Quincy_Jones

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Quincy Jones



Quincy Jones

Quincy Jones



Jones in 2004 at the World Economic Forum in Davos



Background information Birth name Born Origin Genre(s) Quincy Delight Jones, Jr. March 14, 1933 (1933-03-14)

Chicago, Illinois



Seattle, Washington Pop, Funk, Soul, Big Band, Swing, Jazz, Traditional Pop, Bossa nova Impresario, Conductor, Record producer, Arranger, Composer, Trumpeter 1951 – present Columbia, Mercury, Qwest Michael Jackson, Frank Sinatra, Dinah Washington, Dean Martin, Patti Austin Official Quincy Jones Website



Occupation(s)



Years active Label(s) Associated acts Website



Quincy Delight Jones, Jr. (born March 14, 1933) is an American music conductor, record producer, musical arranger, film composer and trumpeter. During five decades in the entertainment industry, Jones has earned a record 79 Grammy Award nominations,[1] 27 Grammys,[1] including a Grammy Legend Award in 1991. He is best known as the producer of the album Thriller, by pop icon Michael Jackson, which has sold 104 million copies worldwide,[2] and as the producer and conductor of the charity song “We Are the World”. He is well known for his 1962 song "Soul Bossa Nova", which originated on the Big Band Bossa Nova album. "Soul Bossa Nova" was a theme for the 1998 World Cup, the Canadian game show Definition, and the Mike Myers movie Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, and was sampled by Canadian rap group Dream Warriors in their "My Definition of a Boombastic Jazz Style".



Quincy Jones attending an after-party of a tribute to his work at Life Restaurant, Los Angeles, CA on October 1, 2008 In 1968, Jones and his songwriting partner Bob Russell became the first African-Americans to be nominated for an Academy Award in the "Best Original Song" category. That same year, he became the first African-American to be nominated twice within the same year when he was nominated for "Best Original Score" for his work on the music of the 1967 film In Cold Blood. In 1971 Jones would receive the honor of becoming the first African American to be named musical director/ conductor of the Academy Awards ceremony. Jones was also the first (and so far, the only) African-American to be nominated as a producer in the category of Best Picture (in 1986, for The Color Purple). He was also the first African-American to win the Academy’s Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, in 1995.



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He is tied with sound designer Willie D. Burton as the most Oscar-nominated AfricanAmerican, each of them having seven nominations. At the 2008 BET Awards, Quincy Jones was presented with the Humanitarian Award.



Quincy Jones

called "The Jones Boys", which included jazz greats Eddie Jones & fellow trumpeter Reunald Jones, and organized a tour of North America and Europe. Though the tour was a critical success, poor budget planning made it an economic disaster and the fallout left Jones in a financial crisis. Quoted in Musician magazine, Jones said about his ordeal, "We had the best jazz band in the planet, and yet we were literally starving. That’s when I discovered that there was music, and there was the music business. If I were to survive, I would have to learn the difference between the two." Irving Green, head of Mercury Records, got Jones back on his feet with a loan and a new job as the musical director of the company’s New York division. In 1964, Jones was promoted to vice-president of the company, thus becoming the first African American to hold such a position. One of his songs, "Soul Bossa Nova", was released in 1962 as a track on the album Big Band Bossa Nova. In 1963 Jones helped discover singer Lesley Gore, and produced some of her biggest hits, including "It’s My Party". In 1964 Jones, at the invitation of film director Sidney Lumet, began composing one of the first of the 33 major motion picture scores he would eventually write. The result was the score for The Pawnbroker. Jones resigned from Mercury Records and moved to Los Angeles to compose film scores full time. Some of his compositions were for the films Walk, Don’t Run, In Cold Blood, The Slender Thread, In the Heat of the Night, Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, which featured Merrilee Rush performing a cover of the Burt Bacharach classic "What The World Needs Now", Cactus Flower, The Getaway, The Italian Job, and The Color Purple. He also scored for television, including the shows Roots, Ironside, Sanford and Son, and The Bill Cosby Show, as well as the theme music for The New Bill Cosby Show titled "Chump Change," which would later serve as the theme for the game show Now You See It. He also composed the theme for the hit TV show "Fresh Prince of Bel Air". In the 1960s, Jones worked as an arranger for some of the most important artists of the era, including Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee, and Dinah Washington. Jones’ solo recordings also garnered acclaim, including Walking in Space, Gula Matari, Smackwater Jack and Ndeda, You’ve Got It



