
Sly Stone, leader of 1960s funk band, dies at age 82
Sly Stone from the group Sly and the Family Stone, seen here performing at the 48th Annual Grammy Awards on Feb 8, 2006, in Los Angeles. (AP pic)
WASHINGTON : Sly Stone, the driving force behind Sly and the Family Stone, a multiracial American band whose boiling mix of rock, soul and psychedelia embodied 1960s idealism and helped popularize funk music, has died at the age of 82, his family said on Monday.
Stone died after a battle with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other health issues, a statement from his family said.
'While we mourn his absence, we take solace in knowing that his extraordinary musical legacy will continue to resonate and inspire for generations to come,' the statement said.
Stone was perhaps best known for his performance in 1969 at the historic Woodstock music festival, the hippie culture's coming-out party.
His group was a regular on the US music charts in the late 1960s and 1970s, with hits such as 'Dance to the Music,' 'I Want to Take You Higher', 'Family Affair', 'Everyday People', 'If You Want Me to Stay', and 'Hot Fun in the Summertime'.
But he later fell on hard times and became addicted to cocaine, never staging a successful comeback.
The confident and mercurial Stone played a leading role in introducing funk, an Afrocentric style of music driven by grooves and syncopated rhythms, to a broader audience.
James Brown had forged the elements of funk before Stone founded his band in 1966, but Stone's brand of funk drew new listeners. It was celebratory, eclectic, psychedelic and rooted in the counterculture of the late 1960s.
'They had the clarity of Motown but the volume of Jimi Hendrix or The Who,' Parliament-Funkadelic frontman George Clinton, a contemporary of Stone and another pioneering figure in funk, once wrote.
When Sly and the Family Stone performed, it felt like the band was 'speaking to you personally,' Clinton said.
Stone made his California-based band, which included his brother Freddie and sister Rose, a symbol of integration. It included Black and white musicians, while women, including the late trumpeter Cynthia Robinson, had prominent roles.
That was rare in a music industry often segregated along racial and gender lines.
Stone, with his orb-like Afro hairstyle and wardrobe of vests, fringes and skin-tight leather, lived the life of a superstar. At the same time, he allowed bandmates to shine by fostering a collaborative, free-flowing approach that epitomized the 1960s hippie ethic.
'I wanted to be able for everyone to get a chance to sweat,' he told Rolling Stone magazine in 1970.
Disc jockey to singer
Born Sylvester Stewart in Denton, Texas, he moved as a child with his family to Northern California, where his father ran a janitorial business.
He took the show business name Sly Stone and worked for a time as a radio disc jockey and a record producer for a small label before forming the band.
The band's breakthrough came in 1968, when the title track to their second album, 'Dance to the Music,' cracked the Top 10.
A year later, Sly and the Family Stone performed at Woodstock before dawn. Stone woke up a crowd of 400,000 people at the music festival, leading them in call-and-response style singing.
Stone's music became less joyous after the idealistic 1960s, reflecting the polarization of the country after opposition to the Vietnam War and racial tensions triggered unrest on college campuses and in African American neighbourhoods in big US cities.
In 1971, Sly and the Family Stone released 'There's a Riot Goin' On', which became the band's only No. 1 album.
Critics said the album's bleak tone and slurred vocals denoted the increasing hold of cocaine on Stone. But some called the record a masterpiece, a eulogy to the 1960s.
In the early 1970s, Stone became erratic and missed shows. Some members left the band.
But the singer was still a big enough star in 1974 to attract a crowd of 21,000 for his wedding to actress and model Kathy Silva at Madison Square Garden in New York. Silva filed for divorce less than a year later.
Sly and the Family Stone's album releases in the late 1970s and early 1980s flopped, as Stone racked up drug possession arrests. But the music helped shape disco and, years later, hip-hop artists kept the band's legacy alive by frequently sampling its musical hooks.
The band was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1993 and Stone was celebrated in an all-star tribute at the Grammy Awards in 2006. He sauntered on stage with a blond Mohawk but bewildered the audience by leaving mid-song.
In 2011, after launching what would become a years-long legal battle to claim royalties he said were stolen, Stone was arrested for cocaine possession. That year, media reported Stone was living in a recreational vehicle parked on a street in South Los Angeles.
