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A timeline of Quincy Jones’s career in 15 essential songs

As a musician, a producer, a composer and an executive, Quincy Jones created hits. Here are 15 of his essential recordings.

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5 min read
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Quincy Jones speaks about pop star Michael Jackson at Michael Jackson Immortalized event in Hollywood, Calif. on Jan. 26, 2012. Jackson’s children Prince, Paris and Blanket imprinted their hands and their father’s sequined glove and shoes in the cement in the famous forecourt of the Grauman’s Chinese Theater as family, friends and fans celebrated the legacy of the King of Pop.


As a musician, a producer, a composer and an executive, Quincy Jones created hits. But in a career that stretched across three-quarters of a century, what may have been more important about this giant of American music — who died Sunday at age 91 — is that he created the conditions for hits. Jones was a crucial connector of talent and repertoire; he had an instinctive sense of where artists should go to find success; he built a multimedia empire with an eye toward empowering people for whom show business didn’t always make room. His magnum opus was Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,†widely agreed upon as the bestselling album of all time. But even that blockbuster merely scratches the surface of his cultural impact. Here, in the order they were released, are 15 of his essential recordings:

Quincy Jones, the music titan whose vast legacy ranged from producing Michael Jackson’s historic “Thriller†album to writing prize-winning film and television scores has died at 91. (Nov. 4 / The Associated Press)

‘Soul Bossa Nova’ (1962)

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