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The event, put on by the Downtown Bremerton Association and City of Bremerton in collaboration with Black Night Market, showcased the vision of Fourth Street that so many had been hoping for.
Quincy Jones, the internationally known music producer who got his start at a piano in Bremerton and is now honored by the city with a major project on Fourth Street, died on Sunday at 91 years old.
The total redesign of a block of Fourth Street took years in coming to fruition, now ready for a public opening in July.
The project aims to revitalize a long-neglected street with housing, arts, entertainment and retail.
The man who made stars collide for "We Are the World," Quincy Jones had a long career as a composer and producer who broke down racial boundaries.
The novel civic project will transform a long neglected downtown street into an active, bustling thoroughfare with new community gathering space, art and programming inspired by the late Quincy Jones.
Quincy Jones, the legendary and award-winning music producer who died Monday at age 91, had deep roots in the Pacific Northwest.
Though he achieved international fame, Quincy Jones never forgot his upbringing in Seattle and Bremerton.
Quincy Jones, who did it all as a record producer, film composer, multi-genre artist, entertainment executive and humanitarian, has died. He was 91.
Jones said his interest in music bloomed in Bremerton, when he and some friends found a piano after sneaking into the community center in the segregated wartime housing project where they lived.