Quincy Jones: His Life in Music
American Made Music Series
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Narrated by:
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Charles Johnson
About this listen
Quincy Jones (b. 1933) is one of the most prolific composers, arrangers, bandleaders, producers, and humanitarians in American music history and the recording and film industries. Among pop music fans he is perhaps most famous for producing Michael Jackson's album, Thriller. Clarence Bernard Henry focuses on the life, music, career, and legacy of Jones within the social, cultural, historical, and artistic context of American, African American, popular, and world music traditions.
Jones's career has spanned over 60 years, generating a substantial body of work with over 500 compositions and arrangements. The author focuses on this material as well as many of Jones's accomplishments: performing as a young trumpeter in the bands of Lionel Hampton and Dizzy Gillespie, becoming the first African American to hold an executive position in the competitive white-owned recording industry, breaking racial barriers as a composer in the Hollywood film and television industries, producing the best-selling album of all time, and receiving numerous Grammy Awards.
He collaborated with an array of musicians and groups such as Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Frank Sinatra, Clifford Brown, Ray Charles, Michael Jackson, USA for Africa, and many others.
The book is published by University Press of Mississippi. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks
©2013 University Press of Mississippi (P)2019 Redwood AudiobooksCritic reviews
"This book is a literary masterpiece and should be required reading for all students of American and African American music history." (Earl L. Stewart, University of California, Santa Barbara, author of African American Music)