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Black America Web
an hour ago
- Entertainment
- Black America Web
Funk Pioneer Sly Stone Dead At 82, Social Media Remembers His Greatness
Source: Michael Putland / Getty Sylvester Stone, who, along with his band The Family Stone, had a major impact on rock, funk, R&B, and hip-hop music, has passed away. He was 82. His family says that the musician passed away after a health battle that included COPD, a progressive lung disease. 'After a prolonged battle with COPD and other underlying health issues, Sly passed away peacefully, surrounded by his three children, his closest friend, and his extended family,' his family said in a statement obtained by Variety. '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.' In the '60s, Sly and the Family Stone released groundbreaking albums including Dance to the Music and There's a Riot Goin' On from 1967 to 1974. The multi-racial band included his brother, Freddie, on guitar and vocals, and his sister, Rose, on keyboard and piano, as well as Cynthia Robinson on trumpet and Larry Graham on bass. Their big hits included 'Dance to the Music,' 'Everyday People,' and 'I Want to Take You Higher.' Not only was the band one of the first of its era to feature both male and female instrumentalists, but it was also one of the first to include both men and women. Stone, born Sylvester Stewart in Denton, Texas, on March 15, 1943, moved to Northern California with his family as a child. His musical career started with his siblings as the gospel group the Stewart Four. After studying music at Vallejo College, he became a radio personality at San Francisco's KSOL Radio and then moved on to producing artists at Autumn Records. He formed Sly and the Family Stone in 1966, and they soon reached the pinnacle of the music world in an era when rock and psychedelia dominated. They combined genres, incorporating funk, R&B, and soul, to craft their own unique sound in a world where rock stars were predominantly white and male. They, along with Jimi Hendrix and others, played the legendary Woodstock Festival in 1969. The band was considered a direct influence on Prince's most commercially successful group, The Revolution, with which he performed during the Purple Rain era. It also included Black and white musicians and women who played instruments. Graham played in The New Power Generation, Prince's band in the 1990s, and remained connected to him throughout the latter part of his life. A proposed collaboration that Stone mentioned in his 2023 memoir never materialized, but the men shared mutual admiration for each other, and Prince often played covers of Stone's music in his live shows. Hip hop musicians sampled Stone as well. Dr. Dre and Snoop used 'Sing a Simple Song' for 'Deep Cover.' KRS used it as well for 'Sound of Da Police.' LL Cool J's song, 'Mama Said Knock You Out,' incorporates 'Trip To Your Heart.' Sly and the Family Stone were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. Earlier this year, Questlove of The Roots directed a documentary on Stone called Sly Lives! (aka The Burden of Black Genius) for Hulu. Stone's career was derailed by drug abuse after the original Sly and the Family Stone broke up unofficially around 1975. He was at one time living in a van and was homeless, then spent years out of the public eye. However, Stone resurfaced in recent years, playing select live shows and contributing to the writing of his memoir and the documentary. His family's statement concluded, 'Sly was a monumental figure, a groundbreaking innovator, and a true pioneer who redefined the landscape of pop, funk, and rock music. His iconic songs have left an indelible mark on the world, and his influence remains undeniable. In a testament to his enduring creative spirit, Sly recently completed the screenplay for his life story, a project we are eager to share with the world in due course, which follows a memoir published in 2024.' Funk Pioneer Sly Stone Dead At 82, Social Media Remembers His Greatness was originally published on Black America Web Featured Video CLOSE
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Sly Stone, Family Stone Architect Who Fused Funk, Rock, and Soul, Dead at 82
Sly Stone, one of the most influential and groundbreaking musicians of the late Sixties and early Seventies who smashed the boundaries of rock, pop, funk, and soul, died on Monday. He was 82. The cause of death was a 'prolonged battle with COPD and other underlying health issues,' according to a statement by his family. 'It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of our beloved dad, Sly Stone of Sly and the Family Stone,' Stone's family said. 'Sly passed away peacefully, surrounded by his three children, his closest friend, and his extended family. 