Biography

Early life

Jones was born into an African-American family in Chicago. He is the oldest son of Sarah Frances (née Wells), an apartment complex manager and bank executive who suffered from schizophrenia, and Quincy Delight Jones, Sr., a semi-professional baseball player and carpenter.[3] Jones discovered music in grade school at Raymond Elementary School on Chicago’s South Side and took up the trumpet. When he was 10, his family moved to Bremerton, Washington, near Seattle; there, he attended Garfield High School. He then attended Somerset Academy. In 1951, Jones won a scholarship to the Schillinger House in Boston, Massachussets. However, he abandoned his studies when he received an offer to tour as a trumpeter with the bandleader Lionel Hampton. While Jones was on the road with Hampton, he displayed a gift for arranging songs. Jones relocated to New York City, where he received a number of freelance commissions arranging songs for artists like Sarah Vaughan, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Gene Krupa, and his close friend Ray Charles.



Musical career

In 1956, Jones toured again as a trumpeter and musical director of the Dizzy Gillespie Band on a tour of the Middle East and South America sponsored by the United States State Department. Upon his return to the United States, Jones got a contract from ABCParamount Records and commenced his recording career as the leader of his own band. Jones moved to Paris, France in 1957. He studied music composition and theory with Nadia Boulanger and Olivier Messiaen. He also performed at the Paris Olympia. Jones became music director at Barclay Disques, the French distributor for Mercury Records and during the 1950s, Jones successfully toured throughout Europe with a number of jazz orchestras. He formed his own band



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Bad, Girl, Body Heat, Mellow Madness, and I Heard That. Jones’s 1981 album The Dude yielded multiple hit singles, including "Just Once" and "One Hundred Ways," both of which featured James Ingram on lead vocals and marked Ingram’s first hit singles. In 1985, Jones scored the Steven Spielberg film adaptation of The Color Purple. He and Jerry Goldsmith (from Twilight Zone: The Movie) are the only composers besides John Williams to have scored a theatrical Spielberg film. After the 1985 American Music Awards ceremony, Jones used his influence to draw most major American recording artists of the day into a studio to lay down the track "We Are the World" to raise money for the victims of Ethiopia’s famine. When people marveled at his ability to make the collaboration work, Jones explained that he’d taped a simple sign on the entrance: "Check Your Ego At The Door". Starting in the late 1970s, Jones tried to convince Miles Davis to re-perform the music he had played on several classic albums that had been arranged by Gil Evans in the 1960s. Davis had always refused, citing a desire not to revisit the past. In 1991, Davis, then suffering from pneumonia, relented and agreed to perform the music at a concert at the Montreux Jazz Festival. The resulting album from the recording, Miles & Quincy Live at Montreux, was Davis’ last released album (he died several months afterward) and is considered an artistic triumph.[4] In 1993, Jones collaborated with David Salzman to produce the concert extravaganza An American Reunion, a celebration of Bill Clinton’s inauguration as president of the United States. In 1994, Salzman and Jones formed the company Quincy Jones/David Salzman Entertainment (QDE) with Time/ Warner Inc. QDE is a diverse company which produces media technology, motion pictures, television programs (In the House, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and MADtv), and magazines (Vibe and Spin). In 2001, he published his autobiography, Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones. On July 31, 2007, Jones partnered with Wizzard Media to launch the Quincy Jones Video Podcast.[5] In each episode, Jones shares his knowledge and experience in the music industry. The first episode features Jones in the studio, producing "I Knew I Loved you" for Celine Dion, which is featured on the Ennio



Quincy Jones

Morricone tribute album, We All Love Ennio Morricone and is slated for an October 2007 release on Dion’s forthcoming album. In 2006, Jones and other individuals became prominent investors in a Foxwoods slots casino proposed for Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[6] In September 2008, facing massive opposition at the originally proposed waterfront location, backers for the slots casino decided to try and seek a new location in the Center City area, next to Philadelphia’s Chinatown community.[7] As of January, 2009, the casino still does not have a building permit.



