The word legend is thrown around a lot these days. Quincy Jones was the very definition of it.
The names he worked with over a long career are also legendary - Frank Sinatra, Ray Charles, Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Aretha Franklin, Lesley Gore and of course, Michael Jackson, whose Thriller LP is one of the best selling in music history. And that's just the short list. You can see a full discography here.
But it didn't stop there. It was Jones who produced "We Are The World," a tune for charity that involved some of the biggest music stars in history. He also scored dozens of movie and TV soundtracks, like Roots, The Wiz, and the theme from Sanford & Son.
That's pretty incredible.
But according to the AP, Jones almost got caught up in a very different lifestyle as a kid.
"He spent much of his time in Chicago on the streets, with gangs, stealing and fighting.
“They nailed my hand to a fence with a switchblade, man,” he told the AP in 2018, showing a scar from his childhood.
Music saved him. As a boy, he learned that a Chicago neighbor owned a piano and he soon played it constantly himself."
The rest, as the old cliche goes, is history. And what a history he leaves.
Quincy Jones, music titan who worked with everyone from Frank Sinatra to Michael Jackson, dies at 91