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.' More from Rolling Stone Wayne Lewis, Founding Member of Atlantic Starr, Dead at 68 George Wendt's Cause of Death Revealed Hear Sly and the Family Stone Rock a Small Club in 1967 With Funky 'I Gotta Go Now' The family added that Stone 'recently completed the screenplay for his life story, a project we are eager to share with the world in due course.' At the peak of his success, when hits like 'Dance to the Music' and 'Everyday People' were high on the charts, the wildly inventive musician and singer presented a glowingly optimistic image in step with the times, bringing together Black and white audiences, uplifting crowds with electrifying shows. But the unpredictability that was the core of his genius gave way to a long decline, as his personal demons destroyed what he had once been. Born Sylvester Stewart in Texas in 1943, Stone started making music with his siblings as a child: The Stewart Four (Sylvester, his sisters Rose and Vaetta, and his brother Freddie) made their first single, 'On the Battlefield,' in 1952. He moved to California with his family as a kid, and later became a familiar voice in the Bay Area's music scene. As a staff producer at Autumn Records, he put together hits like Bobby Freeman's 'C'mon and Swim'; he also produced 'Somebody to Love' by Grace Slick's pre-Jefferson Airplane band, the Great Society. He was also a DJ on KSOL and KDIA, and later noted that 'in radio, I found out about a lot of things I don't like. Like, I think there shoudn't be 'Black radio.' Just radio. Everybody be a part of everything.' Stone's own band, Sly & the Family Stone, came together over the course of 1966 and 1967. It really was a family of sorts: Sly and his siblings Rose and Freddie were joined by cousins Greg Errico and Jerry Martini, as well as bassist Larry Graham and trumpeter Cynthia Robinson. The Family Stone's breakthrough hit was 1968's 'Dance to the Music,' in which their voices and instruments, high and low, each took a turn in the spotlight. A racially mixed band with male and female members, playing soul-infused rock together was a rare sight at the time — a utopian vision of what pop music could be. Hits like 'Life,' 'Stand!,' 'Everyday People,' and 'Hot Fun in the Summertime' followed: all anthems of solidarity and joy that acknowledged the pain and frustration of the times and encouraged their audiences to transcend it. Sly & the Family Stone's soaring performance of 'I Want to Take You Higher' at Woodstock in 1969 was a triumph of that era, and the band finished the decade with an enormous hit: 'Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin),' whose joyful funk masked the existential horror and lacerating sarcasm of its lyrics. Their next album was supposed to be called The Incredible and Unpredictable Sly & the Family Stone — a sideways reference to Stone's habit of blowing off gigs. He finally released his masterpiece, There's a Riot Goin' On, in late 1971. Recorded with help from Bobby Womack and an early drum machine, it was a bleak, scarred, wobbly vision — the soured remains of the Sixties dream. 'I think that's kind of his like, help the medicine go down approach,' Questlove told Rolling Stone in March. 'He paints a very dark, lyric, paranoia, self-confessional thing almost in every record, but it's so happy-sounding.' The Family Stone disintegrated over the next few years, as Sly sank deep into drug abuse and became even more erratic. He married Kathy Silva on stage in front of a crowd of 20,000 at a sold-out Madison Square Garden show in 1974, but within months, the band had broken up, and the marriage, which produced a son, Sylvester Jr., didn't last much longer. 'He beat me, held me captive, and wanted me to be in ménages à trois,' Silva said years later. 'I didn't want that world of drugs and weirdness.' Sylvia left in 1976. Sly had two more children, Sylvette and Novena Carmel. Sly persevered, making one attempt after another to win back the public: His 1976 album was called Heard Ya Missed Me, Well I'm Back, and the one that followed it three years later Back on the Right Track. After 1982's half-finished Ain't But the One Way, he never released another album of new, original material, despite persistent rumors that he was working on the magical record that would get his career back on its feet. He collaborated with George Clinton, on whom he'd been a huge influence; he turned up for guest vocals on records by the Bar-Kays and Earth, Wind and Fire. Stone's personal troubles continued. He was arrested for cocaine possession multiple times in the 1980s, and he served 14 months in a rehab center beginning in 1989. Between Sly & the Family Stone's 1993 induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and the 2006 tribute to them at the Grammy Awards (for which Sly appeared for a few minutes with an enormous blond mohawk, then wandered off), he all but vanished. Interviewed by Vanity Fair in 2007, he claimed he had 'a library' of new material, 'a hundred and some songs, or maybe 200.' In 2011, the New York Post reported that he was living in a camper van in Los Angeles; that same year, he released I'm Back! Family & Friends, mostly lackluster new rerecordings of his Sixties classics. But the specter of his glory years remained. Stone's great 1960s and early-Seventies records inspired Miles Davis and Herbie Hancock to incorporate electric instruments and funk grooves into jazz; Prince and the Red Hot Chili Peppers and the Roots have all covered Sly & the Family Stone songs. A little over a year after the release of Stone's autobiography, Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin), a documentary, 2025's Sly Lives! (aka the Burden of Black Genius), reexamined Stone's legacy. The film, directed by Questlove, focused on how Stone's legacy and influence continues to reverberate through popular music along with how Stone carried the weight of that influence personally until it became a burden. 