with the Dizzy Gillespie band on State Department-sponsored tours of the Middle East and South America and in 1957 he settled in Paris where he studied composition with Nadia Boulanger and Olivier Messiaen, and worked as a music director for Barclay Disques, where he recorded the young Jacques Brel and Charles Aznavour.

In 1964, Jones returned to the United States to take the Mercury Records position and also composed his first film score--The Pawnbroker, which was so successful that he left Mercury and moved to Los Angeles. His film credits now include Walk Don't Run, The Slender Thread, In Cold Blood, In the Heat of the Night, A Dancy in Aspic, MacKenna's Gold, Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice, Cactus Flower, and The Getaway. His career in film reached a high point when he co-produced Steven Spielberg's adaptation of Alice Walker's The Color Purple, which was nominated for 11 Oscars. For television, Jones wrote the theme music for "Ironside" (the first synthesizer-based TV theme song), "Sanford and Son," "The Bill Cosby Show" and won an Emmy Award for the mini-series "Roots." 

Back in the recording studio, Jones recorded a series of chart-topping, Grammy-winning albums and in 1982 he and Michael Jackson made history with Thriller, which sold over 30 million copies and produced an unprecedented six Top Ten singles. 

In the early '90s, became co-CEO and chairman of Quincy Jones/David Salzman Entertainment (QDE), a co-venture with Time-Warner, Inc, which encompasses multi-media programming for current and future technologies, including theatrical motion pictures and television programs. He also runs his own record label, Qwest Records and is chairman and CEO of Qwest Broadcasting, one of the largest minority-owned broadcasting companies in the United States.

Quincy Jones is also a lifelong activist. He was a major supporter of Dr. Martin Luther King. Jr.'s Operation Breadbasket, and after King's death, he served on the board of Jesse Jackson's People United to Save Humanity. An ongoing concern throughout his life has been to foster appreciation of African-American music and culture and to this end he helped form the Institute for Black American Music, which was instrumental in establishing a national library of African-American art and music. Jones is also the founder of the annual Black Arts Festival in his hometown of Chicago.



http://www.biography.com/people/quincy-jones-9357524

Quincy Jones Biography

Children's Activist, Music Producer, Television Producer, Songwriter, Trumpet Player (1933–)


Quincy Jones is best known as a composer and record producer for legendary musicians such as Frank Sinatra, Michael Jackson, Celene Dion and Aretha Franklin.


Synopsis

Quincy Jones was convinced at an early age to explore music by his teenage friend Ray Charles. He played in various bands through the 50's, began composing for film and television in the mid 60's and eventually produced over 50 scores. He has worked with musicians Michael Jackson, Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin and Celine Dion. He's also the most Grammy-nominated artist in history, with 79 nominations and 27 wins. Jones founded a charity for youth in 1985.

Early Career

Famed musician Quincy Jones was born Quincy Delight Jr. on March 14, 1933, in Chicago, Illinois. A multifaceted jazz and pop figure who became the most Grammy-nominated artist in history with 79 nominations and 27 wins, he began with his Seattle teenage friend Ray Charles, who interested him in arranging. He played trumpet and arranged for Lionel Hampton (1951-3), then worked as a freelance arranger on many jazz sessions. He served as musical director for Dizzy Gillespie's overseas big-band tour (1956), worked for Barclay Records in Paris (1957-8), and led an all-star big band for the European production of Harold Arlen's blues opera, "Free and Easy" (1959).

Returning to New York, Jones composed and arranged for Count Basie, Dinah Washington and Sarah Vaughan, while holding an executive post at Mercury Records and producing his own increasingly pop-oriented records. In the mid-1960s he began composing for films and television, eventually producing over 50 scores and serving as a trailblazing African-American musician in the Hollywood arena.

Jones produced Aretha Franklin's 1973 album Hey Now Hey (The Other Side of the Sky).

Qwest Productions

In 1975, Jones founded Qwest Productions, for which he arranged and produced hugely successful albums by Frank Sinatra and other major pop figures. In 1978, he produced the soundtrack for the musical adaptation of The Wizard of Oz, The Wiz, starring Michael Jackson and Diana Ross. In 1982, Jones's produced Michael Jackson's all-time best-selling album Thriller.

In June 2009, a statement on his website regarding the sudden death of Jackson, Jones stated "I am absolutely devastated at this tragic and unexpected news. For Michael to be taken away from us so suddenly at such a young age, I just don't have the words. Divinity brought our souls together on The Wiz and allowed us to do what we were able to throughout the 80's. To this day, the music we created together on Off The Wall, Thriller and Bad is played in every corner of the world and the reason for that is because he had it all... talent, grace, professionalism and dedication. He was the consummate entertainer and his contributions and legacy will be felt upon the world forever. I've lost my little brother today, and part of my soul has gone with him."

Philanthropy

In 1985, Quincy Jones used his clout among major American recording artists to record the much celebrated anthem "We Are the World" to raise money for victims of famine in Ethiopia. His work on behalf of social causes has spanned his career, including the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation, which built more than 100 homes in South Africa in 2001. The charity aims to connect youths with technology, education, culture and music and sponsors an intercultural exchange between teens in Los Angeles and South Africa.

Ventures Beyond Music

Jones also produced the 1985 film The Color Purple directed by Steven Spielberg and starred Whoopi Goldberg, Oprah Winfrey, and Danny Glover; the television series The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air starring Will Smith (1990-96) and published the magazines Vibe and SPIN. In 1990, Quincy Jones formed Quincy Jones Entertainment (QJE), a co-venture with Time Warner, Inc.

Jones has been married three times; to Jeri Caldwell from 1957 to 1966 (they have one daughter), to Ulla Andersson from 1967 to 1974 (they have a son and a daughter), and to Peggy Lipton from 1974 to 1990 (they have two daughters). He also has two daughters from prior relationships. Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones was published in 2001.



http://www.jazz.com/encyclopedia/jones-quincy-delight


Encyclopedia of Jazz Musicians

 

Jones, Quincy (Delight)

 

The key to Quincy Jones's success has always been great ears, which were built by jazz. From his start in Lionel Hampton's big band, he went on to make key contributions to the careers of performers ranging from Dizzy Gillespie and Clifford Brown to Frank Sinatra and Michael Jackson. He has progressively worked as a performer, arranger and composer, and ultimately became the most successful music producer in history.

In the 1970s and 1980s, he produced two of the most commercially successful albums in music history, Michael Jackson's Off the Wall and Thriller. He was also helped create a media conglomerate which founded Vibe magazine and produced such hit television shows as the Fresh Prince of Bel Air. 

 Quincy Jones
Quincy Delight Jones was born on March 14th, 1933 in Chicago, Illinois. His father, Quincy Senior, was a professional basketball player, while his mother Sarah Frances was a financial executive. Quincy Junior moved with his mother when he was ten years old to Seattle, Washington.
He soon took up various brass instruments before settling on the trumpet. As a teenager, Jones befriended a young musician by the name of Ray Charles, who gave the budding trumpeter lessons on harmony and other aspects of music theory. In high school, Jones studied trumpet with Clark Terry, and performed with the likes of Billie Holiday. He studied at the University of Seattle for a short time, before accepting a music scholarship to attend the newly formed Schillinger House in Boston, which later became the Berklee School, and then Berklee College, of Music. 

