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"You gotta calm down. I gotta get it on pop radio!" Jones told guitarist Steve Lukathier Michael Jackson ‘s ‘Beat It’ was initially much more metal-oriented before Quincy Jones suggested it be changed, his ‘Thriller’-era guitarist has said. READ MORE: Quincy Jones obituary: mega-producer who broke boundaries Jackson’s session musician Steve Lukather spoke to The Guardian in a feature about Jones’ influence to commemorate his passing aged 91 earlier this month .

Knowing Eddie Van Halen was already going to be on the track, Lukather took inspiration from his contributions. However, Jones later reminded him they were trying to create something for pop radio. “I played a bunch of really wild guitar parts, because I knew Eddie’s solo was on it,” said Lukather.



“I was doing real hard rock, a quadruple-track riff.” “Quincy wasn’t even there, he was at Westlake doing overdubs on ‘Billie Jean’ while we were fixing ‘Beat It’. So we’d be on the phone and he goes: ‘It’s too metal, you gotta calm down.

I gotta get it on pop radio! Use the small amp, not so much distortion.’” Later on, Lukather paid tribute to Jones: “Quincy is the only guy that can do a solo album without playing or writing anything. Somehow, no matter what he did, there was a Quincy Jones sound, even if he didn’t play, sing, write or whatever.

He was a director.” ‘Beat It’ went on to be a huge hit upon release in 1983 and topped the charts in five countries. It has .

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