Quincy Jones 90th.

Portrait |
14.03.2023

He made stars like Frank Sinatra or Michael Jackson great – and became a legend himself. At 90, Quincy Jones can look back on a remarkable life’s work.

Whether jazz, pop or film music: What a multi-talent Quincy Jones tackled became a success. He has won 28 Grammys in the course of his career and has been nominated a total of 80 times. It was he who pulled the strings behind the scenes of Michael Jacksons “Thriller”, the charity hit “We Are the World” or the cult series “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air”. For more than six decades he shaped the music business, albums by Ray Charles, Count Basie, Frank Sinatra, Donna Summer and Dizzy Gillespie or Charles Aznavour and U2 produces – just to name a few. He was the first African American to serve as a vice president on the executive floor of a major record label. He shook the hand of the music greats of this world as well as the Pope or Nelson Mandela. In short: Quincy Jones has probably achieved everything in life that he ever dreamed of.

Grew up in the ghetto

His life began anything but promising. His story sounds a bit like the fulfillment of the American dream: A boy from a poor family makes it to the top with a lot of hard work – in his case the Olympus of musicians.

Quincy Jones with his Big Band around 1960

Quincy Delight Jones Jr. was born on March 14, 1933 in Chicago. The US is on the ground, battered by the economic depression. It’s the time of mafia boss Al Capone. The boy grows up in the notorious ghetto on the city’s South Side. He always has a knife in his pocket – just in case – and only wants one thing: to become a gangster. “You want to be what you know, and we knew that,” he says2018 in the film regarding his life. And also that he never saw a white man until he was eleven. Actually, his criminal career is inevitable, but then one day Quincy breaks into a US Army veterans’ home. There is a piano in the corner and the boy strums the instrument for fun. It’s the beginning of a great love. He felt “the irrepressible desire to do something like this”.

Dizzy Gillespies “bad dude”

And so it is that Quincy Jones becomes a musician. His father divorced his schizophrenic mother and he moved to Seattle with the family. There, Quincy meets Ray Charles, who is two years older than him, and the two become best friends.

As a 14-year-old, Quincy was already playing in various bands with his friend, in the followingnoon dance music in the white tennis clubs, at night bepop in the city’s jazz bars. At 19, Quincy is a trumpeter in the orchestra of Lionel Hampton, one of the hottest entertainers of the 1950s. None other than jazz icon Dizzy Gillespie certifies Quincy to be a “bad dude”, a musician who knows all the tricks. From the beginning he tried to compose and arrange as well; he stands with Duke Ellington and Billie Holiday on stage and eager to learn from the bandmates.

In 1956 Dizzy Gillespie engaged him as orchestra leader and took him on tour. In the same year Jones worked on his first album “This is how I feel regarding Jazz” in New York.

Despite the initial successes, Quincy Jones went to Europe because jazz was still considered inferior black music in his home country. He’s lucky, he gets a place at university: in Paris, the greats in their field, Nadia Boulanger and Olivier Messiaen, teach him the art of composing and arranging. Later, this knowledge will enable him to conquer musical areas that have long been closed to black musicians.

Successful in every division

In 1964, Quincy Jones became Vice President at Mercury, one of the leading record labels at the time. He is the first African American in such a position. In the same year he produces the first album for Frank Sinatra. 1969 hears the crew of the Apollo 11 on its moon landing Jones’ version of “Fly Me To The Moon”, like all those who sit spellbound in front of the television worldwide. Jones also writes film scores, including hit songs for Roots and The Color Purple.

Miles Davis (left) and Quincy Jones in 1991 at the Montreux Jazz Festival – where Jones was a regular Alex Reed

His stylistically confident flair for the most diverse musical genres Bossa Nova through soul to funk make him a sought-following producer and conductor.

The most successful record in the world

In 1974, Jones suffered a brain hemorrhage. He has to give up playing the trumpet, throws himself more into his work as a producer and founds his own label, “Quest Records”. When he takes former child star Michael Jackson under his wing, Jones finally rises to the top of the music world: the second jointly produced Album “Thriller” (1982) becomes the best-selling record of all time, selling more than 66 million copies.

Successful duo Jones and Jackson


The song was created three years later under Jones’ leadership
“We are the World” for the benefit project Band Aid. Jones had Michael Jackson, Lionel Ritchie,
Bruce SpringsteenPrince, Kenny Rogers and Tina Turner to make the album to raise money for victims of the terrible Ethiopian famine of 1984-85.

Don’t be afraid of crossing genres

Jones is keen to experiment, he always breaks new musical ground and has an ear for musical styles from all corners of the world: Maybe that’s why his music effortlessly spans the decades, and a hit from the 1960s is still successful today.

Active even in old age: Jones at work

But Quincy Jones does not only get praise: He is accused of being exploit black culture and falsify rhythms to create commercial music that white people can easily consume. However, it is mostly whites who accuse him of betraying his black brothers and sisters.

Quincy Jones’ secret to success

This March 14, Quincy Jones celebrates his 90th birthday. “With the power of music I reach the hearts and minds of millions of people,” he once said. The musical genius has created countless musical gems – true to his motto: “The last thing that will disappear from our planet is water and music.”

French musician Matthieu Chedid aka M pays homage to Jones’ lifetime achievement at the 2019 Montreux Jazz Festival

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