Jones didn't stay in college for long. He left before his first year was over to take a position playing trumpet for vibraphonist Lionel Hampton's big band. After performing with Hampton's band, Jones left in 1953 and relocated to New York City where his arranging skills were in demand. Jones worked with his friend Ray Charles, Duke Ellington, and Count Basie while in New York. 

In 1955, Jones was the leader and main arranger for singer Betty Carter's album Social Call. Jones joined the trumpet section of Dizzy Gillespie's big band in 1956, for his U.S. State Department tour of South America and the Middle East. Jones then moved to Paris in 1957 where he studied formally with Nadia Boulanger who taught Jones concepts related to orchestration. 

Prior to moving to Paris, Jones recorded an album entitled This Is How I Feel about Jazz, which featured the song King Road Blues." While in Europe, Jones worked in a variety of different contexts, and toured briefly with his own big band. 

Jones continued to compose, and wrote the ballad The Midnight Sun Never Sets" for Sweden's Harry Arnold Radio Band, which featured altoist Arne Domnrus. 

Jones eventually made his way back to New York in 1960. He was then offered a position with Mercury Records and quickly rose through the label's ranks. Jones helped produce some very successful records while at Mercury. In 1962, he also recorded Big Band Bossa Nova, which featured Clark Terry, Phil Woods, and Rahsaan Roland Kirk. In 1963, he discovered singer Lesley Gore and produced her popular single It's My Party. 

In the mid 1960s, Jones worked with Frank Sinatra and Count Basie for their album on Sinatra's Reprise label, entitled It Might As Well Be Swing. He conducted the band on such songs as I Believe in You." Jones achieved another milestone in 1964, when he became the first African-American record executive in America when he was appointed Vice President of Mercury Records. 

Jones continued his association with Sinatra, and in 1966 he conducted and arranged Come Fly with Me" from the album Sinatra at the Sands. Jones also arranged and produced albums for Ray Charles, Sarah Vaughn, Ella Fitzgerald, and Sammy Davis Jr. during the decade was well. 

Also during the 1960s, Sinatra began to work as a film composer. He composed the music for the hit movie The Pawnbroker, and also used his song Soul Bossa Nova, which had appeared on his 1962 album Big Band Bossa Nova. The song was later used by director Woody Allen in his 1969 film Take the Money and Run, and was introduced to audiences in the new millennium in comedian Michael Myers Austin Powers films.

Among the films Jones scored were The Slender Thread in 1966, In the Heat of the Night with Ray Charles in 1967, and 1968's In Cold Blood. Jones won an Oscar for Best Movie Score this last film. Jones later composed music for television, which included the memorable themes to The Bill Cosby Show in 1969, Sanford and Son in 1972, and the television miniseries Roots in 1977. 

In 1974, Jones almost died of a cerebral aneurysm, and he was advised not to play the trumpet as it might disrupt the effects of his surgeries. 

In the late seventies, when Jones worked on the music for the Motown musical The Wiz, the teenaged singer Michael Jackson asked Jones to work on his upcoming album. The result of this collaboration was Off the Wall, which was a landmark album both stylistically and commercially. Joness arrangements on the album combined disco, funk grooves with lush string arrangements and subtle but effective horn lines and counterpoints. The album sold fifteen million copies worldwide, making Michael Jackson the era's most successful pop artist.

Following the success of Off the Wall, Jones and Jackson returned to the studio in April of 1982 to begin work on a second album, Thriller. Jones and songwriter Rod Temperton crafted the majority of the music for the album, while Jackson wrote four of its nine tracks.

Thriller was released in November of 1982. Supported by the then-new videos for songs such as Billie Jean, Thriller, and Beat It, the album sold over 100 million copies worldwide, making it the best-selling album of all time.

Jones also produced other successful releases in the early 1980s, including George Benson's Give Me the Night and Donna Summer's Donna Summer. In 1985, Jones assembled an all-star cast of pop, rock, and soul musicians for the We Are the World session. The single was written by Michael Jackson and Lionel Ritchie, to benefit the victims of famine in Ethiopia. Also in 1985, Jones scored the Steven Spielberg movie The Color Purple, which starred Danny Glover, Whoopi Goldberg, and Oprah Winfrey. 

In 1987, Jones teamed up with Michael Jackson once again for the pop singer's album Bad. Jones provided more arrangements than production as Jackson assumed more production duties than their previous collaborations. This ended up being the last album the pair worked on but it ended up selling over thirty million copies and ensured the fact that Jones and Jackson were the most successful artist-production duo in the history of recorded music. 

In 1991, Jones convinced an infirm Miles Davis to perform with him at the Montreux Jazz Festival. The resulting recording was issued as Miles and Quincy Live at Montreux. This was one of the last albums Davis participated on before his death in September of that year. 

Continuing his evolution as an impresario, Jones combined forces with David Salzman to form QDE, an entertainment firm that founded both Vibe and Spin magazines. The company also produced the hit television shows, including The Fresh Prince of Bel Air and MADtv.

Jones has been married three times, and has seven children, including his son Quincy Jones III, who was a key figure in the emergence of hip-hop in Sweden. Jones has also been very active with social issues and continues to support issues he finds worthy. 

In 2008, Jones was named a Jazz Master by the United States' National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), the nation's highest honor for a jazz musician.

Select Discography:

As Quincy Jones

The Birth of a Big Band Volume 1 (Mercury, 1959)
The Quintessence (Impulse!, 1961)
Big Band Bossa Nova (Mercury, 1962)
Q's Jook Joints (Qwest, 1995)

As either an arranger/producer/performer/conductor
With Ray Charles

Soul+Genius=Jazz (Impulse!, 1961)
In the Heat of the Night (1967)

With Michael Jackson

Off the Wall (Epic, 1979)
Thriller (Epic, 1982)
Bad (Epic, 1987)

With Frank Sinatra

It Might As Well Be Swing (Reprise, 1964)
Sinatra at the Sands (Reprise, 1966)
L.A. Is My Lady (Warner, 1984)

With Sarah Vaughn

You're Mine You (Roulette, 1962)

With George Benson

Give Me the Night (1980)
Contributor: Jared Pauley

 

http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/quincy-jones-best-stories-about-working-with-mj-sinatra-and-ray-20140708

Quincy Jones' Best Stories About Working With MJ, Sinatra and Ray


The musician and producer talks new documentary 'Distortion of Sound' and half a century of music business memories


by
 Quincy Jones and Michael Jackson. Ron Galella/WireImage


Quincy Jones, now 81 years old, has been not just an eyewitness to the evolution of 20th century music but one of its biggest players. He started as a jazz trumpeter and an arranger, and went on to be a bandleader, a film composer and a producer. Along the way, he worked with Ray Charles, Count Basie, Aretha Franklin, Frank Sinatra, Billie Holiday, Paul Simon and Michael Jackson, to name a few. He produced the world's best-selling album (Michael Jackson's Thriller) and the all-star charity single "We Are the World." He's been nominated for 79 Grammys, winning 27 of them. His seven children include actress Rashida Jones: "She's a sweet little thing, so smart," he brags.

