|
| Essential Sly & Family Stone | 
enlarge | Artist: Sly & Family Stone Label: Sony Category: Music
List Price: $24.98 Buy New: $9.00 You Save: $15.98 (64%)
New (53) Used (22) Collectible (1) from $8.98
Avg. Customer Rating: 53 reviews Sales Rank: 5085
Format: Limited Edition, Original Recording Remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 696998686724 EAN: 0696998686724 ASIN: B00006NSH7
Release Date: March 11, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: still in plastic wrap-not sure on limited edition or being remastered, but it is the same 2-cd set with the same cd cover featured in this listing. 18 songs on one cd, 17 on the other
|
| Tracks:
Disc 1
| • | Underdog | | • | I Cannot Make It | | • | Dance To The Music | | • | Are You Ready? | | • | Fun | | • | M'Lady | | • | Life | | • | Love City | | • | Stand! | | • | Don't Call Me Nigger, Whitey | | • | I Want To Take You Higher | | • | Somebody's Watching You | | • | Sing A Simple Song | | • | Everyday People | | • | You Can Make It If You Try | | • | Hot Fun In The Summertime | | • | Everybody Is A Star | | • | Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin) |
Disc 2
| • | Family Affair | | • | Luv N' Haight | | • | Poet | | • | (You Caught Me) Smilin' | | • | Runnin' Away | | • | Brave & Strong | | • | Just Like A Baby | | • | Thank You For Talkin' To Me, Africa | | • | In Time | | • | If You Want Me To Stay | | • | Frisky | | • | Skin I'm In | | • | Babies Makin' Babies | | • | If It Were Left Up To Me | | • | Time For Livin' | | • | Loose Booty | | • | I Get High On You |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com 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
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 48 more reviews...
I'm telling you- YOU NEED THIS!!!! April 19, 2004 64 out of 69 found this review helpful
There is a war goin on out there, between the good the bad and the pabulum. You can hear the battles seeping out of tv's and blaring out car windows. The war is for the soul of America- every time some lil' anorexic gal buys a Britney album an elf dies of advanced encyphalititis... Not mice elf though... This is your best defense against empty-ass bland as hell, dead-people music. Thirty five tracks of remastered Sly and the Fam????? Damn brother, where do I sign??!! Yes, yes, yes- this lil collection is exactly as badass as they say. In a world a broken promises- this is one that will not let you down! Where do I start? The badass opener (Underdog) that builds on the little kid's tune, `Frere Jacques,' making a funky world out of it? Sing a Simple Song, Stand!, Everyday People, Everybody is a Star, Love City, Life, Somebody's Watching You (a favorite mellow track of mine), Are you Ready, Fun... And that's just the first CD. The price on this is reasonable considering the quality, all the more if you can find a reliable used seller.... Nice packaging, blah blah blah- get it for the tunes or just don't get it. These songs deserve to be played. ALL THIRTY-FREAKIN-FIVE OF THEM!!!!!!!! Minor key beef- the track selection... Too much of their poppiesr shizzah and not enough deep-fried frunked out kinky funk madness. Well, I wasn't polled when they put this together so I can't really complain there. I would have had more of their oddball material- the absence of "I'm Gonna Trip through Your heart," (sampled by LL for Momma said knock you out) rankles a tad. As does the lack of `Remember Who You Are,' from Back on the right track... Aww hell though, there's so much killer cream from the cookie cutters on this that nothing can diminish the 5 star rating. Here- your five stars, now run with it baby, go outside and play. I have to say- the sound is soooooooo much better than before. I was a bit surprised and I don't usually put much stock in in `remastering,' yeah whatever, I thought- NO! It's much improved. So, until they start revamping and reissuing all the old Sly and albums with bonus tracks and better sound quality- it's either this or looting your grand-daddy's record collection like I done did done it. Shhhhhhh! Hey if you want to dig on Sly in a different evirons/goin's ons... Check out Funkadelic's, `Electric Spanking of War Babies,' (ASIN: B000069CLA) where he gets down with brother Eddie Hazel and the savior- Dr. George Clinton, Esq!!!!!
Best collection yet March 28, 2003 60 out of 62 found this review helpful
There are at least four things that make this far and away the best Sly & the Family Stone collection yet:
1) Unless you've hunted them down on various hard-to-find compilations, this is the first time you'll hear true stereo mixes of "Hot Fun In The Summertime", "Thank You" and "Everybody Is A Star". (The improvement in sound is a small miracle)
2) Unless you happen to have a copy of the MasterSound gold CD version of 'Stand!', this is the first time you'll hear those tracks on CD like they were meant to be heard, with punchy and crystal clear sound. (Only the 13-minute "Sex Machine" jam is omitted from that great album.)
3) Unless you have the UK import version of 'There's A Riot Goin' On', this is the first time you'll have most of that album in proper sound.
4) Unless you bought the ... Japanese import, this is the first time you'll have anything from 'Small Talk' on CD.
Now let's hope all the original albums will be released in remastered form with plenty of bonus tracks! (In the meantime, don't buy any of those substandard old CDs)
The Two Sides of Sly Stone March 19, 2005 12 out of 12 found this review helpful
When I saw that the library had just received this double disc set, I held my hands together and whispered a Burnsesque "Excellent". I could already envision the sunny days in my car, jamming out to some of the happiest and empowering funk ever made, songs such as "Dance to the Music", "I Want to Take You Higher", "Stand!" and "Hot Fun in the Summertime".
Those were the types of songs that I had on my worn out and now scratched copy of Sly and the Family Stone's Greatest Hits. But I found that The Essential Sly and the Family Stone is more complete, and with that, a collection of songs that tells a story that is at times sublime and tragic. Especially if you read Sly Stone's descent into drug addiction and isolation into the songs.
