Notes
Quincy Jones
An impresario in the broadest and most creative sense of the word, Quincy Jones ' career has
encompassed the roles of composer, record producer, artist, film producer, arranger, conductor,
instrumentalist, TV producer, record company executive, magazine founder and multi-media
entrepreneur. As a master inventor of musical hybrids, he has shuffled pop, soul, hip-hop, jazz,
classical, African and Brazilian music into many dazzling fusions, traversing virtually every medium,
including records, live performance, movies and television. Celebrating his 50th year performing and
being involved in music, Jones' creative magic has spanned over six decades, beginning with the music
of the post-swing era and continuing through today's high-technology, international multi-media
hybrids. In the mid-50's, he was the first popular conductor-arranger to record with a Fender bass. His
theme from the hit TV series "Ironside " was the first synthesizer-based pop theme song. As the first
black composer to be embraced by the Hollywood establishment in the 60's, he helped refresh movie
music with badly needed infusions of jazz and soul. His landmark 1989 album, BACK ON THE
BLOCK was named "Album Of The Year " at the 1990 Grammy Awards and brought such legends as
Dizzy Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan and Miles Davis together with Ice T, Big Daddy Kane
and Melle Mel to create the first fusion of the be hop and hip hop musical traditions. His 1993
recording of the critically acclaimed "Miles and Quincy Live At Montreux " featured Quincy
conducting Miles Davis' live performance of the historic Gil Evans arrangements from the "Miles
Ahead", "Porgy and Bess" and "Sketches of Spain" sessions, garnering a Grammy Award for Best Large
Jazz Ensemble Performance. As producer and conductor of the historic "We Are The World"
recording (the best-selling single of all time) and Michael Jackson's multi-platinum solo albums, "Off
The Wall", "Bad " and "Thriller" (the best selling album of all time, with over 40 million copies sold),
Jones stands as one of the most successful and admired creative artist/executives in the entertainment
world.
Born on March 14, 1933, in Chicago, Jones was brought up in Seattle. While in junior high
school, he began studying trumpet and sang in a gospel quartet at age 12. His musical studies
continued at the prestigious Berklee College of Music in Boston, where he remained until the
opportunity arose to tour with Lionel Hampton ' s band as a trumpeter, arranger and sometimepianist.
He moved on to New York and the musical "big leagues" in 1951, where his reputation as an
arranger grew. By the mid-50 ' s, he was arranging and recording for such diverse artists as Sarah
Vaughan, Ray Charles, Count Basic, Duke Ellington, Big Maybelle, Dinah Washington, Cannonball
Adderly and LeVern Baker. When he became vice-president at Mercury Records in 1961, Jones
became the first high-level African American of an established major record company. Toward the
end of his association with the label, Jones turned his attention to another musical area that had been
closed to African Americans-the world of film scores. in 1963, he started work on the music for
Sidney Lumet's "The Pawnbroker" and it was the first of his 33 major motion picture scores.
Jones' laurels, awards and accolades have been innumerable: he has won an Emmy Award for his
score of the of the opening episode of the landmark TV miniseries, "Roots", seven Oscar nominations,
the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences ' Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, 26 Grammy
Awards, and N.A.R.A.S.' prestigious Trustees' Award and The Grammy Living Legend Award. He is
the all-time most nominated Grammy artist with a total of 77 Grammy nominations. In 1990, France
recognized Jones with its most distinguished title, the Legion d' Honneur. He is also the recipient of
the French Ministry of Culture ' s Distinguished Arts and Letters Award. Jones is the recipient of the
Royal Swedish Academy of Music 's coveted Polar Music Prize, and the Republic of Italy's Rudolph
Valentino Award. Jones is also the recipient of honorary doctorates from Howard University, the
Berklee College of Music, Seattle University, Wesleyan University, Brandeis University, Loyola
University (New Orleans), Clark Atlanta University, Claremont University's Graduate School, and the
University of Connecticut, Harvard University, and The American Film Institute.