The 50 Best Michael Jackson Songs

Jones is featured in the forthcoming documentary Distortion of Sound, about how digital compression has compromised the music that we all hear today. We caught up with him in Los Angeles for a conversation about technology and his career.

Have you seen technology change music?
Yeah, that's what changes the world. I remember when Baryshnikov first came to New York in the Sixties. I asked him, "Mikhail, how the hell did you have the guts to pull out of Russia in those days?" He said, "Quincy, very simple – television. I saw Roland Petit at the Parisian Ballet, I saw ABT in NY, and I said, 'I can do that too.'" When I look back at my own lifetime, the things I saw change the most was jet planes and television. And then we got into faxes and satellites and email, and it was over, man. The Arab Spring couldn't have happened without e-mail.

How often do you play trumpet these days?
I can never play it again – I'd die. Dizzy [Gillespie] gave me his original horn, and I can't touch it. I had a brain operation: aneurysms. I have this clip in my brain. I got letters in five languages saying I can't go through anything magnetic. Given the alternative, it's an easy choice.

What did you learn from Ray Charles?
Well, everything. We met when I was 14 years old and he was 17. He used to teach me stuff in braille. He sang back then, like Nat Cole and Charles Brown, and he played alto like Charlie Parker. There was a lot of racism going on in the Forties, but every day we used to say to the world, "Not one drop of my self-worth depends on your opinion of me."

Frank Sinatra gave you your "Q" nickname?
I was living in France and one day they said, "Grace Kelly's office called, and Mr. Sinatra wants you to bring a 55-piece orchestra down to Monte Carlo for a benefit." We took a train down and at the end of the show, he said, "Great job, kid, koo-koo." I didn't hear from him for four years and then he called me and said, "Hey, Q, this is Francis, I'm in Hawaii directing a film called None But the Brave. I heard the record you did last year with Basie." It was a waltz – I did it in 4/4 with Basie so it would swing. He said, "That's the way I like to do it too. Would you consider doing an album with Basie and me?" I said hell to the yeah, went over to Hawaii, and I didn't leave Frank until he left earth.

Do you have a memory of Michael Jackson as a musician?
We started to work on The Wiz when he was about 19. He said, "I need a producer for my album," seeing if I had a personal interest in working with him. I said, "Michael, I don't want to talk about nothing but the film." But I was trying to find things that he hadn't done before. I had this song "She's Out of My Life" that Tommy Bahler wrote when his wife left him. I was saving that for Sinatra, but I said, "I want to try this with Michael, 'cause he's never had a real life experience, a genuine relationship with a woman." I saw him at the Oscars one year – he was doing "Ben," this romantic love story to a rat! So I gave the song to him, and every time we recorded it, he cried.



THE MUSIC OF QUINCY JONES: AN EXTENSIVE VIDEO OVERVIEW, A CROSS SECTION OF RECORDINGS, MUSICAL ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY, PLUS VARIOUS INTERVIEWS WITH QUINCY JONES:

Quincy Jones --'The Birth of a Band' Album  (1960)

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Quincy Jones 'Birth Of A Band’-- 1960.wm
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Quincy Jones Big Band In Germany 1960:

 

Quincy Jones - "Listen Up! The Lives Of Quincy Jones" 1990-- (Full Movie HD):



 

'Big Band Bossa Nova’ (1962) - Quincy Jones:



 

Quincy Jones - 'Body Heat'-- FULL ALBUM (1974) --(HQ):



 


A1 Body Heat -- 0:00
Vocals, Soloist -- Bruce Fisher, Leon Ware
----------------------------------------­---------
A2 Soul Saga (Song Of The Buffalo Soldier) -- 3:58
Effects [Vocal] -- Al Jarreau
Vocals, Soloist -- Jim Gilstrap
----------------------------------------­---------
A3 Everything Must Change -- 8:58
Vocals, Soloist -- Benard Ighner
----------------------------------------­---------
A4 Boogie Joe The Grinder -- 15:01
----------------------------------------­---------
A5 Reprise: Everything Must Change -- 18:11
----------------------------------------­---------
B1 One Track Mind -- 19:12
----------------------------------------­---------
B2 Just A Man -- 25:28
Vocals, Soloist -- Quincy Jones
----------------------------------------­---------
B3 Along Came Betty -- 28:59
----------------------------------------­---------
B4 If I Ever Lose This Heaven -- 33:48
Effects [Vocal] -- Al Jarreau
Vocals, Soloist -- Leon Ware, Minnie Riperton

 
"Theme From The Pawnbroker" (Instrumental)—film soundtrack composed by Quincy Jones,  1964:


 

Producer: Quincy Jones
Composer, Author: Quincy Jones
Music Publisher: Pawnbroker Music Corp.

 

Quincy Jones and Bill Cosby - The Original Jam Sessions 1969 - full album:

 

The Original Jam Sessions 1969 is a 2004 released album by Quincy Jones and Bill Cosby recorded as backing music for The Bill Cosby Show in 1969.

Released June 22, 2004
Recorded July–September, 1969, Warner Brothers/Seven Arts, Burbank, California
Genre Jazz
Length 52:43
Label Concord Records
Producer Quincy Jones


Quincy Jones - "Hicky Burr”:


 

Quincy Jones-- "Ironside Theme”:


 

Quincy Jones-- Smackwater Jack Album 1971:

Woodwinds-Jerome Richardson, Hubert Laws and Peter Christlieb
Trumpets/Flugelhorns-Ernest Royal, Eugene Young, Marvin Stamm, Joe Newman, Buddy Childers and Freddie ubbard
Trombones-Wayne Andre, Garnett Brown
Bass Trombones-Dick Hixon, Alan Raph and Tony Studd
Guitars-Eric Gayle, Jim Hall, Joe Beck, Arthur Adams and Freddie Robinson
Keyboards-Bobby Scott, Bob James, Jack Byard, Monty Alexander and Joe Sample
Drums/Percussion-Grady Tate, Larry Bunker, Paul Humphreys and George Devns
Bass-Ray Brown, Chuck Rainey, Bob Crenshaw and Carole Kaye



Quincy Jones--"The Streetbeater" aka "Sanford & Son" Theme:


 

Legendary producer Quincy Jones:  Interview from 2014: 

 

In part one of a two-part interview, Jian speaks to Quincy Jones about his musical past and most vivid memories, including how he went from "baby gangster" to musical great, and how a near-death experience left him with only one fear.

