Few artists have legacies so mammoth their very name could be considered synonymous with the music industry, but then again, most musicians are not the prodigious producer
The larger-than-life figure died Sunday night at his Los Angeles home, surrounded by his family. He was 91 and scheduled to receive an later this month.
Across his career, the 28-time Grammy Award winning Jones worked with everyone from Ray Charles and Frank Sinatra to with hundreds in-between. The best way to celebrate his legacy, of course, is to listen to the music he made.
Read on, and then listen to all of the tracks on our
1963: Ella Fitzgerald and Count Basie's orchestra,
Those looking to kickstart their Jones listening journey at the very beginning of his career could do so with 鈥淟iza,鈥 from his first album, 鈥淛azz Abroad,鈥 a joint release with Roy Haynes. For everyone else, look to his arrangements on 1963's 鈥淓lla and Basie!,鈥 an with Count Basie's orchestra. Moving from just vocals and bass before building into its own grandness 鈥 not to mention, a delightful scat solo from Fitzgerald 鈥 鈥淗oneysuckle Rose鈥 from the album is an exemplar of Jones' jazz brilliance.
1963: Lesley Gore,
Teenage heartbreak met its match on Lesley Gore's 鈥淚t's My Party,鈥 recorded when its pop singer was still in her own adolescence. Jones produced the record, with its addictive melodies, percussion and cheerful horn section 鈥 emotionally and diametrically opposed to its narrative tale of a girl getting dumped by her boyfriend for her best friend on her birthday. You'd cry, too, if it happened to you.
1964: Frank Sinatra,
Jones' legacy is defined by an idiosyncratic ability to master various American musical forms with an apparent ease. That is the case of this canonized cover by 鈥淔ly Me to the Moon,鈥 from Sinatra's 1964 album, 鈥淚t Might as Well Be Swing,鈥 arranged by Jones. The producer set the song to a punchy, swinging rhythm and wistful flute, and the rest is history. You can also thank Jones for 鈥淭he Best Is Yet to Come.鈥
1967: Ray Charles,
Jones scored the 1967 film 鈥淚n the Heat of the Night,鈥 which includes its R&B-gospel title track, 鈥淚n the Heat of the Night,鈥 performed by his good friend Ray Charles. It is soul committed to wax, amplified by the inclusion of a lusty tenor sax solo.
1979: Michael Jackson,
Perhaps Jones' best-known production partnership is the one he had with Michael Jackson, working with the King of Pop on his culture-shifting albums, 1979's 鈥淥ff the Wall," 1982's 鈥淭hriller鈥 and 1987's 鈥淏ad.鈥 The pair met while working on the 1978 movie 鈥 Jones worked on its soundtrack, and Jackson was its star. 鈥淒on't Stop 鈥楾il You Get Enough," with its inventive disco-funk, ambitious production and Jackson's signature falsetto set the stage for the massive career to come.
1981: Quincy Jones,
Put it in the pantheon of great piano ballads: On Jones' 1981 album 鈥淭he Dude,鈥 James Ingram takes over lead vocal duties for 鈥淛ust Once,鈥 the big-hearted and bigger-feelings track.
1982: Michael Jackson,
What songs are more immediately recognizable? An elongated drum and bass lick introduce 鈥淏illie Jean,鈥 one of the great genre-averse pop songs of all time, from Jackson's record-breaking 鈥淭hriller" album. Here, Jones' production is post-disco, but still funky, still prescient. And time tells the greatest tale: than 20 million copies in 1983 alone and has contended with the Eagles鈥 鈥淕reatest Hits 1971-1975鈥 among others as the best-selling album of all time.
1982: Donna Summer,
And now for something completely different: In 1982, Jones worked with on her self-titled album, a dance-forward record that includes the synth-y pop single 鈥淟ove Is in Control (Finger on the Trigger)," which earned a Grammy nomination for best R&B vocal performance, female.
1985: USA for Africa,
Nearly four decades ago, some of the biggest stars on the planet 鈥 Jackson, Bob Dylan, Tina Turner, Dionne Warwick, Billy Joel, Stevie Wonder, Willie Nelson and Bruce Springsteen among them 鈥 came together for an all-night recording session. The result was a pop superhit overseen by Jones, the 1985 charity record for famine relief in Africa.
Lionel Richie, who co-wrote 鈥淲e Are the World鈥 and was among the featured singers, would call Jones 鈥渢he master orchestrator.鈥
1989: Quincy Jones with Ray Charles and Chaka Khan,
Back in 1976, Jones produced the Brothers Johnson's R&B hit, 鈥淚'll Be Good to You,鈥 and then re-recorded the track with and Chaka Khan 鈥 an ebullient number with contemporary production, completely transforming the classic.
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National Writer Hillel Italie contributed to this report.
Maria Sherman, The Associated Press