Quincy Jones wanted some pie. That’s what drove the 11-year-old and his friends to break into a rec center in their Seattle-area neighborhood one night. After gorging on lemon meringue pie and ice cream and having a food fight, Jones wandered into an office and spotted a piano in the corner.
I almost closed the door and left,” he says. “But something, thank God, told me, ‘Go back in that room, fool.’ And I did. I touched that piano and knew then that every part of my soul would be in music forever.”
That moment changed the course of Jones’ life. He gave up the role of petty thief and gang member to embrace music, eventually becoming composer, artist, conductor, arranger, producer and record company executive. Over his more than 60-year music career, Jones has worked with the greats. Among them: Ray Charles (a childhood friend), Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra, Michael Jackson (Jones produced Jackson’s Thriller, the best-selling album in history). Jones’ list of accolades is equally impressive, including 27 Grammys (and 79 nominations, more than anyone in history), the Recording Academy’s Trustees Award and the Grammy Living Legend Award.
And that’s just his musical career. Jones, 75, has also found success in TV and film, producing such hits as The Fresh Prince of Bel Air and the critically acclaimed The Color Purple, starring Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey. He has also founded Quincy Jones Entertainment, Quincy Jones Media Group, Qwest Records, Qwest Broadcasting and Vibe magazine.
FINDING HIS PASSION
Such success was nowhere on the horizon for a young Quincy
Jones, born and reared in Chicago until the age of 10.
“My daddy worked for the biggest black gangsters in Chicago,” Jones says. “He was a master carpenter who built their homes—the Jones Boys, the Capones, all those people back then. That’s all I ever saw in the ’30s: the machine guns, the stogies, piles of cash and all the shootings… ice picks in bodies. It’s unbelievable.”
On top of that, his schizophrenic mother was institutionalized when Jones was just 7. After moving with his father and siblings to Seattle—and discovering the power of music—Jones made a decision: “I made a deal with myself that, if I didn’t have a mother, I didn’t need one, and I would let music be my mother, because it would never let you down. It’s just something that touched me.”
Jones immersed himself in all things music. He tried piano, violin, clarinet, percussion and five more instruments before settling on the trumpet. He joined area bands, studied at the Berklee College of Music in Boston and eventually took up with Lionel Hampton and his big band—Jones’ big break into the music industry.
He credits that break to his devotion and diligence. “The dictionary is the only place where success precedes work—that’s alphabetical,” he says. “You have to get off your butt and do it. You have to have a core skill and you have to study all aspects of it. The emotional side is what will drive it, but the science is what will prepare you—if it’s playing piano scales or if it’s a business course at Wharton, whatever. The science will be there to back up all your ideals and dreams. You know how they say, ‘Make the drunken dreams turn into sober realities?’ It’s really true.”
LEARN FROM THE BEST
In the years that followed, Jones was “always inquisitive,”
he says. “When I was young, I used to sit down, shut up and
listen to people who knew what they were talking about—
musicians and my mentors, Count Basie, Ray Charles, Benny
Carter and businessmen like Steve Ross at Time Warner and
Irving Green at Mercury Records.”
“The dictionary is the only place where SUCCESS precedes WORK.”
While on the road with Hampton, Jones’ talent for arranging songs became evident. But, even when he began arranging for artists like Sarah Vaughan and Dinah Washington in the mid- 1950s, Jones’ lessons from his band days remained relevant.
“The big band is my whole world,” he says. “That’s what I look at everything like. [All the musicians] play something different, but they do it together—the power of collective creativity. In an orchestra, you have 120 musicians, a composer and a conductor all thinking about one thing. It’s very powerful. You can’t taste it, smell it, see it or touch it, but, boy, you can sure feel it.”
In 1957, Jones moved to Paris to study music composition and theory under legendary tutor Nadia Boulanger. “When I was with Nadia, she taught me—I had a hard time getting my head around it. She’d say, ‘The more you restrict yourself, musically, the more freedom you have,’ ” Jones says. “Which is hard to understand as a jazz musician, but she’s right. A jazz musician doesn’t just come out and play whatever they feel; they have a bottom, basic structure that they’re dealing with. It enables them to have more and more freedom. I look at business and everything else the same way.”