Quincy Jones-- 'Walking In Space' (1969)--HQ FULL ALBUM  (1969):

 


A2 Walking In Space
4:05


Flute [Solo] – Hubert Laws
Tenor Saxophone [Solo] – Roland Kirk
Trombone [Solo] – Jimmy Cleveland
Trumpet [Solo] – Freddie Hubbard
Vocals [Solo] – Valerie Simpson
---------------------------------
B1 Killer Joe 16:02
---------------------------------
B2 Love And Peace 21:14
Electric Bass – Chuck Rainey
Tenor Saxophone [Solo] – Hubert Laws
---------------------------------
B3 I Never Told You 27:04
Soprano Saxophone [Solo] – Jerome Richardson
---------------------------------
B4 Oh Happy Day 31:22


http://www.ascap.com/press/2012/20120605-quincy-jones

Quincy Jones to Be Honored with ASCAP's Prestigious Founders Award at the 25th Annual Rhythm & Soul Awards


Quincy_Jones_620x352


New York, NY, June 6, 2012: The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) will honor songwriter, composer, producer, arranger and entertainment industry legend Quincy Jones with the ASCAP Founders Award during its 25th Annual Rhythm & Soul Music Awards. The invitation-only event will take place on Friday, June 29th, 2012, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles, California.

The ASCAP Founders Award is among the most prestigious honors that ASCAP gives to songwriters and composers who have made pioneering contributions to music by inspiring and influencing their fellow music creators. Each recipient is a musical innovator who possesses a unique style of creative genius that will enrich generations to come. Past recipients include Sean "Diddy" Combs, Rod Stewart, Dr. Dre, Patti Smith, Stevie Wonder, Billy Joel, Smokey Robinson, Paul McCartney, Ashford & Simpson, and Berry Gordy Jr. & Motown Industries.

Named by TIME Magazine as one of the most influential jazz musicians of the 20th century, Quincy Jones's career in the entertainment industry has spanned an impressive six decades, during which time he's played the role of composer, record producer, artist, film producer, arranger, conductor, instrumentalist, TV producer, record company executive, magazine founder, multi-media entrepreneur and humanitarian. Jones has earned a record 79 Grammy nominations and won a total of 27, and the celebrated Grammy Living Legend Award in 1991. One of the most prolific record producers ever, Jones has worked with countless music legends, including Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Frank Sinatra, Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder, Miles Davis and Céline Dion, among many others. Perhaps most notable, however, is his work in producing both the historic "We Are the World" charity single and pop icon Michael Jackson's Thriller. "We Are the World" which Jones also conducted, went on to become the fastest and best-selling American pop song of all time, with sales in excess of 20 million copies. Similarly, Thriller has sold an estimated 110 million copies worldwide since its release in 1982, making it the single best-selling album of all time. As a record company executive, Jones remains highly active in the recording field as the guiding force behind his own Qwest Records.

"Quincy Jones's contributions to the history of American music are immeasurable. With over 50 years experience working with the biggest names in music and in nearly every genre, he is easily one of the most influential figures in music history," said ASCAP President and Chairman Paul Williams. "He has had - and continues to have - a significant and long-lasting effect on the music community. As a pioneering composer and someone who has shaped the sound of American music, he is a clear and obvious choice for The ASCAP Founders Award."

The 25th Annual Rhythm & Soul Music Awards will celebrate the songwriters and publishers of the most performed ASCAP songs on the 2011 R&B/Hip-Hop, Rap and Gospel charts. Top awards will be given to the Songwriter of the Year, Publisher of the Year, Top R&B/Hip-Hop Song, Top Rap Song and Top Gospel Song, among others. The evening will also feature performances by several award-winning songwriters and performers.

Members of the press may apply for credentials at www.ascap.com/press/pressroom/rhythmsoulawards

About ASCAP
 
Established in 1914, ASCAP is the first and leading U.S. Performing Rights Organization (PRO) representing the world's largest repertory totaling over 8.5 million copyrighted musical works of every style and genre from more than 435,000 songwriter, composer and music publisher members. ASCAP has representation arrangements with similar foreign organizations so that the ASCAP repertory is represented in nearly every country around the world where copyright law exists. ASCAP protects the rights of its members and foreign affiliates by licensing the public performances of their copyrighted works and distributing royalties based upon surveyed performances. ASCAP is the only American PRO owned and governed by its writer and publisher members. www.ascap.com



http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/database/jones_q_interview.html


AMERICAN MASTERS Online presents an extended interview with "Quincy Jones" filmmaker Michael Kantor

Q: What did you learn while making an AMERICAN MASTERS program about Quincy Jones?

A: There were two stories that I will never forget. One happened to make it into the show, when Quincy's first wife Jeri described his approach to money when they were starting out:

Quincy had an attitude about money, that he didn't want to worry about it, that he believed it would come. I worried about money all the time, and I'd try to talk to him about it, and I'd say, you know, well, you know, I'd try to talk to him, and he'd say , "Oh, honey, not before breakfast," "Oh, not before lunch," "Oh, not before dinner," "Oh, not before we go to bed," "Well, not today," [laughs] you know, and he'd say, "Well, all I can do is my very best, and I'm doing my very best. And that's all I can do. So I just can't -- I just can't worry about it, you know?"

This is a quote about a guy who is now worth, I don't know, mucho dinero. It just struck me as really honest, and truthful, and inspiring to all of us who are just eaking by, but trying to do their very best.

The other quote was by his daughter Jolie, who said:

I always continually learn from him to take the higher road in a situation and to not get engaged in the lower, petty, you know, stuff that doesn't allow you to move above and beyond the situation. And I've seen him in a lot of difficult situations where people have not, in my opinion, dealt rightly with him in certain areas, and he will just go above it.

Also a good idea for all of us in torment over all kinds of petty issues.

Q: Was there anything that you had to omit from the show that you really wanted to keep in?

A: I really wanted to do a section on how Quincy uses language in his everyday life. He has a nickname for everyone - Sack, Bump, Sister Chloe, Mouse, 69, Punkin, etc. etc. I had hoped to be able to include Quincy's favorite expressions, such as when he describes being in front of a band as if he was "Dracula at the bloodbank." Also, we had created a really interesting section about the Listen Up Foundation and its work in South Africa that featured both Ms. Shabazz (daughter of Malcolm X and one of the board members of this organization) and Lisette Derouaux, who was leading this charitable organization and has been Quincy's partner for the past five years. Unfortunately, this section felt like it was from a different documentary - it didn't tie in that clearly with Quincy's career, so we had to cut it.

There is no question in my mind that Quincy closest relationship was with his brother Lloyd, and I wanted to in some way acknowledge this intense bond, but I couldn't figure out an artful way to dramatize it, so the film ended up focusing mainly on Quincy and his father. I guess if you wanted to know more about his brother, you could read Q's autobiography, which goes deeply into their relationship.

Also, there was so much music that Quincy created that couldn't be incorporated into the show. Check out "Boogie Joe, The Grinder" from his Body Heat Album, or anything he did with the Brothers Johnson, or the wacky "Hickey Burr" piece that Quincy created with Bill Cosby. I could go on forever.

Q: What's your favorite movie that Quincy scored?