Work with Michael Jackson

While working on the film The Wiz, Michael Jackson asked him to produce his upcoming solo record. The result, Off The Wall has sold a staggering 20 million copies and made Jones the most powerful record producer in the industry. Jones’ and Jackson’s next collaboration Thriller has sold 104 million copies and became the highest-selling album of all time.[8] Jones also worked on Michael Jackson’s third solo album Bad, which has sold 32 million copies. After the Bad album, Jackson and Jones went their separate ways so that Jackson could produce his later solo works by himself. In a 2002 interview, when Jackson was asked if he would ever work with Jones again he replied, "the door is always open". However, in 2007, when NME.COM asked Jones a similar question, he said "Man please, I’ve got enough to do. We already did that. I have talked to him about working with him again but I’ve got too much to do. I’ve got 900 projects, I’m 74 years old. Give me a break".[9]



Work with Frank Sinatra

Jones first worked with Frank Sinatra when he was invited by Princess Grace to arrange a benefit at the Monaco Sporting Club in 1958.[10] Six years later, Sinatra hired him to arrange and conduct Sinatra’s second album with Count Basie, It Might as Well Be Swing (1964). Jones conducted and arranged 1966’s live album with the Basie Band, Sinatra at the Sands.[11] Jones was also the arranger/ conductor when Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr., Dean Martin, and Johnny Carson performed with the Basie orchestra in St. Louis in a benefit for Dismas House in June 1965. The



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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

fund-raiser was broadcast to a number of other theaters around the country and eventually released on DVD.[12] Later that year, Jones was also the arranger/conductor when Sinatra and Basie appeared on "The Hollywood Palace" TV show on October 16, 1965.[13] Nineteen years later, Sinatra and Jones teamed up for 1984’s L.A. Is My Lady, after a joint Sinatra-Lena Horne project was abandoned.[14]



Quincy Jones

In 2001, the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation built over 100 homes for Nelson Mandela’s foundation in South Africa. In 2004, Jones helped launch the We Are the Future (WAF) project, which gives children in poor and conflict-ridden areas a chance to live their childhoods and develop a sense of hope. The program is the result of a strategic partnership between the Glocal Forum, the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation and Mr. Hani Masri, with the support of the World Bank, UN agencies and major companies. The project was launched with a concert in Rome, Italy, in front of a half-million-person audience. Jones supports a number of other charities including the NAACP, GLAAD, Peace Games, AmFAR and The Maybach Foundation.[17] On July 26, 2007, he announced his endorsement of Hillary Clinton for president. But with the election of Barack Obama, Quincy Jones said that his next conversation "with President Obama [will be] to beg for a Secretary of Arts,"[18] prompting the circulation of a petition on the Internet asking Obama to create such a Cabinet-level position in his administration.[19][20]



Personal life

Jones has never learned to drive, citing an accident in which he was a passenger (at age 14) as the reason.[15] Jones has been married three times and has seven children: • to Jeri Caldwell from 1957 to 1966; they had one daughter, Jolie Jones Levine. • to Ulla Andersson from 1967 to 1974; they had two children, Martina Jones and son Quincy Jones III; • to actress Peggy Lipton from 1974 to 1990; they had two daughters, actresses Kidada Jones and Rashida Jones, of which the elder, Kidada, once dated rap icon Tupac Shakur prior to his 1996 murder in Las Vegas. • Jones also had a brief affair with Carol Reynolds and had a daughter, Rachel Jones. • Jones dated and lived with actress Nastassja Kinski from 1991 until 1997. In February 1993, their daughter Kenya Julia Miambi Sarah Jones was born.[16]



