Alben von Sly & The Family Stone
ALBUMSly & The Family Stone: The Woodstock ExperienceSly & The Family Stone
ALBUMAin't But The One WaySly & The Family Stone
ALBUMBack On The Right TrackSly & The Family Stone
ALBUMHeard Ya Missed Me, Well I'm BackSly & The Family Stone
ALBUMSmall Talk (Bonus Tracks Edition) [2007 Remaster]Sly & The Family Stone
ALBUMFresh (Bonus Tracks Edition) [2007 Remaster]Sly & The Family Stone
ALBUMThere's a Riot Goin' On (Expanded Edition)Sly & The Family Stone
ALBUMStand! (Deluxe Edition)Sly & The Family Stone
ALBUMLife (Bonus Tracks Edition) [2007 Remaster]Sly & The Family Stone
ALBUMDance To The Music (Bonus Tracks Edition) [2007 Remaster]Sly & The Family Stone
Beliebte Musikvideos von Sly & The Family Stone
Everyday People (Official Video)
Sly & The Family Stone
Sing a Simple Song (Live at Harlem Cultural Festival, 1969)
Sly & The Family Stone
Everyday People (2021 Animated Video)
Sly & The Family Stone
Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Again) [Live 1973]
Sly & The Family Stone
I Want To Take You Higher (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, December 29, 1968)
Sly & The Family Stone
I Want to Take You Higher (Live 1973)
Sly & The Family Stone
Künstler-Playlists
Sly & the Family Stone Essentials
A funk pioneer invites you to dance to the music.
Inspired by Sly & The Family Stone
Soul meets rock and launches a musical revolution.
Sly & The Family Stone: Sampled
Their original tunes have been the source material for some of modern music’s biggest hits.
Sly & The Family Stone: Deep Cuts
Throughout the shifting times, their beat remained constant.
Künstler-Biographie
It’s impossible to tell the story of the ’60s counterculture without Sly Stone. A product of the Church of God in Christ (and later a San Francisco radio DJ who peppered his soul sets with Dylan and The Beatles), the songwriter, producer, multi-instrumentalist, and creative thrust of Sly & The Family Stone fused the elation of gospel with the radical edge of psychedelia and funk. Despite cosmetic differences, these styles held similar goals: transcendence of self through surrender to music. Politically astute and proudly integrated (Stone was one of the few black artists to perform at Woodstock), the band and their sound became a bellwether for the era, mixing protest and party in equal measure. The Denton, Texas–born Stone pioneered funk while also blowing out its borders—just listen to There’s a Riot Goin’ On, which turned the genre inward, capturing the bleakness and paranoia of America just as the country was becoming mired in Vietnam. And while Stone projected unity (“Everyday People”), he also carved out a space that felt unapologetically black (“Don’t Call Me N****r, Whitey”), a balancing act that made him a guidepost for Prince, Outkast, and dozens of others, regardless of genre. Even when things got dark, both in his life and on record, his songs embodied a tremendously uplifting promise: that music could be revolutionary and still get people dancing.
Heimatort
San Francisco, CA, United States
Genre
R&B/Soul