A: I've probably only seen about half a dozen of the 35+ films that Quincy has scored. I'd really love to see "Honky" someday... But my personal favorite has to be "The Pawnbroker." Produced by my father-in-law, Ely Landau, and directed by Sidney Lumet, it is an incredibly intense movie that connects the Holocaust to Harlem in a dramatic, troubling, and moving way. This is the film that broke the Motion Picture Code's censorship of frontal nudity, and in fact a range of clergymen came forward and argued that the use of nudity in this film had an unmistakably clear moral purpose. It is really hard to believe that this is Quincy's first film score - it's full of dynamic jazz that drives the story along.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quincy_Jones

Quincy Jones


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Quincy Jones
Quincy Jones May 2014.jpg
Jones in 2014.
Background information
Birth name Quincy Delightt Jones, Jr.
Born March 14, 1933 (age 83) Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s) Musician, conductor, producer, arranger, composer, executive
Instruments Trumpet, french horn, drums, vocals, piano, synthesizer
Years active 1951–present
Labels Warner Bros, Columbia, Mercury, Qwest, Epic, ABC, Interscope
Associated acts Lionel Hampton, Ray Charles, Dizzy Gillespie, Clark Terry, Toots Thielemans, Sarah Vaughan, Aaliyah,[1] Rod Temperton, The Brothers Johnson, Frank Sinatra, Eddie Van Halen, Dinah Washington, Nana Mouskouri, Dean Martin, Patti Austin, Tevin Campbell, Tamia, Trey Songz, Lesley Gore, Nikki Yanofsky, Michael Jackson, Caiphus Semenya
Website quincyjones.com




Quincy Delight Jones, Jr. (born March 14, 1933) is an American record producer, conductor, arranger, composer, musician, television producer, film producer, instrumentalist, magazine founder, entertainment company executive, and humanitarian.[2] His career spans six decades in the entertainment industry and a record 79 Grammy Award nominations,[3] 28 Grammys,[3] including a Grammy Legend Award in 1991.

Jones came to prominence in the 1950s as a jazz arranger and conductor, before moving on to work prolifically in pop music and film scores.

In 1968, Jones and his songwriting partner Bob Russell became the first African Americans to be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song, their "The Eyes of Love" for the Universal Pictures film Banning. That same year, Jones was the first African American to be nominated twice within the same year for an Academy Award for Best Original Score, as he was also nominated for his work on the film In Cold Blood (1967). In 1971, Jones was the first African American to be named as the musical director and conductor of the Academy Awards ceremony. In 1995 he was the first African American to receive the Academy's Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award. He is tied with sound designer Willie D. Burton as the African American who has been nominated for the most Oscars; each has received seven nominations.

Jones was the producer, with Michael Jackson, of Jackson's albums Off the Wall (1979), Thriller (1982), and Bad (1987), as well as being the producer and conductor of the 1985 charity song "We Are the World", which went to raise funds for victims of destitution in Ethiopia.[4]
In 2013 Jones was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as the winner, alongside Lou Adler, of the Ahmet Ertegun Award.[5] Among his awards, Jones was named by Time Magazine as one of the most influential jazz musicians of the 20th century.[2]


 EXTERNAL VIDEO:

 

Early life

 

Quincy Jones was born in 1933, on the South Side of Chicago, to Sarah Frances (née Wells) (1903-1999) and Quincy Delightt Jones, Sr (1895-1971). His father was a semi-professional baseball player and carpenter from Kentucky; his paternal grandmother was an ex-slave in Louisville.[6] They had gone to Chicago as part of the Great Migration out of the South. Sarah was a bank officer and apartment complex manager.[6][7][8] Quincy had a younger brother, Lloyd, later an engineer for the Seattle station, KOMO-TV; he died in 1998. Quincy was introduced to music by his mother, who always sang religious songs, and by his next door neighbor Lucy Jackson. When he was five or six, Jackson played stride piano next door, and he would always listen through the walls. Lucy Jackson recalled that after he heard her that one day, she could not get him off her piano if she tried.[9]

When the boys were young, their mother suffered from a schizophrenic breakdown and was committed to a mental institution.[6][10] His father obtained a divorce and remarried.

Jones' stepmother, Elvera, had three children of her own: Waymond, who became a friend of the young Quincy, Theresa and Katherine.[10] Elvera and Quincy Senior had three more children together through 1950, after they had moved to the Northwest: Jeanette, Margie and Richard, now a judge in Seattle,[11] making a total of eight in the family.[10]

In 1943, when Jones was ten, his family moved to Bremerton, Washington, where his father got a wartime job at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard.[10] After the war, the Jones family moved to Seattle, the major regional city, where Jones attended Garfield High School near his home. He had discovered music when he was 12 and became more deeply involved in high school, developing his skills as a trumpeter and arranger.[6] Classmates included Charles Taylor, who played saxophone and whose mother, Evelyn Bundy, had been one of Seattle's first society jazz-band leaders. The youths began playing with a band.[10] At the age of 14, they were playing with a National Reserve band. Jones has said he got much more experience with music growing up in a smaller city; otherwise, he would have faced too much competition.[6]

At the age of 14, Jones introduced himself to a 16-year-old musician from Florida Ray Charles, after watching him play at the Black Elks Club. Jones cites Ray Charles as an early inspiration for his own music career. He noted that Charles overcame a disability (blindness) to achieve his musical goals. He has credited his father's sturdy work ethic with giving him the means to proceed, and his loving strength with holding the family together. Jones has said his father had a saying: "Once a task is just begun, never leave until it's done. Be the labor great or small, do it well or not at all."[10]

In 1951, Jones won a scholarship to Seattle University, where a young Clint Eastwood—also a music major there—watched him play in the college band. After only one semester, Jones transferred to what is now the Berklee College of Music in Boston on another scholarship (as of 2016, Jones' application for admission is preserved on display at Berklee).[12] While studying at Berklee he played at Izzy Ort's Bar & Grille with Bunny Campbell and Preston Sandiford, whom he later cited as important musical influences.[13] He left his studies after he received an offer to tour as a trumpeter with the bandleader Lionel Hampton and embarked on his professional career. While Jones was on the road with Hampton, he displayed a gift for arranging songs. Jones relocated to New York City, where he received a number of freelance commissions arranging songs for artists including Sarah Vaughan, Dinah Washington, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Gene Krupa, and Ray Charles, by then a close friend.

Musical career

 

At the age of 19, Jones traveled with Lionel Hampton to Europe and said it turned him upside down, altering his view of racism in the US.

"It gave you some sense of perspective of past, present and future. It took the myopic conflict between just black and white in the United States and put it on another level because you saw the turmoil between the Armenians and the Turks, and the Cypriots and the Greeks, and the Swedes and the Danes, and the Koreans and the Japanese. Everybody had these hassles, and you saw it was a basic part of human nature, these conflicts. It opened my soul, it opened my mind."[6]
In 1956, Jones toured again as a trumpeter and musical director of the Dizzy Gillespie Band on a tour of the Middle East and South America sponsored by the United States Information Agency. Upon his return, Jones signed with ABC-Paramount Records and started his recording career as the leader of his own band. In 1957, Quincy settled in Paris, where he studied composition and theory with Nadia Boulanger and composer Olivier Messiaen. He also performed at the Paris Olympia. Jones became music director at Barclay Disques, a leading French record company and the licensee for Mercury Records in France.

