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4 Incredible Quincy Jones Songs All Fans Should Know

In the wake of Quincyโ€™s Jones passing, quite a few fans are just now starting to learn about his contributions to the music world. Letโ€™s take a look at four different Quincy Jones songs and albums that the late icon had a hand in producing!

1. โ€˜New Wave!โ€™ by Dizzy Gillespie

Jones began performing with Dizzy Gillespie as a jazz trumpet player in the late 1950s, and he eventually became this famed jazz musicianโ€™s musical director. One of his biggest claims to fame was the 1963 Gillespie record New Wave! We can only imagine how it felt to get to this point for a young Jones, who was a loud and proud fan of Gillespie.

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โ€œI had loved [Dizzy Gillespie] ever since I was twelve years old,โ€ Jones once said. โ€œHe had style, soul, technique, substance.โ€ Weโ€™d have to agree with that.

2. โ€œYou Donโ€™t Own Meโ€ by Lesley Gore

This track is one of Lesley Goreโ€™s biggest hits, and it also happens to be one of Quincy Jonesโ€™ most successful songs. Interestingly enough, Jones didnโ€™t approach Gore with the tune. Rather, songwriters David White and John Madara played the song for Gore after a performance, and she agreed to jump on the project. A few days later, she was pitching the track to Jones with the songwriters behind โ€œYou Donโ€™t Own Meโ€, and the rest is history.

3. โ€œThe Rayโ€ by Ray Charles

Surprisingly, Jones and Ray Charles didnโ€™t work together as much as you would think they did. They actually were very close friends, having met when they were just a couple of teenagers. However, they did work together on the 1967 record The Great Ray Charles, particularly for the song โ€œThe Rayโ€. You can hear Jonesโ€™ influence on this instrumental track, as well as the much-needed jazziness of contributing musicians David Newman and Oscar Pettiford.

4. โ€˜Badโ€™ by Michael Jackson

Ah, one of the most iconic pop-leaning Quincy Jones songs and albums ever. โ€œBadโ€ by Michael Jackson, in addition to the album of the same name, was the last collaboration between Jones and Jackson. And boy, did they go out with a bang.ย 

โ€œAll the turmoil [in Jacksonโ€™s life] was starting to mount up, so I said I thought it was time for him to do a very honest album writing all the songs,โ€ said Jones of the record. โ€œI suggested that for โ€˜Badโ€™.โ€

Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images for Keep Memory Alive

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