Mick Jones (Foreigner)

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Mick Jones (Foreigner) bigraphy, stories - British musician

Mick Jones (Foreigner) : biography

27 December 1944 –

Michael Leslie "Mick" Jones (born 27 December 1944) is an English guitarist, songwriter, and record producer best known as the founding member of the rock band Foreigner. Prior to Foreigner, he was in the band Spooky Tooth.

Album producer credits

In addition to the Foreigner albums, Jones produced the following:

  • 5150 – Van Halen (1986)
  • Fame and Fortune – Bad Company (1986)
  • Dead, White and Blue – Flesh & Blood (1989)
  • Save The Last Dance For Me – Ben E. King (1989)
  • Storm Front – Billy Joel (1989)
  • In Deep – Tina Arena (1997)
  • Beyond Good and Evil – The Cult (2001)

Solo discography

  • Mick Jones (1989)

Charted single

Year Song US Rock Chart
1989 "Just Wanna Hold" #16

Life and career

Jones was born in Portsmouth, Hampshire. He began his music career in the early 1960s as a member of the band Nero and the Gladiators, who scored two minor British hit singles in 1961. After the demise of the band, Jones worked as a songwriter and session musician for such artists as Sylvie Vartan and Johnny Hallyday, for whom he wrote many songs, including "Je suis né dans la rue" and "À tout casser" (which features Jimmy Page on guitar), until he joined Gary Wright, formerly of the band Spooky Tooth, to form Wonderwheel. In 1973, Jones and Wright reformed Spooky Tooth, and after this Jones was a member of the Leslie West Band. He also played guitar on the albums Wind of Change (1972) for Peter Frampton, and Dark Horse (1974) for George Harrison.

In 1976 he formed Foreigner with Ian McDonald and recruited vocalist Lou Gramm. Jones co-produced all of the group’s albums and co-wrote most of their songs with Gramm. Jones wrote the band’s most successful single, "I Want to Know What Love Is". Allmusic Retrieved 13 February 2011[ I Want to Know What Love Is – Foreigner] Billboard Retrieved 13 February 2011 Tensions developed within the band during the early 1980s and were attributed to a difference in musical taste between Gramm, who favoured a more hard-edged rock, as opposed to Jones’ interest in synthesisers. Gramm left the band in 1989 but returned in 1991. Also in 1989, Jones released his only solo album titled Mick Jones on the Atlantic Records label. Jones is the only person to play on every Foreigner album.

He co-wrote with Eric Clapton the song "Bad Love" on Clapton’s Journeyman album, and in 2002 co-wrote the song "On Her Mind" with Duncan Sheik. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, he played with Bill Wyman’s Rhythm Kings.

He was married to socialite/writer Ann Dexter-Jones, mother of Mark, Samantha and Charlotte Ronson. Ann and Mick have two children, Annabelle and Alexander Dexter-Jones. Married for nearly 25 years, in 2007 Jones and Dexter-Jones divorced. He also has two sons, from prior relationships, Roman, partner in Miami’s largest nightclub group, , and Christopher Jones.