During the 1950s, Jones successfully toured throughout Europe with a number of jazz orchestras. As musical director of Harold Arlen's jazz musical Free and Easy, Quincy Jones took to the road again. A European tour closed in Paris in February 1960. With musicians from the Arlen show, Jones formed his own big band, called The Jones Boys, with eighteen artists. The band included double bass player Eddie Jones and fellow trumpeter Reunald Jones, and organized a tour of North America and Europe. Though the European and American concerts met enthusiastic audiences and sparkling reviews, concert earnings could not support a band of this size. Poor budget planning resulted in an economic disaster; the band dissolved and the fallout left Jones in a financial crisis. Quoted in Musician magazine, Jones said about the ordeal,

"We had the best jazz band on the planet, and yet we were literally starving. That's when I discovered that there was music, and there was the music business. If I were to survive, I would have to learn the difference between the two."
Irving Green, head of Mercury Records, helped Jones with a personal loan[14] and a new job as the musical director of the company's New York division. There he worked with Doug Moody, who founded Mystic Records.

1960s breakthrough and rise to prominence

In 1964, Jones was promoted to vice-president of Mercury Records, becoming the first African American to hold this executive position.[15] In that same year, he turned his attention to film scores, another musical arena long closed to African Americans. At the invitation of director Sidney Lumet, he composed the music for The Pawnbroker (1964). It was the first of his 33 major motion picture scores.
Following the success of The Pawnbroker, Jones left Mercury Records and moved to Los Angeles. After composing the film scores for Mirage and The Slender Thread in 1965, he was in constant demand as a composer. His film credits over the next seven years included Walk, Don't Run, The Deadly Affair, In Cold Blood, In the Heat of the Night, Mackenna's Gold, The Italian Job, Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, Cactus Flower, The Out-of-Towners, They Call Me Mister Tibbs!, The Anderson Tapes, $ and The Getaway. In addition, he composed "The Streetbeater," which became familiar as the theme music for the television sitcom Sanford and Son, starring close friend Redd Foxx; he also composed the themes for other TV shows, including Ironside, Banacek, The Bill Cosby Show, the opening episode of Roots, and the Goodson & Todman game show Now You See It.

In the 1960s, Jones worked as an arranger for some of the most important artists of the era, including Billy Eckstine, Sarah Vaughan, Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Nana Mouskouri, Shirley Horn, Peggy Lee, and Dinah Washington. Jones's solo recordings also gained acclaim, including Walking in Space, Gula Matari, Smackwater Jack, You've Got It Bad, Girl, Body Heat, Mellow Madness, and I Heard That!!.

He is known for his 1962 tune "Soul Bossa Nova", which originated on the Big Band Bossa Nova album. "Soul Bossa Nova" was a theme used for the 1998 World Cup[citation needed], the Canadian game show Definition, the Woody Allen film Take the Money and Run, and the Austin Powers film series. It was sampled by Canadian hip hop group Dream Warriors for their song, "My Definition of a Boombastic Jazz Style".

Jones produced all four million-selling singles for Lesley Gore during the early and mid-sixties, including "It's My Party" (UK No. 8; US No. 1), "Judy's Turn to Cry" (US No. 5), "She's a Fool" (also a US No. 5) in 1963, and "You Don't Own Me" (US No. 2 for four weeks in 1964). He continued to produce for Gore until 1966, including the Greenwich/ Barry hit "Look of Love" (US No. 27) in 1965.

In 1975, Jones founded Qwest Productions, for which he arranged and produced hugely successful albums by Frank Sinatra and other major pop figures. In 1978, he produced the soundtrack for The Wiz, the musical adaptation of The Wizard of Oz, starring Michael Jackson and Diana Ross. In 1982, Jones' produced Michael Jackson's all-time best-selling album Thriller.[16]

Jones's 1981 album, The Dude, yielded multiple hit singles, including "Ai No Corrida" (a remake of a song by Chaz Jankel), "Just Once," and "One Hundred Ways", the latter two featuring James Ingram on lead vocals and marking Ingram's first hits.

In 1985, Jones wrote the score for the Steven Spielberg film adaptation of the Pulitzer-prize winning epistolary novel, The Color Purple, by Alice Walker. He, Jerry Goldsmith (from Twilight Zone: The Movie), and Thomas Newman (from Bridge of Spies) are the only composers besides John Williams to have scored a Spielberg theatrical film. After the 1985 American Music Awards ceremony, Jones used his influence to draw most of the major American recording artists of the day into a studio to record the song "We Are the World" to raise money for the victims of Ethiopia's famine. When people marveled at his ability to make the collaboration work, Jones explained that he'd taped a simple sign on the entrance: "Check Your Ego At The Door".
In 1988, Quincy Jones Productions joined forces with Warner Communications to create Quincy Jones Entertainment. He signed a ten-picture deal with Warner Brothers and signed a two-series deal with NBC Productions. The television show The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air was completed in 1990, but producers of In the House (from UPN) later rejected its early concept stages. Jones produced the highly successful Fresh Prince of Bel Air (discovering Will Smith); UPN's In the House, and FOX's Madtv—which did 14 seasons on Fox.[17] In the early 1990s, Jones started a huge, ongoing project called "The Evolution of Black Music." Not only did the Quincy Jones Entertainment Company produce The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, but it also started a weekly talk show with his friend, Reverend Jesse Jackson, as the host.[18]

Starting in the late 1970s, Jones tried to convince Miles Davis to revive the music he had recorded on several classic albums of the 1960s, which had been arranged by Gil Evans. Davis had always refused, citing a desire not to revisit the past. In 1991, Davis, then suffering from pneumonia, relented and agreed to perform the music at a concert at the Montreux Jazz Festival. The resulting album from the recording, Miles & Quincy Live at Montreux, was Davis' last released album (he died several months afterward). It is considered an artistic triumph.[19]

In 1993, Jones collaborated with David Salzman to produce the concert extravaganza, An American Reunion, a celebration of Bill Clinton's inauguration as president of the United States. The same year, Jones joined forces with Salzman and renamed his company as Quincy Jones/David Salzman Entertainment (QDE). QDE is a diverse company that produces media technology, motion pictures, television programs (In the House, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and MADtv), and magazines (VIBE and Spin).

In 2001, Jones published his autobiography, Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones. On July 31, 2007, he partnered with Wizzard Media to launch the Quincy Jones Video Podcast.[20] In each episode, Jones shares his knowledge and experience in the music industry. The first episode features him in the studio, producing "I Knew I Loved you" for Celine Dion. This is featured on the Ennio Morricone tribute album, We All Love Ennio Morricone. Jones is also noted for helping produce Anita Hall's CD, Send Love, which was released in 2009.

Work with Michael Jackson

 

While working on the film The Wiz, Michael Jackson asked Jones to recommend some producers for his upcoming solo record. Jones offered some names, but eventually offered to produce the record. Jackson accepted and the resulting record, Off The Wall, ultimately sold about 20 million copies. This made Jones the most powerful record producer in the industry at that time. Jones' and Jackson's next collaboration, Thriller, has sold a reputed 110 million copies and has become the highest-selling album of all time.[21] Jones also worked on Jackson's album Bad, which has sold 45 million copies. Bad was the last time the pair worked together in the studio. Audio interviews with Jones are featured on the 2001 special editions of Off The Wall, Thriller, and Bad.