One surprise on this collection is the first song, "Underdog". I hear a young and scrappy Sly, taking on racism in the lyrics, but still learning the ropes as far as arranging the horn parts and producing. The chorus sounds like it's in a minor key, not fully resolved. Comparing it to the later songs, it seems to lack that classic Sly perfection. But it's still catchy and I love it.
Soon enough the hits start to roll across the speakers. The classic Sly sound develops right before your ears. Multiple voices carry the verses. Driving drums and bass carry a big time horn section. Once in a while there might be some nonsense vocal harmonies; my favorite part is the chicken clucking on "Everybody is a Star". The lyrics feature some wonderful word play. And of course, there's a lot of hope and togetherness. After all, the Family Stone was one of the first intergrated groups, with both black and white musicians. Most people describe this era as Sly's Happy Music Era.
Not that there aren't any hints of a darker side. "Don't Call Me Nigger, Whitey" foretells a different and darker sound, with more confrontational themes and an electronic talk box.
I also have to wonder if Sly could prophesize his own decline when you hear lines like the one in "Everybody is a Star" which goes: Did you catch a falling star? /It won't stop until it hits the ground.
The second disc is like the night to the first disc's day. It starts off with "Family Affair", which frankly isn't the most uplifting song. The driving drums of the first side are replaced with plodding electronic drums. And there's only one backup singer. Sly's vocals sound like they've been sung on a beautifully over-driven microphone, as if he's whispering into a megaphone right behing the speaker. It's a creepy sound, but very cool. Every time I hear this song, I envision Sly sitting in the studio with all the curtains drawn, binging on whatever he's been binging on. Nobody can be around him. But he still has it together enough to come up with a cool groove. He lays down all the tracks by himself and calls in the backup to record the refrain in a one hour session. I also like to imagine that Sly is referring to himself in the lyrics when he sings about the two children: the one child who loves to learn, and the other you would just love to burn--like the two sides of Sly Stone himself.
The rest of the disc is more confrontational, and the sound starts to get a little off kilter, more processed and electronic, like a bad trip...like Funkadelic. That's not to say that it's a bad thing, in fact it's kind of cool sometimes.
To me, "If You Want Me Stay" has a bass line that is just like musical crack. I cannot get enough of it, and there's no chorus or changes...just the bass, some horns, organ, and the lyrics straight through. And then the lyrics seem to be written by someone who's locked themselves in their hidey-hole.
If you want me to stay I'll be around today To be available for you to see I'm about to go there Then you'll know For me to stay here I've got to be me You'll never be in doubt That's what it's all about You can't take me for granted and smile Count the days I'm gone Forget reachin' me by phone Cause I promise I'll be gone for a while...
I start to feel bad for the guy; it's like he's saying goodbye. And then, of course, Sly dropped off the face of the planet, to join the mythic American music acropolis of rock and roll burn-outs.
Essential Funk/Rock Compilation! March 24, 2003 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
I have been waiting for a 2 cd compilation of Sly & the Family Stone for a long while and I was eagerly anticipating this set. Sly & the Family Stone played a combination of rock, funk, soul, and r&b. Stone's band was one of the first interracial rock bands of the late sixties and early seventies. Sly & the Family Stone provided us with some of the most danceable tunes of all time. Songs like "Dance To The Music", "I Want To Take You Higher", "Sing A Simple Song", "Everyday People" and "Thank You (Falettimme Be Mice Elf Agin)" are instantly memorable and are used as background music for commercials to this day. Sly's songs on the first disk are especially uplifting and came along at just the right time when people needed them after becoming burned out by the Vietnam war. The rhythm section of Greg Errico and Larry Graham was great. They infused the music with both drive and danceability. Graham's finger-popping bass technique was revolutionary at the time but is now a standard practice among funk bassists. Sly & the Family Stone became popular enough to be invited to the big rock festivals of the day like Woodstock. With the second disk Stone's music began to become more erratic with his ascent into drug addiction and the departures of both Graham and Errico who were replaced by Rusty Allen and Andy Newmark respectively. Sly also began to write about black issues of the day like "Don't Call Me Nigger Whitey" and "Babies Makin' Babies" among others. The Essential Sly & the Family Stone" contains all the songs released on "Greatest Hits" and every song from "Anthology" except for the great cover of "Que Sera, Sera". Even if Sly Stone never makes another album the material on this set cements his legacy. He is not only a funk innovator but also produced some of the best singles of the late sixties and early seventies. He also found time to produce a number of bands before concentrating on his own material. This is truly an essential purchase!
Very Essential Sly April 7, 2003 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
A release I've been eagerly anticipating for a long time has been this new compilation of Sly And The Family Stone's best from 1967 to 1974. 35 tracks on two CD's this collection is an excellent introduction for new fans of this innovative and highly influential band's work. One of my biggest complaints about the previously available Sly CD's(minus the Gold "Stand" CD)was the sound quality and packaging, which were poor to say the least. Sonically this music has never sounded better and is readily apparent on the especially on the "Stand" and "There's A Riot Goin'On" tracks, most of each album is represented on this set(minus "Sex Machine" from "Stand" and "Spaced Cowboy" and "Africa Talks To You" from "Riot"). Also for the first time the previous mono only singles "Hot Fun In The Summertime", "Thank You(Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)", and "Everybody Is A Star" are in true stereo on a Sly compilation. The first track(Hot Fun) has been released on a couple of different Sony Legacy compilations and "Everybody Is A Star" turned up on a rare Legacy promo CD. While this package isn't entirely comprehensive, it hits the major highlights and hopefully will finally clear the way for remastered and repackaged versions of Sly's Epic albums from 1969 through 1975, and the much talked about and delayed box set. I can hardly wait. Until then, this comes highly recommended.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |