| | |  | Music | Home » » Essential Sly & Family Stone | | | | | | | Product Promotions: | | | | | Description: | | Long before Michael Jackson and Prince became superstars by fusing rhythmic soul with rock's sense of scale and ambition, a former Northern California deejay and producer named Sylvester Stewart took the vaunted musical utopianism of the '60s and forged it into the cross-cultural, ass-shaking, genre-bending groove monster that was Sly and the Family Stone. James Brown may have invented funk, but S&TFS masterfully tooled and supercharged it into mass-acceptance. No mere greatest hits collection--though they're all here in digitally remastered glory--this 35-track, double-disc anthology delves deeper into the handful of seminal albums the band produced before its leaders' long, troubling slide into drug abuse and oblivion. Given the chronological development, there's a sense here that Stewart/Stone's problems paralleled the increasingly militant and hard-edged stance his band took on albums like the uncompromising classics There's a Riot Going On and Family Affair. Propelled by Larry Graham's locomotive bass lines and accented by rousing horns, Sly and company swooped from the heights of 1969's hit-laden "Stand" towards a darker and more unsettling decade ahead. Few bands have soared higher--or fallen as far. --Jerry McCulley | | | Product Details: | | | Audio CD Release Date:
| March 11, 2003 | | Studio:
| Sony | | Number Of Discs:
| 2 | | Format:
| Limited Edition, Original recording remastered | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 58 reviews |
| | | Track Listing: | | | Disc: 1 | | | 1. | Underdog | | 2. | I Cannot Make It | | 3. | Dance To The Music | | 4. | Are You Ready? | | 5. | Fun | | 6. | M'Lady | | 7. | Life | | 8. | Love City | | 9. | Stand! | | 10. | Don't Call Me Nigger, Whitey | | 11. | I Want To Take You Higher | | 12. | Somebody's Watching You | | 13. | Sing A Simple Song | | 14. | Everyday People | | 15. | You Can Make It If You Try | | 16. | Hot Fun In The Summertime | | 17. | Everybody Is A Star | | 18. | Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin) | | | Disc: 2 | | | 1. | Family Affair | | 2. | Luv N' Haight | | 3. | Poet | | 4. | (You Caught Me) Smilin' | | 5. | Runnin' Away | | 6. | Brave & Strong | | 7. | Just Like A Baby | | 8. | Thank You For Talkin' To Me, Africa | | 9. | In Time | | 10. | If You Want Me To Stay | | 11. | Frisky | | 12. | Skin I'm In | | 13. | Babies Makin' Babies | | 14. | If It Were Left Up To Me | | 15. | Time For Livin' | | 16. | Loose Booty | | 17. | I Get High On You | |
| | | Customer Reviews: | |
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Comfort yourself with Sly and the Family StoneSep 02, 2010 Ah, Sly and the Family Stone, and this album offers The Essentials. Beautiful, fun, upbeat songs, still as fresh now as they were then. "Thank You", "Hot Fun In the Summertime", "You Can Make It If You Try", "Stand" and "Everyday People" and all the others are here. If you came of age around 1970, these songs were most likely a part of the fabric of your life, and still just as sweet and comforting now as they were then.
For The SlyestFeb 03, 2010 Like it says: The Essential Sly & Family Stone. Absolutely essential if you are a hard-core, die-hard Sly fan, but even so, most of the second disc offers very little to keep the listener's interest, as 90% of it is quite boring, even if you live, eat, drink, sleep, and breathe S & F.S.
The first disc is phenomenal. This compilation has every great Sly & Family Stone song there is and in fantastic sound quality too. Most of all, it shows that this band was super tight in the studio and really had it together. This is what probably allowed them to let it all hang out and be so free, lose, and even at times unrefined when performing live without being sloppy or disconnected from each other; a true testament to each member's top class musicianship. It would have really been nice to have some studio outtakes and some of Sly's demos to see how some of these songs developed into the final product.
I would have liked to have given "Essential" 5 stars, but because it suffers the aforementioned in the first paragraph (as do many compilations of this type do), I have to give it 4.
stick with single CDNov 29, 2009 Unless you are specifically looking for a lot of Sly, the remastered single CD is a probably better deal. I don't agree that the Riot Goin On stuff is essential, but maybe it will grow on me. The sound is very good however, and it still was a good deal.
0 of 7 found the following review helpful:
sly& family stoneApr 17, 2009 i was looking at songs i notice some songs like hot fun in summer time is a single version maybe its me is there a full version of this song if there is where is it ? until i see the full version of this song and others not buying this cd sorry what a rip off
Sly Stone:Funkmaster ExtraordinaireApr 01, 2009 In 1968,a new type of music was introduced called "psychedelic soul"-One of its leading exponents was Sly & The Family Stone-"The Essential Sly & The Family Stone" is the only collection you need-It's chock full of Family Stone classics such as:"Dance To The Music","Everyday People","Hot Fun In The Summertime","Thank You","Stand",& "Family Affair"-While Sly has been out of the spotlight for a while,his influence has been strong,especially on performers such as Prince-If you like 70's funk,this collection is right up your alley.
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