Stone had a son, Sylvester, with Silva. He had two daughters, Novena Carmel, and Sylvette 'Phunne' Stone, whose mother was bandmate Cynthia Robinson.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Malay Mail
12 hours ago
- Malay Mail
‘I wasn't even in my own body': Sean ‘Diddy' Combs's ex faces defence grilling in sex trial
NEW YORK, June 10 — Sean Combs's defence lawyers on Tuesday will question a woman who dated the music mogul up until his arrest, and who has testified in agonising detail that he pressured her into drug-fuelled sex with escorts. After three days on the stand the woman speaking under the pseudonym Jane will face intense scrutiny from defence lawyers who have insisted that what prosecutors deem sex trafficking was in fact consensual. Jane told jurors how the final year of her relationship with the artist known as 'Diddy' exploded into violence in June 2024. At the time Combs was already under investigation by federal authorities; his homes had been raided, and the now-infamous security footage of him assaulting his ex-girlfriend Casandra Ventura in a hotel was public. Throughout her testimony Jane, who began seeing Combs in early 2021, detailed how she had longed for a more traditional romantic relationship with him. But she said 90 per cent of their time together resulted in sometimes days-long sex parties that saw Combs direct her to have sex with male escorts while he watched, even as she told him the encounters made her feel 'sleazy' and 'disgusted.' The June 2024 date at home was meant to be a chill night in, she said, but she and Combs got into a fight over his relationship with another woman. The argument escalated when Jane said she pushed Combs's head onto a marble countertop and began hurling candles. 'I was angry with him,' Jane said. 'It was a built-up mix of everything... I just kept saying that I hated him.' Combs was livid: Jane told jurors he kicked down doors and ultimately put her in a chokehold. She managed to run out of the house barefoot but upon returning hours later he was still there. He kicked and punched her until she had a black eye and 'golf-ball' sized welts, she said. Combs instructed her to ice the injuries and 'put an outfit on.' Jane told jurors that she put on the requisite heels and lingerie for a so-called 'hotel night' with Combs and a man he had invited. Through tears Jane said Combs gave her ecstasy and demanded she have sex with the man, and when she protested he said 'you're not going to ruin my f**king night.' When she said again she didn't want to participate, he stood closely to her face as he asked in a 'forceful' tone: 'Then is this coercion?' Jane ultimately complied, and gave the escort oral sex: 'I just felt like I wasn't even in my own body,' she said. Jane told jurors Combs paid for her rent at the time and still does. He also continues to fund her legal costs. 'Sexual trauma' When Ventura — who last month testified of physical and psychological abuse in similarily excruciating detail — filed her 2023 civil lawsuit that opened the door for a federal investigation, Jane said she 'almost fainted.' 'There was a whole other woman feeling the same thing,' Jane said. 'I feel like I'm reading my own sexual trauma. It makes me sick how three solid pages, word for word, is exactly my experiences and my anguish,' she messaged Combs, in text records read in court. After weeks of back-and-forth, Jane said Combs called her a 'con artist,' and threatened to show sexually explicit videos to the father of her child. She had previously testified at length that she felt 'obligated' to participate in hotel nights for 'fear of losing the roof over my head' that Combs was bankrolling. Jane said that following their physical fight in the summer of 2024, they saw each other twice more before his arrest last September. The 55-year-old faces life in prison if convicted of racketeering and sex trafficking. Jane's story was not in the original indictment against Combs, but she was added after receiving a subpoena requiring she testify in November 2024 before a grand jury. She began speaking to prosecutors in January of this year. Jane testified that she told Combs's defence team about the brawl last summer before she told prosecutors. She said she felt 'obligated' to meet the defence team 'due to my relationship.' Jane has not filed any civil suit against Combs, and said in court Monday she has no plans to. 'I just pray for his continued healing,' she told jurors, 'and I pray for peace for him.' The Manhattan federal trial is expected to last several more weeks. — AFP

Malay Mail
12 hours ago
- Malay Mail
Rapper Kendrick Lamar leads 2025 BET Awards wins as ‘Not Like Us' takes video of the year
LOS ANGELES, June 10 — Kendrick Lamar was the top winner on Monday at the BET Awards, an awards ceremony honouring Black actors, singers and sports stars. The 30 For 30 rapper won the best male hip hop artist award, best album of the year as well as the video of the year award for Not Like Us. Lamar and filmmaker Dave Free also took home the video director of the year award at the event, which was held at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles and broadcast on the BET cable channel. Lil Wayne performs at the 25th annual BET (Black Entertainment Television) Awards, in Los Angeles, June 9, 2025. — Reuters pic 'BET has always made sure they're representing the culture right and always put me in the midst of the cycle of what we represent,' Lamar said on stage when accepting his award. Host comedian Kevin Hart opened the ceremony by recognising the BET Awards' 25th anniversary and all of the 'history that has been made' on the stage. The ceremony traversed the evolution of Black music, starting with a performance by R&B artist Ashanti that featured a compilation of songs, including her 2002 song Foolish. Mariah Carey performs at the 25th annual BET (Black Entertainment Television) Awards. — Reuters pic Additional performances included other 2000s songs Ballin' by Mustard, 1 Thing by Amerie and Like You by Bow Wow. Hart led with jokes while also highlighting the BET Ultimate Icon Award winners of the night, including Kirk Franklin, Mariah Carey, Jamie Foxx and Snoop Dogg. The special award was given to those that have paid homage to music, entertainment, advocacy and community impact. Snoop Dogg reacts after accepting the Ultimate Icon award from Dr Dre at the 25th annual BET (Black Entertainment Television) Awards. — Reuters pic Presented by Stevie Wonder, Foxx accepted his award and reflected on his recovery journey after having a stroke in 2023. 