It's the perfect mix of aggressive social rights and inclusive funky music. The Electric Lady is another but isn't quite so rough around the edges.
Sly & The Family Stone
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
It's the perfect mix of aggressive social rights and inclusive funky music. The Electric Lady is another but isn't quite so rough around the edges.
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
By the time You Can Make It If You Try is over, I find myself really believing that I can make it if I try.
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
Totally.
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
It's so amazing how they experimented with ambient sounds and atonality, even in 1968. The sections of the song "Dynamite!" for example don't go together in a predictable / logical way; that's got to have influenced hiphop's use of chords, basslines and samples that don't "fit". It just makes for an overall messier sound than I'm used to associating with the era. The later Temptations stuff does the same thing, manages to add a roughness to the somewhat clean pop sound that Motown began in.
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
The Rockefeller guitar on "Harmony" is so cool. I love the way this band mashes styles together. And then the circus trombone on "Life." Wow.
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
the Woodstock version of "I Wanna Take You Higher" and this version of James Browns "There Was A Time"
are easily my 2 favorite live funk/RnB tracks ever... just such great riffs, horns, grooves...
I could listen to them over and over (and have on a few occasions like today)
are easily my 2 favorite live funk/RnB tracks ever... just such great riffs, horns, grooves...
I could listen to them over and over (and have on a few occasions like today)
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
It says it's from Live at the Apollo, but which volume is it on? I only have the first, and don't see it listed on the other ones.MadTIGERmaN wrote:this version of James Browns "There Was A Time"
They get virtually no respect from the mainstream music fan, but their influence is EVERYWHERE over the last 45 years of music. It's like that quote on their wikipedia page from that book about them says, "there are two types of black music: black music before Sly Stone, and black music after Sly Stone."harmless wrote:It's so amazing how they experimented with ambient sounds and atonality, even in 1968. The sections of the song "Dynamite!" for example don't go together in a predictable / logical way; that's got to have influenced hiphop's use of chords, basslines and samples that don't "fit". It just makes for an overall messier sound than I'm used to associating with the era. The later Temptations stuff does the same thing, manages to add a roughness to the somewhat clean pop sound that Motown began in.
When you compare the stuff with what else was going on at the time, they were so far ahead of everybody else. You could argue they were the biggest reason Motown's sound developed and morphed into what it became despite not even being on the label, because artists like the Temptations, Stevie Wonder, and Marvin Gaye all of the sudden had to scramble to catch up with Sly. Dude was a fucking musical genius of the highest level (in terms of popular music).
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
If they were white and British, people would be still be creaming themselves over them to this day.harmless wrote:The Rockefeller guitar on "Harmony" is so cool. I love the way this band mashes styles together. And then the circus trombone on "Life." Wow.
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
Lament wrote:It says it's from Live at the Apollo, but which volume is it on? I only have the first, and don't see it listed on the other ones.MadTIGERmaN wrote:this version of James Browns "There Was A Time"
They get virtually no respect from the mainstream music fan, but their influence is EVERYWHERE over the last 45 years of music. It's like that quote on their wikipedia page from that book about them says, "there are two types of black music: black music before Sly Stone, and black music after Sly Stone."harmless wrote:It's so amazing how they experimented with ambient sounds and atonality, even in 1968. The sections of the song "Dynamite!" for example don't go together in a predictable / logical way; that's got to have influenced hiphop's use of chords, basslines and samples that don't "fit". It just makes for an overall messier sound than I'm used to associating with the era. The later Temptations stuff does the same thing, manages to add a roughness to the somewhat clean pop sound that Motown began in.
When you compare the stuff with what else was going on at the time, they were so far ahead of everybody else. You could argue they were the biggest reason Motown's sound developed and morphed into what it became despite not even being on the label, because artists like the Temptations, Stevie Wonder, and Marvin Gaye all of the sudden had to scramble to catch up with Sly. Dude was a fucking musical genius of the highest level (in terms of popular music).
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
http://www.amazon.com/Live-At-Apollo-II ... the+apollo
its on that one, the deluxe version is one of the best live concerts...
Let Yourself Go / There Was A Time / I Feel Alright / Cold Sweat HAS NO BREAKS, its about 24 mins of non stop JB
its on that one, the deluxe version is one of the best live concerts...
Let Yourself Go / There Was A Time / I Feel Alright / Cold Sweat HAS NO BREAKS, its about 24 mins of non stop JB
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
There's A Riot Goin' On is such a trippy, weird, dark set of slow jams.
Gotta wonder whether PJ had it in mind when they made the "non-songs" on Vitalogy.
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
OH MY GOD WHY DO I LOVE SPACED COWBOY SO MUCH
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
I wonder if Sly fans were disappointed that the word "Riot" was in the title and it wasn't an aggressive, fast, rock album.
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
CAUSE IT'S SO AWESOME.harmless wrote:OH MY GOD WHY DO I LOVE SPACED COWBOY SO MUCH
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Re: Sly & The Family Stone
This is SO EXACTLY what I was thinking.Lament wrote:I wonder if Sly fans were disappointed that the word "Riot" was in the title and it wasn't an aggressive, fast, rock album.
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