Awards and recognition

In 2000, Harvard University endowed the Quincy Jones Professorship of Afro-American Music with a grant of $3 million from Time Warner. The endowed chair for AfricanAmerican music, housed in Harvard’s African and African-American Studies Department, is believed to be the first in the nation, and is presently held by the ethnomusicologist Ingrid Monson. Distinguished scholar and public intellectual Henry Louis Gates, Jr. is a close, personal friend of Jones. In January 2005, Jones was honored by the United Negro College Fund at their annual Evening of Stars event for an entertainment career that has spanned over five decades. Berklee College of Music considers Jones its most successful alumnus, even though he only attended for a year. His original application for admission is housed in a display case at the school. On September 19, 2005, Jones was honored at the Dance Music Hall of Fame ceremony, when he was inducted for his many outstanding achievements as a producer. He was awarded the Polar Music Prize in 1994.



Social activism

Jones’s social activism began in the 1960s with his support of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Jones is one of the founders of the Institute for Black American Music (IBAM) whose events aim to raise enough funds for the creation of a national library of African-American art and music. Jones is also one of the founders of the Black Arts Festival in his hometown Chicago. For many years, he has worked closely with Bono of U2 on a number of philanthropic issues. He is the founder of the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation, a nonprofit that connects youths with technology, education, culture and music. One of the organization’s programs is an intercultural exchange between underprivileged youths from Los Angeles and South Africa.



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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

On May 20, 2007, Jones received an honorary doctorate of humanities degree from Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia. On March 26, 2001, Quincy Jones was made Commandeur (Commander) of the Légion d’Honneur for his significant achievements in his career.[21] In 2007, Jones was honored by the Harvard School of Public Health as its Mentor of the Year[22] at a star-studded gala in New York City. The gala also marked the launch of Harvard’s "Q Prize", an international award named for Jones which honors extraordinary advocacy on behalf of the world’s children. "Quincy Jones’ entire life is a testament to the power of mentoring," Dr. Jay Winsten, an associate dean of the Harvard School of Public Health, said at the event. "He has served as a role model for using the power of celebrity to improve the lot of humankind."[23]



Quincy Jones



Quincy Jones in 2008. entertainment industry executive," during Commencement exercises on June 3, 2008 for his contributions to music and entertainment.[25] On May 14, 2008, Washington University in St. Louis presented Jones with an honorary Doctorate of Arts degree, citing his lifetime musical accomplishments.[26] On June 14, 2008, Jones was awarded an honorary degree from the University of Washington and delivered the keynote at the university’s 133rd commencement.[27] On June 24, 2008, at the BET Awards, Quincy Jones was presented with the Humanitarian Award. On September 26, 2008, Garfield High School’s Quincy Jones Performing Arts Center was officially dedicated to Quincy Jones. On October 1, 2008, Jones was presented with the Unity Through Music Award at Thank Q: A World Music Tribute to the Humanitarian Works of Quincy Jones. On December 15, 2008, Jones was inducted in the California Hall of Fame at the California Museum in Sacramento, California.



Usher (left) and Dr. Jay Winsten (right), an associate dean at the Harvard School of Public Health, presented Quincy Jones with the School’s Mentor of the Year award at a gala in New York City on January 24, 2007. Jones was presented with the annual George and Ira Gershwin Award for Lifetime Musical Achievement in 2007 during UCLA Spring Sing.[24] California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and First Lady Maria Shriver announced on May 28, 2008 that Jones will be inducted into the California Hall of Fame, located at The California Museum for History, Women and the Arts. The induction ceremony will take place December 15 and he will be inducted alongside 11 other legendary Californians. Princeton University also awarded an honorary doctorate degree to Quincy Jones, "an inspirational creative artist and



Media appearances

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Quincy Jones

Jones appeared in the Walt Disney Pictures film Fantasia 2000, introducing the set piece of George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue. On February 10, 2008, Jones presented at the Grammy Awards. With Usher he presented Album of The Year to Herbie Hancock. On January 6, 2009, Quincy Jones appeared on NBC’s Last Call with Carson Daly to discuss various experiences within his prolific career. Also discussed was also the informal notion of Jones becoming the first Minister of Culture for the United States - following the pending inauguration of the 44th U.S. President, Barack Obama. Carson Daly indicated the U.S. as being one of the only leading world countries, along with Germany, to exclude this position from the national government. This idea has also been subject to more in-depth discussion on NPR[30] and the Chronicle of Higher Education.[31]