'I gotta be honest, when I saw the in memoriam, I was like, 'Man, that could have been me',' he said. Another honour included the best female hip hop artist award for rising rapper Doechii. 'Trump is using military forces to stop protest,' Doechii said in her acceptance speech, addressing the anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles, where the National Guard and US Marines are being deployed. 'I want y'all to consider what kind of government it appears to be, when every time we exercise our democratic rights to protest, the military is deployed against us,' she added. — Reuters


New Straits Times
14 hours ago
- New Straits Times
#SHOWBIZ: Sly Stone, frontman of iconic 1960s funk band, dies at 82
WASHINGTON: Sly Stone, the driving force behind Sly and the Family Stone, a multiracial American band whose boiling mix of rock, soul and psychedelia embodied 1960s idealism and helped popularize funk music, has died at the age of 82, his family said on Monday. Stone died after a battle with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other health issues, a statement from his family said. "While we mourn his absence, we take solace in knowing that his extraordinary musical legacy will continue to resonate and inspire for generations to come," the statement said. Stone was perhaps best known for his performance in 1969 at the historic Woodstock music festival, the hippie culture's coming-out party. His group was a regular on the US music charts in the late 1960s and 1970s, with hits such as "Dance to the Music," "I Want to Take You Higher", "Family Affair", "Everyday People", "If You Want Me to Stay", and "Hot Fun in the Summertime". But he later fell on hard times and became addicted to cocaine, never staging a successful comeback. The confident and mercurial Stone played a leading role in introducing funk, an Afrocentric style of music driven by grooves and syncopated rhythms, to a broader audience. James Brown had forged the elements of funk before Stone founded his band in 1966, but Stone's brand of funk drew new listeners. It was celebratory, eclectic, psychedelic and rooted in the counterculture of the late 1960s. "They had the clarity of Motown but the volume of Jimi Hendrix or The Who," Parliament-Funkadelic frontman George Clinton, a contemporary of Stone and another pioneering figure in funk, once wrote. When Sly and the Family Stone performed, it felt like the band was "speaking to you personally," Clinton said. Stone made his California-based band, which included his brother Freddie and sister Rose, a symbol of integration. It included Black and white musicians, while women, including the late trumpeter Cynthia Robinson, had prominent roles. That was rare in a music industry often segregated along racial and gender lines. Stone, with his orb-like Afro hairstyle and wardrobe of vests, fringes and skin-tight leather, lived the life of a superstar. At the same time, he allowed bandmates to shine by fostering a collaborative, free-flowing approach that epitomized the 1960s hippie ethic. "I wanted to be able for everyone to get a chance to sweat," he told Rolling Stone magazine in 1970. DISC JOCKEY TO SINGER Born Sylvester Stewart in Denton, Texas, he moved as a child with his family to Northern California, where his father ran a janitorial business. He took the show business name Sly Stone and worked for a time as a radio disc jockey and a record producer for a small label before forming the band. The band's breakthrough came in 1968, when the title track to their second album, "Dance to the Music," cracked the Top 10. A year later, Sly and the Family Stone performed at Woodstock before dawn. Stone woke up a crowd of 400,000 people at the music festival, leading them in call-and-response style singing. Stone's music became less joyous after the idealistic 1960s, reflecting the polarization of the country after opposition to the Vietnam War and racial tensions triggered unrest on college campuses and in African American neighbourhoods in big US cities. In 1971, Sly and the Family Stone released "There's a Riot Goin' On", which became the band's only No. 1 album. Critics said the album's bleak tone and slurred vocals denoted the increasing hold of cocaine on Stone. But some called the record a masterpiece, a eulogy to the 1960s. In the early 1970s, Stone became erratic and missed shows. Some members left the band. But the singer was still a big enough star in 1974 to attract a crowd of 21,000 for his wedding to actress and model Kathy Silva at Madison Square Garden in New York. Silva filed for divorce less than a year later. Sly and the Family Stone's album releases in the late 1970s and early 1980s flopped, as Stone racked up drug possession arrests. But the music helped shape disco and, years later, hip-hop artists kept the band's legacy alive by frequently sampling its musical hooks. The band was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1993 and Stone was celebrated in an all-star tribute at the Grammy Awards in 2006. He sauntered on stage with a blond Mohawk but bewildered the audience by leaving mid-song. In 2011, after launching what would become a years-long legal battle to claim royalties he said were stolen, Stone was arrested for cocaine possession. That year, media reported Stone was living in a recreational vehicle parked on a street in South Los Angeles. Stone had a son, Sylvester, with Silva. He had two daughters, Novena Carmel, and Sylvette "Phunne" Stone, whose mother was bandmate Cynthia Robinson.