Mark Ronson is remembering legendary producer Quincy Jones.
In an emotional piece shared with The Guardian on Thursday (Dec. 26), Ronson mirrored on his private experiences working with Jones — who handed away in November on the age of 91 — and the profound influence the music icon had on his life and profession.
“Dropping Quincy is sort of a black gap swallowing a part of the musical universe,” Ronson wrote. “However his work will reside ceaselessly, as will his classes. Maintain striving for that deeper data. All the time depart house for one thing greater than your self. As a result of generally, magic occurs once we get out of the way in which.”
Ronson opened the tribute by recalling a passage from Jones’ 2001 autobiography, Q, by which the legendary musician describes strolling away from a profitable profession as a way to examine music principle and composition in Paris.
“Think about reaching the head of success, particularly as a younger Black musician in segregated Nineteen Fifties America, and saying thanks, however I’m beginning over for the sake of chords and concord,” Ronson wrote. “I fantasize about having that form of braveness.”
“However that’s the peril of holding Quincy as a yardstick,” he continued. “He’s an unattainable customary. For producers and arrangers like me, he didn’t simply increase the bar; he hid it the place nobody may attain.”
Ronson additionally mirrored on the years he spent with Jones, significantly when he was engaged to the legendary producer’s daughter, Rashida Jones, within the early 2000s. The 2 producers additionally collaborated on the track “Maintain Reachin’,” that includes Chaka Khan, for the 2018 Netflix documentary Quincy, directed by Rashida Jones.
“Through the years, he would ship me variety notes — he had a selected fondness for Amy [Winehouse] — and we’d typically hang around each time I performed the Montreux jazz competition, his beloved stomping floor,” Ronson wrote. “Seeing him there, stage proper, seated in his director’s chair — trying each bit the debonair godfather of music, smiling again at you — elicited a wild mixture of feelings.”
He added, “The best producer and arranger of all time, watching your each transfer, was completely terrifying. And but he solely radiated generosity. All he wished was so that you can win, to shine. He had already achieved the unimaginable. Now he existed as one thing uncommon and exquisite — a benevolent cheerleader for the marvel of music itself.”
Jones handed away on Nov. 3 at his residence in Los Angeles. A 28-time Grammy Award winner, Jones was revered for his groundbreaking work as a producer and arranger on iconic albums, together with Michael Jackson’s Off the Wall (1979), Thriller (1982) and Unhealthy (1987).
Jones was additionally the guiding power behind the recording of the all-star charity single “We Are the World” in 1985, which rose to No. 1 on the Billboard Scorching 100 and featured a star-studded lineup of artists, together with Jackson, Cyndi Lauper, Bob Dylan, Ray Charles, Billy Joel, Diana Ross, Bruce Springsteen, Tina Turner and Kenny Rogers.