'My intent was always to use Sly Stone to tell our story, my story, D'Angelo's story, Lauryn Hill's story, Frank Ocean's story,' Questlove told Rolling Stone. 'When you're talking about 'blowing it,' a lot of times the fear of failing or the fear of returning to where you came from — which is the very bottom — causes you anxiety about your future, and then causes you to fumble it.' The film featured commentary from George Clinton, Chaka Khan, D'Angelo, Q-Tip, and Family Stone members Larry Graham and Jerry Martini, among several others. 'I feel like a piece of my heart left with Sly. We were best friends for 60 years. He credits me with starting the band, but it was his musical genius that made music history,' Martini said in a statement to Rolling Stone. 'He will always be in my heart and I will continue to celebrate his music with the Family Stone. We extend our sincere love, condolences and prayers to his children and his family. Rest well my dear friend. You will be greatly missed.' Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked


The Sun
2 hours ago
- Entertainment
- The Sun
Funk-rock pioneer Sly Stone dead at 82
FUNK master and innovator Sly Stone, whose music drove a civil rights-inflected soul explosion in the 1960s, sparking influential albums but also a slide into drug addiction, has died, his family said Monday. He was 82. The multi-instrumentalist frontman for Sly and the Family Stone -- rock's first racially integrated, mixed-gender lineup -- 'passed away peacefully, surrounded by his three children, his closest friend and his extended family,' after a prolonged battle with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other health issues, his family said in a statement. '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,' it added. With his vibrant on-stage energy, killer hooks and lyrics that often decried prejudice, Stone became a superstar, releasing pivotal records that straddled musical genres and performing a set that enraptured the crowd at Woodstock. But he retreated to the shadows in the early 1970s and his personal struggles ultimately led to the group's disintegration. He emerged sporadically for unfulfilling concert tours, erratic TV appearances and a flopped 2006 reunion on the Grammy Awards stage. An effervescent hybrid of psychedelic soul, hippie consciousness, bluesy funk and rock built on Black gospel, Stone's music proved to be a melodic powerhouse that attracted millions during a golden age of exploratory pop -- until it fell apart in a spiral of drug use. Over the course of just five years, his diverse sound cooperative left an indelible impact on American and world music, from the group's debut hit 'Dance to the Music' in 1967 and their first of three number one songs, 'Everyday People' a year later, to the 1970s rhythm and blues masterpiece 'If You Want Me To Stay.' For many, Sly was a musical genius creating the sound of the future. It was 'like seeing a Black version of the Beatles,' funk legend George Clinton told CBS News of his longtime friend's stage presence. 'He had the sensibility of the street, the church, and then like the qualities of a Motown,' Clinton added. 'He was all of that in one person.'


AsiaOne
4 hours ago
- Entertainment
- AsiaOne
Sly Stone, leader of 1960s funk band, dies at age 82, Entertainment News
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 popularise funk music, has died at the age of 82, his family said on Monday (June 9). 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. [embed] 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 epitomised 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 polarisation 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. [[nid:718655]]


San Francisco Chronicle
5 hours ago
- Entertainment
- San Francisco Chronicle
No, Sylvester Stallone isn't dead: Online confusion follows music legend Sly Stone's passing
Sylvester Stallone is very much alive, despite a wave of ' RIP Sylvester Stallone ' messages that flooded social media Monday, June 9. Stone, born Sylvester Stewart, was a central figure in shaping the sound of American funk and soul in the late 1960s and '70s. He died peacefully after a prolonged battle with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, his family said in a statement released Monday. The confusion stemmed from the nickname 'Sly,' which both men share. But their careers could hardly be more different. Stone, raised in Vallejo, was a musical innovator whose band broke racial and gender barriers. His hits — including 'Dance to the Music,' 'Family Affair' and 'Everyday People' — became anthems of a generation. His childhood nickname 'Sly' came from a misspelling of 'Sylvester.' Stallone, by contrast, is a Hollywood icon, known for portraying cinematic tough guys like boxer Rocky Balboa and soldier John Rambo. The actor is a vocal Donald Trump supporter, who last year called the anti-DEI president the 'second George Washington.' The 78-year-old celebrity has made no public statement about the mix-up, though fans were quick to set the record straight.