Quincy Jones – a life in pictures
The composer, arranger and producer who worked with stars from Frank Sinatra to Michael Jackson has died aged 91. We look back at his career highs
· the GuardianQuincy Jones conducting in 1960. Born in 1933, in south Chicago, he won music scholarships and first rose to prominence as a trumpet player in Lionel Hampton’s jazz band
Photograph: Ernst Henriksson/Rex/Shutterstock
With Lesley Gore. Her song It’s My Party was the first hit single for Jones as producer. It went to No 1 in the US charts and Jones became the first African American vice-president of Mercury Records
Photograph: Keystone Press/Alamy
Working with Frank Sinatra on a soundstage, 1964
Photograph: John Dominis/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Image
In the 1960s and 1970s, Jones was in great demand as a writer of film scores including In the Heat of the Night, They Call Me Mister Tibbs!, The Italian Job, In Cold Blood and The Getaway
Photograph: Granamour Weems Collection/Alamy
Jones pictured in 1970
Photograph: Jim McCrary/Redferns
Conducting in 1973
Photograph: Allstar
At his home studio in 1974 writing music and listening to a recording on his headphones. That year, he survived a life-threatening brain aneurysm that required two operations, leaving six steel pins in his head
Photograph: George Brich/AP
Dionne Warwick and Jones at the Grammy awards, 1979
Photograph: Michael Putland/Getty Images
Jones and his second wife, actor Peggy Lipton, hold Jones’s star, which was placed in the Hollywood Walk of Fame, 1980
Photograph: Barfield/AP
Michael Jackson holds eight awards as he poses with Jones at the 1984 Grammys. Jones produced, with Jackson, the albums Off the Wall (1979), Thriller (1982), and Bad (1987)
Photograph: Doug Pizac/AP
Jones at the Dreamworks studio in Universal City, California, in 1986. He was one of the producers on The Color Purple and also wrote the music for the film
Photograph: David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images
Warwick, Stevie Wonder, Jones, Jackson and Lionel Ritchie pose with the Grammy they received for their performances on the all-star recording USA for Africa: We Are the World, 1985. Jones produced and conducted the celebrities and wrote a sign ‘Check your egos at the door’ on the front door of A&M Studios in Los Angeles
Photograph: Bettmann Archive
With Miles Davis at the Montreux Jazz festival, 1991. Jones persuaded him to perform in what would be one of his last concerts
Photograph: Keystone Press/Alamy
Quincy with a trophy case containing some of his 28 Grammys. He had 80 Grammy award nominations plus a Grammy legend award
Photograph: Dave Allocca/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images
Jones and Oprah Winfrey backstage during the 67th Oscars, 1995, where he received the Jean Hersholt humanitarian award
Photograph: Bob Riha Jr/Getty Images
Jones with his daughter and his partner Nastassja Kinski at the We Are the Future concert, Rome, 2004, organised by the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation to raise money for children in war-scarred cities
Photograph: Luigi Narici/Rex/Shutterstock
Jones hugs singer Angélique Kidjo at the end of the Quincy Jones’ 75th birthday celebration at the Montreux jazz festival, 2008
Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images
President Barack Obama awards the 2010 National Medal of Arts to Jones during a ceremony at the White House in 2011
Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images
Jones speaks during his induction at the 2013 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Los Angeles
Photograph: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters
With daughter Rashida Jones on stage at Q85: A Musical Celebration for Quincy Jones in 2018 in Los Angeles. Jones was married three times and had seven children
Photograph: Kevin Winter/Getty Images
With Naomi Campbell at the American Icon awards gala, Los Angeles, 2019
Photograph: Startraks Photo/Rex/Shutterstock