In a 2002 interview, when asked if he would work with Jones again, Jackson suggested he might. But, in 2007, when Jones was asked by NME, he said "Man, please! We already did that. I have talked to him about working with him again but I've got too much to do. I've got 900 products, I'm 74 years old."[22]


Following Jackson's death on June 25, 2009, Jones said:


In October 2013, it was reported by the BBC and Hollywood Reporter that Jones is suing the estate of Michael Jackson for 10 million dollars. Jones says that MJJ Productions, a song company managed by the singer's estate and Sony Music Entertainment, improperly re-edited songs to deprive him of royalties and production fees; further, they broke an agreement giving him the right to remix master recordings for albums released after Jackson's death in 2009.[24] The songs Quincy produced for Jackson were used in the film, This Is It. Jones is filing lawsuits against the works of Michael Jackson Cirque du Soleil productions, and the 25th anniversary edition of the Bad album.[25] Quincy believes he should have received a producer credit in the film.[24][26][27]

 

Work with Frank Sinatra


Jones first worked with Frank Sinatra in 1958 when invited by Princess Grace to arrange a benefit concert at the Monaco Sporting Club.[28] Six years later, Sinatra hired him to arrange and conduct Sinatra's second album with Count Basie, It Might as Well Be Swing (1964). Jones conducted and arranged the singer's live album with the Basie Band, Sinatra at the Sands (1966).[29] Jones was also the arranger/conductor when Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr., Dean Martin, and Johnny Carson performed with the Basie orchestra in June 1965 in St. Louis, Missouri, in a benefit for Dismas House. The fund-raiser was broadcast to movie theaters around the country and eventually released on DVD.[30] Later that year, Jones was the arranger/conductor when Sinatra and Basie appeared on The Hollywood Palace TV show on October 16, 1965.[31] Nineteen years later, Sinatra and Jones teamed up for 1984's L.A. Is My Lady.[32] Quincy was quoted saying,

"Frank Sinatra took me to a whole new planet. I worked with him until he passed away in '98. He left me his ring. I never take it off. Now, when I go to Sicily, I don't need a passport. I just flash my ring."[33]

Brazilian culture

 

A great admirer of Brazilian culture, Jones is planning a film on Brazil's "Carnival," describing it as "one of the most spectacular spiritual events on the planet."[citation needed] The Brazilians Simone, whom he cites as "one of the world's greatest singers",[34] Ivan Lins,[35] Milton Nascimento, percussionist Paulinho Da Costa, "one of the best in the business",[36] have become close friends and partners in his recent works.

Media appearances

 

Jones had a brief appearance in the 1990 video for The Time song "Jerk Out". Jones was a guest actor on an episode of The Boondocks. He appeared with Ray Charles in the music video of their song "One Mint Julep" and also with Ray Charles and Chaka Khan in the music video of their song "I'll Be Good to You".


Jones during an annual meeting in 2004 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, January 21, 2004


Quincy Jones hosted an episode of the long-running NBC sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live on February 10, 1990 (during SNL's 15th season). The episode was notable for having 10 musical guests[37] (the most any SNL episode has ever had in its near-40 years on the air): Tevin Campbell, Andrae Crouch, Sandra Crouch, rappers Kool Moe Dee and Big Daddy Kane, Melle Mel, Quincy D III, Siedah Garrett, Al Jarreau, and Take 6, and for a performance of Dizzy Gillespie's "Manteca" by The SNL Band (conducted by Quincy Jones).[37] Jones impersonated Marion Barry, former mayor of Washington, DC, in the then-recurring sketch, The Bob Waltman Special. Quincy Jones later produced his own sketch comedy show, FOX's MADtv. This competed with SNL from 1995 to 2009.

Jones appeared in the Walt Disney Pictures film, Fantasia 2000, introducing the set piece of George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue. Two years later he made a cameo appearance as himself in the film Austin Powers in Goldmember.

On February 10, 2008, Jones joined Usher in presenting the Grammy Award for Album of the Year to Herbie Hancock.

On January 6, 2009, Quincy Jones appeared on NBC's Last Call with Carson Daly to discuss various aspects of his prolific career. Daly informally floated the idea that Jones should become the first minister of culture for the United States, pending the inauguration of Barack Obama as President. Daly noted that only the US and Germany, among leading world countries, did not have a cabinet-level position for this role. Commentators on NPR[38] and in the Chronicle of Higher Education have also discussed the topic of a minister of culture.[39]

In February 2014, Jones appeared in "Keep on Keepin' On," a documentary about his friend Clark Terry. In the film, Terry introduces Jones to his protege, Justin Kauflin, who Jones then signs into his band and label.[40] In July 2014, Jones was starring in a documentary film, The Distortion of Sound.[41]

In September 2015, Jones was a guest on Dr. Dre's The Pharmacy on Beats 1 Radio.

Social activism


Jones at a performance of The Hot Chocolate Nutcracker, December 2010

Jones's social activism began in the 1960s with his support of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Jones is one of the founders of the Institute for Black American Music (IBAM), whose events aim to raise enough funds for the creation of a national library of African-American art and music. Jones is also one of the founders of the Black Arts Festival in his hometown of Chicago. In the 1970s Jones formed The Quincy Jones Workshops. Meeting at the Los Angeles Landmark Variety Arts Center, the workshops educated and honed the skills of inner city youth in musicianship, acting and songwriting. Among its Alumni were Alton Mc Clain who had a hit song with Alton Mc Clain and Destiny, and Mark Wilkins, not the Race Car Driver, who co-wrote the hit song "Havin' A Love Attack" with Mandrill, and went on to become the National Promotion Director for Punk / Thrash record label Mystic Records.

For many years, Jones has worked closely with Bono of U2 on a number of philanthropic endeavors. He is the founder of the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation.[4] A nonprofit organization that built more than 100 homes in South Africa which aims to connect youths with technology, education, culture and music.[42] One of the organization's programs is an intercultural exchange between underprivileged youths from Los Angeles and South Africa.

In 2004, Jones helped launch the We Are the Future (WAF) project, which gives children in poor and conflict-ridden areas a chance to live their childhoods and develop a sense of hope. The program is the result of a strategic partnership between the Global Forum, the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation, and Hani Masri, with the support of the World Bank, UN agencies and major companies. The project was launched with a concert in Rome, Italy, in front of an audience of half a million people.

