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Showing posts with label sly stone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sly stone. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 June 2025

Sly Stone


The death of Sly Stone rippled and then flowed through the world of music and social media on Monday evening and into Tuesday. He was 82 and had lived quite a life. I think I first caught sight of him in 1989 with the 20th anniversary release and TV screenings of the Woodstock movie. His name became a fashionable one to drop and Sly And The Family Stone's multi racial, mixed gender, good time dance music from the late 60s fitted in with the times. When people mentioned acid house, S- Express, The Stone Roses, Bass-o- Matic, De La Soul and a host of others, Sly Stone and The Family were never far away. Like many people I bought the Greatest Hits album, an album stuffed wall to wall 60s dance floor hits, a fusion of pop, soul, funk and psychedelia played by people with long hair and Afros wearing dungarees and floral shirts. They were tailor made for 1989- I Want To Take You Higher, Dance To The Music, Everyday People, Hot Fun In The Summertime Everybody Is A Star...

It's fair to say as well that when the Woodstock film is taken as a whole, Sly is very much the star... boom lackalackalacka...


Later on in the early 90s Arrested Development sampled Sly for their hit People Everyday and then people began to refer to There's A Riot Goin' On. In 1991 Los Angeles went up in flames with the acquittal of four policemen who had been filmed brutally beating Rodney King. It seems frighteningly apt that when Sly died, there was indeed a riot goin' on again in L.A., this time caused by the President and (again) racially motivated.

The album There's A Riot Goin' On is a very different record from the feel good anthems the Family Stone made in 1967/68. Recorded largely by Sly on his own and featuring one of the first sues of drum machines, it's a dense, pessimistic and disillusioned album, murky funk. The arc of the civil rights movement is reflected in it, from I Have A Dream in 1963 to the assassination of King in '68, from the Freedom Rides and the Greensboro Sit Ins in the early 60s to the Watts riots and Black Power by the end of decade. It's a pissed off, militant and on edge. Sly had mixed with the Black Panthers and was being urged to make music that reflected the times, with an all Black band. Drugs and paranoia play their part. It's one of those albums that everyone should own a copy of. 

Luv N' Haight

Family Affair

RIP Sly Stone. 

Wednesday, 25 March 2015

All We Need Is A Drummer


Sometimes we all need a bit of boom-shackalackalack boom-shackalackalack in our lives and Sly Stone is just the man. In this live performance on Soul Train Sly spends a few minutes meeting his adoring fanbase, with Japanese subtitles, and then leads the band through Dance To the Music with a detour into I Want To Take You Higher.

Fact- I first bought a Sly Stone record because they were mentioned in relation to The Stone Roses, in an NME article. Fact- neither band sound remotely like each other.



Here's the studio version, audio only. Life affirming and all that, from 1968 and before the drugs, paranoia and disillusionment with the hippy dream set in.



That drum break's been recycled a few times.

Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Life And Death



World Of Twist, Manchester's long lost turn of the 90s band, made at least three outstanding singles- The Storm, Sons Of the Stage (one of my favourite records ever) and She's A Rainbow- and an album which was badly mixed (at a cost of a quarter of a million pounds). Quality Street had some good songs on it but no matter how loud you played it, it lacked oomph. A shame since they had real potential, magnetic stage presence and a sound combining 60s pop, Northern Soul and psych with an early 90s sensibility- a definite sidestep from the Madchester sound, more like a sharper, rawer Pulp. I saw them at Manchester Academy and they were a blast, MC Shells keyboards housed in a giant shell, and spinning round newsagents signs and stage props. Front man Tony Ogden died a few years ago, one of the era's lost souls. He was devastated after the band were dropped and spent several years doing little but taking smack and watching World War II documentaries. Drummer Nick Sanderson followed the band by forming Earl Brutus but died of lung cancer in 2008. The lp has recently been remixed/remastered and is due for release next Monday, hopefully giving the record and the band the sound it needed twenty odd years ago. A second disc has radio sessions for John Peel and Mark Goodier and b-sides. This is the extended 12" version of their cover of a Sly Stone song.

Life And Death (12" Mix)

In this interview clip for Snub TV they are interviewed in Withington baths, just up the road from where I grew up and where I once nearly drowned as a kid (I stuck my finger in a grid at the bottom of the deep end. To see what would happen). Proper swimming baths they were- cubicles around the edge, freezing cold, fag ends and plasters floating in the chlorine.