Jones during NASA’s 50th anniversary gala, 2008. Jones had a cameo in the 1997 video for the Puff Daddy song "Been Around the World" (as "Uncle Q").That same year, Jones made a cameo in the video for the song "Triumph" by Wu-Tang Clan. Rapper Ludacris sampled Jones’ "Soul Bossa Nova" for his 2005 single "Number One Spot". Jones was featured in the video; he also performed a cameo in Austin Powers in Goldmember, which also featured "Soul Bossa Nova" on its soundtrack. Jones had a brief appearance in the 1990 video for The Time song "Jerk Out". Jones was a guest star on an episode of The Boondocks in which he and the main character, Huey Freeman, co-produced a Christmas play for Huey’s elementary school. Quincy Jones hosted an episode of the long-running NBC sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live on February 10, 1990 (during SNL’s 15th season [the 1989-1990 season]). The episode was notable for having ten musical guests[28] (the most any SNL episode has ever had in its 30+ years on the air): Tevin Campbell, Andrae Crouch, Sandra Crouch, rappers Kool Moe Dee and Big Daddy Kane, Melle Mel, Quincy D III, Siedah Garrett, Al Jarreau, and Take 6, and for a performance of Dizzy Gillespie’s "Manteca" by The SNL Band (conducted by Quincy Jones himself.[29] Jones also impersonated Marion Barry in the then-recurring sketch, "The Bob Waltman Special". Quincy Jones would later be producer for his own sketch comedy show: FOX’s MADtv, which has often been compared favorably (and unfavorably) to Saturday Night Live.



Brazilian culture

Jones is a great admirer of Brazilian culture and a film on Brazil’s Carnival is among his recent plans: "one of the most spectacular spiritual events on the planet";[32] Simone, whom he cites "one of the world´s greatest singers",[33] Ivan Lins,[34] Milton Nascimento and Gilson Peranzzetta, "one of the five biggest arrangement producers of the world"[35] stand as close friends and partners in his recent works.



African American Lives

For the 2006 PBS television program African American Lives, Jones had his DNA tested; West African/Central African ancestry of Tikar descent.[36] The test showed him to be descended from the Tikar of Cameroon, an ethnic group whose members are well known for their artistic and musical prowess.



Cultural references

• South Korean popstar BoA, a popular artist in Japan, released a single called Quincy in 2004 that was a "soul disco" song in homage to his legacy. (The single made it to #4 on the Japanese Oricon Charts.) • Jones was portrayed by Larenz Tate in the 2004 biography about Ray Charles, Ray.



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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

• In the TV Series Mission Hill, at the end of the episode, "Day of the Jackass", the main character, Andy French, receives a gift from an actress he briefly knew. The gift in question is an emmy award titled Lifetime Achievement in Music, for Quincy Jones. • In the TV series Flight of the Conchords episode "Girlfriends", a man swindles Murray Hewitt by claiming to be Quincy Jones’ brother. • In the TV series Arrested Development, Starla (played by former MADtv castmember Mo Collins) claims to have a deep personal relationship with Quincy Jones (or Q) • Jones makes a guest appearance in Austin Power’s Goldmember during the movie’s opening sequence (during the parody of Singing in the rain). • The Japanese composer Joe Hisaishi based his alias upon Quincy Jones. Retranscribed in Japanese, "Quincy Jones" became "Joe Hisaishi." "Quincy," pronounced "Kuinshii" in Japanese, can be roughly approximated using the same kanji in "Hisaishi" (alternately read, Ku-Ishi); "Joe" refers to "Jones."