Jones supports a number of other charities including the NAACP, GLAAD, Peace Games, AmfAR and The Maybach Foundation.[43] Jones serves on the Advisory Board of HealthCorps. On July 26, 2007, he announced his endorsement of Hillary Clinton for president. But with the election of Barack Obama, Quincy Jones said that his next conversation "with President Obama [will be] to beg for a secretary of arts,"[44] This prompted the circulation of a petition on the Internet asking Obama to create such a Cabinet-level position in his administration.[45][46]

In 2001, Jones became an honorary member of the board of directors of The Jazz Foundation of America. He has worked with The Jazz Foundation of America[47] to save the homes and the lives of America's elderly jazz and blues musicians, including those who survived Hurricane Katrina.[citation needed]

Jones and his friend John Sie, founder of Liberty Starz, worked together to create the Global Down Syndrome Foundation. They were inspired by Sie's granddaughter, Sophia, who has Down syndrome.[48]

Personal life

 

With the help of the author Alex Haley in 1972 and Mormon researchers in Salt Lake City, Jones discovered that his mother's ancestors included James Lanier, a relative of Sidney Lanier, the poet. Jones said in an interview, "He had a baby with my great-grandmother [a slave], and my grandmother was born there [on a plantation in Kentucky]. We traced this all the way back to the Laniers, same family as Tennessee Williams."[6] Learning that the Lanier immigrant ancestors were French Huguenot refugees, who had court musicians among their ancestors, Jones attributed some of his musicianship to them.[6] In a 2009 BBC interview, Jones said Haley also helped him learn that his father was of part Welsh ancestry.[49]

In 1974, he suffered a life-threatening brain aneurysm, so he decided to cut back on his schedule to spend time with his friends and family.[50] Since his family and friends believed that his life was coming to an end, they started to plan a memorial service for him. He attended his own service with his neurologist by his side in case the excitement overwhelmed him. Some of the entertainers at his service were Richard Pryor, Marvin Gaye, Sarah Vaughan and Sidney Poitier.[51]

Jones has been married three times and has had other relationships; he has a total of seven children:

  • Jeri Caldwell (1957 to 1966); they had a daughter, Jolie Jones (now married and using the surname Levine).[10]
  • Ulla Andersson, Swedish actress, (1967 to 1974); they had two children, Martina and Quincy Jones III;[10]
  • Peggy Lipton, actress, (1974 to 1990); they had two daughters, Kidada and Rashida Jones, both born in the United States, who have become actresses.[10]
  • Jones had a brief affair with Carol Reynolds, and they had a daughter, Rachel Jones.[10]
  • Jones dated and lived with the actress, Nastassja Kinski, from 1991 until 1995. They had a daughter, Kenya Julia Miambi Sarah Jones, born in 1993.[52]
  •  
For the 2006 PBS television program, African American Lives, Jones had his DNA tested and genealogists researched his family history again. His DNA admixture revealed he is predominately African with 34% European in ancestry, found on both sides of his family. Research showed that he has Welsh, English, French and Italian ancestry, with European ancestry in his direct patrilineal line (Y DNA). Through his direct matrilineal line (mt DNA), he is of West African/Central African ancestry of Tikar descent, a people centered in present-day Cameroon.[53] Other matrilineal ancestry includes European, such as Lanier male ancestors who fought for the Confederacy, making him eligible for Sons of Confederate Veterans. Among his ancestors is Betty Washington Lewis, the sister of president George Washington.[54] Jones is also a direct descendant of Edward I of England; Edward's ancestors included Rurik, Polish, Swiss, and French nobility.[55]

Jones has never learned to drive, citing an accident in which he was a passenger (at age 14) as the reason.[56]

Honors and awards

 

In addition to receiving recognition specifically for his music and arrangements, Jones has been recognized for his overall contributions to music and humanitarian goals. He has received numerous honorary doctorates and been invited to speak at college and university commencement ceremonies.[6]
  • Garfield High School in Seattle named a performing arts center after him.[6]
  • Quincy Jones Elementary School located in South Central Los Angeles is named after him.
  • He received the Humanitarian Award at the BET Awards in 2008.
  • He received the John F. Kennedy Center Honors in 2001.[57]
  • He received the Los Angeles Press Club Visionary Award in 2014.[58]
  • He received an honorary doctorate from the Royal Academy of Music, London, in 2015.[59]
  •  

Film scores

Discography

Awards and recognition

References











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  • Busis, Hillary. "Public Enemy, Rush, Heart, Donna Summer to be inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame | The Music Mix | EW.com". Music-mix.ew.com. Retrieved December 13, 2012.

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  • "Paul De Barros, "From his Great Depression childhood in Seattle, Quincy Jones dared to dream"". Catholic.org. Retrieved September 27, 2014.

  • Brunner, Jim (March 25, 2007). "Federal bench nominee Jones wins high praise from both parties". The Seattle Times. Retrieved July 16, 2011.

  • "Quincy Jones: Seattle's Own Music Man". Northwest Prime Time. September 1, 2013. Retrieved July 8, 2014.

  • Feist, Jonathan (1999). Masters of Music: Conversations with Berklee Greats. Berklee Press. p. 177. ISBN 9780634006425.

  • Jones, Quincy. (2002) Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones, Random House, At Google Books. Retrieved July 26, 2013

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  • "BBC China | Michael Jackson Photo Gallery 迈克•杰克逊影集". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved August 17, 2011.

  • "Quincy Jones snubs chance to team up with Michael Jackson , News , NME.COM". NME. UK <!. May 25, 2007. Retrieved July 18, 2009.

  • James, Frank (June 25, 2009). "Michael Jackson Dead at 49". The Two-Way. NPR. Retrieved December 9, 2010.

  • "Miriam Coleman, "Quincy Jones Sues Michael Jackson's Estate"". Rolling Stone. Retrieved September 27, 2014.

  • Gardner, Eriq (October 25, 2013). "Quincy Jones Files $10M Lawsuit Over Michael Jackson Music (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter.

  • ABC News. "Quincy Jones Sues Michael Jackson's Estate". ABC News. Retrieved September 27, 2014.

  • "BBC News – US music producer Quincy Jones sues Jackson estate". Bbc.co.uk. October 26, 2013. Retrieved 2014-05-23.

  • (Quincy Jones) Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones, Doubleday, 2001, pp. 129–132.

  • (Jones), pp. 179–83.

  • Live and Swingin': The Ultimate Rat Pack Collection, Reprise R2 73922, 2003 (CD & DVD)

  • video tape Frank Sinatra. Good Times Home Video, No. 05-09845. One of a set of five tapes. 1999?

  • on the VHS tape,Frank Sinatra: Portrait of an Artist, MGM/UA Video, 1985, MV400648.

  • Elfmanlas, Doug (2013-04-13). "Quincy Jones shares stories of old Vegas". Reviewjournal.com. Retrieved 2015-12-28.

  • Brazilian Television, Rede Bandeirantes, 2006, Flash Program

  • "AllBrazilianMusic, Ivan Lins from A to Z". Allbrazilianmusic.com. October 18, 2000. Archived from the original on August 6, 2007. Retrieved July 18, 2009.

  • Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones page 233

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  • [1][dead link]

  • "Ability Magazine: Quincy Jones Interview with Chet Cooper" (2011)". Retrieved April 3, 2012.

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  • [2][dead link]

  • "New DNA test results trace Oprah Winfrey's ancestry to Liberia / Zambia : Zambia News". Zambia News. February 6, 2006.

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  • "Michelle's Great-great-great-granddaddy and Yours?". Theroot.com. Retrieved September 27, 2014.

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  • "Quincy Jones Trivia – Quincy Jones Information and Facts". Whosdatedwho.com. Retrieved 2014-05-23.

  • "Music Legend Quincy Jones to Receive the Visionary Award". LA Press Club. 2014-09-22. Retrieved 2015-12-28.


  • External links