TRENDING NEWS
Back to news
17 Jun, 2025
Share:
Sly Stone: The funk-rock visionary who became an addict and recluse
@Source: theweek.com
SUBSCRIBE & SAVE Less than $3 per week View Profile The Explainer Talking Points The Week Recommends Newsletters From the Magazine The Week Junior Food & Drink Personal Finance All Categories Newsletter sign up Culture & Life Sly Stone: The funk-rock visionary who became an addict and recluse Stone, an eccentric whose songs of uplift were tempered by darker themes of struggle and disillusionment, had a fall as steep as his rise Newsletter sign up Sylvester Stewart "became a familiar voice in the Bay Area's music scene" (Image credit: Getty Images) The Week US 17 June 2025 Sly Stone was a musical alchemist, combining soul, funk, and psychedelic rock with elements of gospel, jazz, and Latin music to create the new sound of the 1960s. With his prodigious Afro and platform boots—a look that one critic described as "the wildest pimp on the block"—he was an onstage dynamo as leader of the multiracial, mixed-gender band Sly and the Family Stone. From 1968 to 1971, the group scored hits with buoyant songs such as "Dance to the Music," "Everyday People," "Hot Fun in the Summertime," and "I Want to Take You Higher," and influenced artists such as Prince, Stevie Wonder, and Miles Davis. But Stone, an eccentric whose songs of uplift were tempered by darker themes of struggle and disillusionment, had a fall as steep as his rise. He descended into drug abuse and bankruptcy, spending most of his later years living in a camper van in Los Angeles. A New York Post reporter who located him in 2011 described him as paranoid and disheveled. "Tell everybody, please, to give me a job, play my music," he said then. "I'm tired of all this shit, man." Raised in Vallejo, Calif., Sylvester Stewart was a musical prodigy who "started making music with his siblings as a child," said Rolling Stone. Their father, a janitor, was also a Pentecostal deacon, and the siblings sang gospel harmonies, recording their first single when Sylvester was 9. Adept at keyboards, guitar, bass, and drums, he studied music at a junior college and DJed at a local radio station under the name Sly Stone, breaking the R&B format by playing white acts like the Beatles along with soul and funk. He got a job as a staff producer for Autumn Records and "became a familiar voice in the Bay Area's music scene" before starting the band in 1966 that would become Sly and the Family Stone. They were men and women, black and white—and two were Sly's siblings. Their 1967 debut album "vanished without a trace," said The Telegraph (U.K.). Prodded by his label to make something more commercial, Stone released Dance to the Music, an "irresistibly pro-pulsive funk collage" whose eponymous single shot to the Top 10. The band became known for high-octane live shows, and "a string of Top 20 successes followed." In 1969, they released a triumphant fourth album, said The Times (U.K.). "With its thrilling mix of rousing horns, acid-rock guitars, and funky bass lines," Stand! yielded four hits, including the smash "Everyday People." The band's reputation soared further after their "ecstatic" 4 a.m. Woodstock performance, widely hailed as a festival highlight. Subscribe to The Week Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives. SUBSCRIBE & SAVE Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. "Then it all started to unravel," said The Washington Post. Strung out on cocaine and PCP, Stone missed a third of his shows in 1970. They all moved into a Beverly Hills mansion where recording sessions became "nonstop parties," with a drug-addled Stone flanked by "mobsters doubling as bodyguards." Stone "obsessively" overdubbed and erased tracks, degrading the master tape—allegedly, he would often tell a girl she could record backing vocals and then, once he'd bedded her, tape over her track. The result, There's a Riot Goin' On (1971), had a "bleak, dissonant" sound, said the Los Angeles Times. It "was the last significant music Stone released." He grew more isolated and erratic, and in 1974 married his 19-year-old girlfriend onstage at Madison Square Garden—she promptly divorced him, claiming abuse. Stone alternated drug arrests with stints in rehab and disappeared from the public eye. In later years he "performed intermittently, and often bizarrely," said The New York Times. He surfaced at the 2006 Grammys sporting a "towering bleach-blond Mohawk," playing keyboards on "I Want to Take You Higher" but wandering offstage mid-song. In a shambolic 2010 appearance at Coachella, he told the audience he'd been kidnapped and would sue his manager. But in recent years "his musical legacy was fortified" when Questlove featured him in a 2021 documentary; another film followed this year. Finally drug-free, Stone moved into a house, wrote a memoir, and passed the time listening to records. Health problems had stopped him from recording, he said in 2023. But they "haven't stopped me from hearing music." Sign up for Today's Best Articles in your inbox A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over. The Week US Social Links Navigation Unreal: A quantum leap in AI video Google's new Veo 3 is making it harder to distinguish between real videos and AI-generated ones Travel ban: It's back and it's bigger Trump revives a controversial travel ban, targeting mostly poor, nonwhite countries 'Big Oil does not accept responsibility' Instant Opinion Opinion, comment and editorials of the day You might also like Some of the best music and singing holidays in 2025 The Week Recommends From singing lessons in the Peak District to two-week courses at Chetham's Piano Summer School 6 bold homes for maximalists Featuring a restored Queen Anne Victorian in California and a sculpture studio turned townhome in New York City Heiress: Sargent's American Portraits – a 'revelatory' glimpse into the Belle Époque The Week Recommends Kenwood exhibition shines a light on the American 'dollar princesses' who married into the English aristocracy Gordon Corera chooses his favourite spy novels The Week Recommends The journalist picks works by James Wolff, Graham Greene and John le Carré Ballerina: 'a total creative power cut' for the John Wick creators Talking Point Ana de Armas can't do much with her 'lethally dull' role Properties of the week: gorgeous Georgian houses The Week Recommends Featuring homes in Norfolk, Suffolk and Kent Homework: Geoff Dyer brings 'a whole world' to life in his memoir The Week Recommends Author writes about his experiences with 'humour and tenderness' Critics' choice: Restaurants that write their own rules A low-light dining experience, a James Beard Award-winning restaurant, and Hawaiian cuisine with a twist View More ▸ Contact Future's experts Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Advertise With Us The Week is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site. Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street
For advertisement: 510-931-9107
Copyright © 2025 Usfijitimes. All Rights Reserved.