Quincy Jones' Top 20 Songs on Billboard Hot 100
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Quincy Jones' Top 20 Songs on Billboard Hot 100

Nov 05, 2024

Quincy Jones was a trailblazing producer, songwriter and composer – and those are just three of the many hats he donned in his seven decades in the business. Jones left his stamp on the Billboard charts with an impressive discography of his own performing work and as an integral collaborator with iconic singers such as Frank Sinatra and Michael Jackson. Jones’ peerless career began as an arranger, musician and bandleader in the 1950s, but he scored a prominent breakthrough on the Billboard Hot 100 as the producer of Lesley Gore’s Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 hit “It’s My Party” in 1963. The next time he captured the top spot, producing Jackson’s “Don’t Stop Til You Get Enough” in 1979, it kicked off one of the most successful partnerships in music history. The hitmakers’ collaborations yielded defining blockbusters, Off the Wall, Thriller and Bad – and saw Jackson become the King of Pop, earning a combined nine Hot 100 No. 1s between the three albums, and the middle title remains one of the best-selling albums of all time. While the Jackson-Jones tunes are most familiar to audiences, Jones achieved many more successes on the Hot 100, including helming the No. 1 smash “We Are The World” in 1985 and hits from George Benson (“Give Me the Night”), Aretha Franklin (“Angel”) and Donna Summer (“State of Independence” and “The Woman in Me”). As the industry and music fans worldwide pause to remember the titan and his fundamental role in shaping the sound of pop music, here’s a review of the icon’s 20 biggest hits as a producer on the Hot 100. Quincy Jones’ Biggest Billboard Hot 100 hits as a producer are based on weekly performance on the Billboard Hot 100 chart through Nov. 2, 2024. Songs are ranked based on an inverse point system, with weeks at No. 1 earning the greatest value and weeks at lower spots earning the least. Due to changes in chart methodology over the years, eras are weighted differently to account for chart turnover rates during various periods.

Hot 100 Peak: No. 5Peak Date: December 7, 1963

Hot 100 Peak: No. 4Peak Date: March 3, 1984

Hot 100 Peak: No. 5Peak Date: September 24, 1977

Hot 100 Peak: No. 5Peak Date: July 16, 1983

Hot 100 Peak: No. 2Peak Date: June 1, 1964

Hot 100 Peak: No. 4Peak Date: September 27, 1980

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1Peak Date: October 13, 1979

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1Peak Date: July 2, 1988

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for two weeksPeak Date: October 24, 1987

Hot 100 Peak: No. 3Peak Date: July 10, 1976

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1Peak Date: September 19, 1987

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for two weeksPeak Date: June 1, 1963

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1Peak Date: January 23, 1988

Hot 100 Peak: No. 2Peak Date: January 8, 1983

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for two weeksPeak Date: March 26, 1988

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for two weeksPeak Date: February 19, 1983

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for four weeksPeak Date: January 19, 1980

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for three weeksPeak Date: April 30, 1983

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for four weeksPeak Date: April 13, 1985

Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for seven weeksPeak Date: March 5, 1983

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