Quincy Jones has opened up about meeting Michael Jackson when the late singer was just 12 years old.
The 88-year-old musician and producer made the comments while speaking to The Hollywood Reporter as part of their new Icon series.
“When he was 12 at Sammy Davisâ house, and he told me when we decided to do [The Wiz], he says, âI need you to help me find a producer. Iâm getting ready to do my first solo album.â
The 28-time Grammy-winning producer said the young Jackson “knew how to do his homework” when it came to other artists, “whether it was with Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly or whoever, James Brown. He was doing some Elvis copying, too. ‘The King of Pop,’ man. Come on!”

Jones went on to say that he wouldnât have worked with Elvis Presley, alleging in a new interview that the late singer âwas a racistâ.
Pressed on why not, Jones continued: âI was writing for [orchestra leader] Tommy Dorsey, oh God, back then in the â50s. And Elvis came in, and Tommy said: âI donât want to play with him.â He was a racist mother â Iâm going to shut up now.
âBut every time I saw Elvis, he was being coached by [âDonât Be Cruelâ songwriter] Otis Blackwell, telling him how to sing,â he added. THR notes that Blackwell told David Letterman in 1987 that he and Presley had never met.
NMEÂ has contacted representatives of Elvis Presleyâs estate for comment on Jonesâ remarks.
Jones was also asked about the anti-racism protests which took place across the world last year following the death of George Floyd.
âItâs been coming a long time, man,â Jones said. âPeople have been turning their heads the other way, but itâs all the same to me â misogyny, racism. You have to be taught how to hate somebody. It doesnât come naturally, I donât think. I donât think so, unless youâve been trained. I just think itâs such a bad habit.â
Back in February, Jones was named on an advisory board to help support musicians in the US who have been affected by the coronavirus pandemic.
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