Q: The Musical Biography of Quincy Jones Quincy Jones

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CD

  • Release Date: 10/16/2001
  • 4 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 19,131
  • Label: RHINO / WEA
  • UPC: 081227436322

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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Over the course of five decades in the music business, Quincy Jones -- Q to his friends -- has seen it all. More to the point, he's done it all, from arranging big-band sides to scoring films to producing many of pop music's most enduring icons to recording his own eclectic body of work. This chronologically arranged, four-disc box set tells Jones's story in sound every bit as effectively as his simultaneously released autobiography does in prose. One of the most illuminating elements of this handsomely packaged box is Disc 1, which focuses on Q's early, lesser-known jazz work, including Duke Ellington's recording of the Jones-penned "The Midnight Sun Will Never Set" and vivid arrangements for singers as diverse as Peggy Lee ("As Time Goes By") and Big Maybelle ("Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On"). The set's second disc showcases Q's mastery of mood, via nearly two dozen contributions to the lexicon of film and television. Here, the results are both elegant -- in themes from The Pawnbroker and The Deadly Affair -- and wacky, as in his junkyard funk theme from Sanford and Son. Disc 3 compiles the production work that he's best known for: tracks from Michael Jackson's Thriller and Frank Sinatra's "Fly Me to the Moon" as well as several songs that will leave listeners exclaiming, "That was him?" The latter category includes Lesley Gore's classic melodrama "You Don't Own Me" and the Brothers Johnson's' space-funk chestnut "Strawberry Letter 23." Q concludes with a career-spanning disc highlighting Jones's solo recordings, which stretch from the smoky jazz of "Killer Joe" (recorded with legendary reedmen Hubert Laws and Freddie Hubbard) to swelling ballads such as the James Ingram-sung "Just Once" and "One Hundred Ways" to the hip-hop extravaganza "Back on the Block," a jam laced with raps from Ice-T, Big Daddy Kane, and Kool Moe Dee. The 100-page companion booklet includes essays from journalists Nat Hentoff, Gerald Earley, and Don Heckman, as well as an annotated track listing, lots of photos, and appreciations from Maya Angelou, Michael Jackson, Bono, and others. Between 1951 and 1995, millions of music fans the world over have been touched by the musical compositions of Quincy Jones, and this 74-song collection reminds us just how deep Q's hands reach in the fertile soil of pop culture. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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