Composer and musician Quincy Jones has passed at 91. This legendary music producer (as well as arranger and conductor) had a career spanning seven decades that ranged from early jazz collaborations with such greats as Ray Charles, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, and Frank Sinatra to scoring for TV and films which included Sanford and Son, Ironside, In the Heat of the Night, Roots, The Wiz, and The Color Purple. One of his first hits was with Lesley Gore and It's My Party. His collaborations with Michael Jackson produced some of the most popular albums of all time including Off the Wall and the blockbuster, Thriller. He followed up with the ultimate charity single, We Are the World, that had a remarkable collection of superstar artists, and had an impressive string of his own album classics including Body Heat, The Dude, and Back on the Block. Besides seven Oscar nominations and being awarded the Academy's Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, he garnered an Emmy, a Tony, and 28 Grammy Awards out of 80 nominations. This giant of multiple music genres was inducted to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2013.
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