Jones has applied those lessons to several of his own albums throughout the years, many featuring collaborations with other well-known artists. His trademark is creating musical hybrids, blending pop, soul, hip-hop, jazz, classical, African and Brazilian sounds. He was named one of the most influential jazz musicians of the 20th century by TIME, and one of his prized possessions is a signed photograph from Duke Ellington that bears the inscription: “May you be the one to continue to de-categorize American music.” Jones says, “That’s my firm belief, to get away from those categories.”
NEVER GIVE UP
While in France in the late 1950s, Jones
began working with Barclay Disques,
Mercury Records’ French distributor. He
faced a financial crisis when a European tour with his own band
failed to make a profit. When dealing with such challenges, Jones
says, his past helps him to persevere: “There’s something inside that
never lets you give up. I guess that probably came as a child. It was
survive or die.”
Irving Green, head of Mercury, hired Jones as the musical director of the label’s New York division. In 1964, he became vice president of Mercury—and the first high-level black executive of a major record company. He later resigned and moved to Hollywood to score music for more than 30 movies. But, by 1974, Jones’ resolve was once again tested when he suffered a near-fatal cerebral aneurysm that required two major surgeries. He made it through that time by thinking positively, he says.
“You can see darkness or light. I’ve always chosen light. One thing that turns me on is if somebody says, ‘You’ll never get that done. That’s impossible.’ That’s all I need to hear. I’ve always taken that as the supreme challenge. ‘Oh, it’s impossible, huh? OK.’ I love that.”
SHARE THE WEALTH
Although Jones’ history of humanitarian work began in
the 1960s, perhaps his most remembered charitable contribution
was when he produced and conducted the best-selling
single of all time, We Are the World, in 1985. The charity
effort, which raised more than $63 million for Ethiopian
famine relief, featured more than 30 popular musicians,
including Bob Dylan, Ray Charles, Billy Joel, Diana Ross,
Tina Turner, Bruce Springsteen and Stevie Wonder.
In 1990, Jones started the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation, which has a self-proclaimed vision to help children “build self-esteem, foster sustainable self-sufficiency and develop those characteristics of leadership that can drive change.” Among other initiatives, the foundation offers mentorship programs and intercultural exchanges between young people and leaders around the world, and works with leading organizations such as UNICEF to promote children’s health and well-being. The organization has disbursed more than $20 million for various initiatives.
The foundation also established the Q Prize, an international award named for Jones that honors outstanding young visionaries. In November, the Q Prize went to the leaders of Venezuela’s El Sistema, which provides early music education and a network of youth orchestras for hundreds of thousands of young people, mostly from impoverished families. The program’s alumni include Gustavo Dudamel, music director-designate of the Los Angeles Philharmonic and a conductor of El Sistema’s Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra.
Jones says that philanthropy should be a part of everybody’s life—whether celebrity or not. “That, to me, is like the laws of being alive. To give and expect nothing in return—there’s nothing that feels better.”
He has also shared the knowledge of his 75 years in his New York Times best-selling Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones, and in two new books, The Complete Quincy Jones: My Journey & Passions: Photos, Letters, Memories & More from Q’s Personal Collection and Quincy Jones: 60 Years of American Music (scheduled for a September 2009 release). Jones says the underlying message of his books—and life—is, “Don’t ever give up, and always believe.”
Those works are just a couple of the many projects that Jones has brewing at any given time. He recently consulted on the Summer Olympics in Beijing, and he’s working on a 3-D, high-def movie centering on Brazil’s Carnival festival. In the future, Jones hopes to write ballets and street operas, put together “something with a symphony orchestra and [dancer] Savion Glover,” produce an album with Tony Bennett and Stevie Wonder—and much more.
“There’s no end to the possibilities,” he says.


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