Quincy Jones

[10] (Quincy Jones) Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones, Doubleday, 2001, pp. 129-132. [11] (Jones), pp. 179-83. [12] Live and Swingin’: The Ultimate Rat Pack Collection, Reprise R2 73922, 2003 (CD & DVD) [13] video tape "Frank Sinatra", Good Times Home Video, #05-09845. One of a set of five tapes. 1999? [14] on the VHS tape,Frank Sinatra: Porttrait of an Artist, MGM/UA Video, 1985, MV400648. [15] Fortune test drives a Mercedes Maybach with Quincy Jones - February 5, 2007 [16] Quincy Jones — Family and Companions, Yahoo! Movies [17] urbiz.com. 2009-01-04. URL:http://www.tpurbizdigital.com/ urbiz/2008/?pg=15. Accessed: 2009-01-04. (Archived by WebCite® at http://www.webcitation.org/5dai0Xest) [18] John Schaefer interview with Quincy Jones on Soundcheck, November 14, 2008 [19] Suzanne Perry, "Online Petition Asks Obama to Create Secretary of the Arts Position" November 26, 2008 [20] DeadlineHollywoodDaily [21] BBC News | Music | Quincy Jones gets French honour [22] [1] [23] [2] [24] Quincy Jones receives Gershwin Award [25] Princeton University - Princeton awards five honorary degrees [26] Washington University to award six honorary degrees at 147th Commencement [27] UW graduation draws 40,000 as musician Quincy Jones speaks [28] http://www.tv.com/saturday-night-live/ quincy-jones/episode/105585/ trivia.html?tag=episode_tabs;trivia [29] http://www.tv.com/saturday-night-live/ quincy-jones/episode/105585/ trivia.html?tag=episode_tabs;trivia [30] http://www.npr.org/templates/story/ story.php?storyId=99450228 [31] http://chronicle.com/review/brainstorm/ katz/do-we-need-a-minister-of-culture-inthese-united-states [32] Quincy Jones celebrates Carnival with new movie [33] Brazilian Television, Rede Bandeirantes, 2006, Flash Program]



Discography See also

• List of number-one dance hits (United States) • List of artists who reached number one on the US Dance chart



References

[1] ^ Fortune test drives a Mercedes Maybach with Quincy Jones - February 5, 2007 [2] Jacko’s Back! | MTV UK [3] Quincy Jones Biography (1933-) [4] "The Last Great Set", David Thigpen, Time, October 4, 1993 [5] Quincy Jones [6] Foxwoods Philadelphia website, listing investors [7] www.planphilly.com [8] Guinness World Records [9] Quincy Jones snubs chance to team up with Michael Jackson | News | NME.COM



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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[34] AllBrazilianMusic, Ivan Lins from A to Z [35] LuaMusic.com [36] Scholar Helps Black Americans Trace Family Roots : NPR



Quincy Jones

• Quincy Jones speech on the importance of Cultural Diplomacy throughout the world, Beijing, China, May 26, 2006 • Quincy Jones on Chicago Public Schools Alumni Website Honor Roll • Quincy Jones’ oral history video excerpts at The National Visionary Leadership Project • Video clip of Quincy Jones’ speech on education at the American Film Institute for the 2006 ACM Computers in Entertainment Scholarship Awards (November 4, 2006) • Raymond Elementary School, where Quincy Jones discovered music



External links

• • • • Official Quincy Jones Website Official Quincy Jones Myspace Profile Quincy Jones Music Publishing American Masters - Quincy Jones: The Story of an American Musician • Quincy Jones at the Internet Movie Database • Association for Computing Machinery Video Interview with Quincy Jones



Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quincy_Jones" Categories: 1933 births, Living people, Academy Honorary Award recipients, African American musicians, American composers, American dance musicians, American film score composers, American jazz trumpeters, American music arrangers, American record producers, American songwriters, American television producers, Bebop trumpeters, Bell Records artists, Berklee College of Music alumni, Cameroonian people, Commandeurs of the Légion d'honneur, Crossover jazz trumpeters, Grammy Award winners, Harvard University people, Ivor Novello Award winners, Jazz-pop trumpeters, Jazz composers, Kennedy Center honorees, Musicians from Chicago, Illinois, Musicians from Washington (U.S. state), Swing trumpeters, Welsh Americans This page was last modified on 19 May 2009, at 07:20 (UTC). All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) taxdeductible nonprofit charity. Privacy policy About Wikipedia Disclaimers



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