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Reply #60 posted 07/20/15 2:18pm

SoulAlive

madhattter said:

The new "Live At The Filmore East"is an example of how tight their sound was.

I gotta order that!

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Reply #61 posted 07/20/15 8:26pm

madhattter

SoulAlive said:

madhattter said:

The new "Live At The Filmore East"is an example of how tight their sound was.

I gotta order that!

"Back on the right track" and "High On You" are very underated albums.

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Reply #62 posted 07/21/15 6:23am

214

Ego101 said:

ha ha.. you know wrong my friend.

http://forums.stevehoffman.tv/threads/sly-and-the-family-stone-fresh-cd-first-issue-alternate-mix.165129/

214 said:

Fresh outtakes which ones as far as i know there are no outtakes

Those are not outtakes, they're alternate mixes what i'm talkin about is other songs recorded during those sessions and planned to be included in the album but didnĀ“t make it

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Reply #63 posted 07/21/15 7:02am

HardcoreJollie
s

avatar

madhattter said:

SoulAlive said:

I gotta order that!

"Back on the right track" and "High On You" are very underated albums.

It is a crime High on You is not easily available on domestic release. His erratic behavior combined with major tradewind changes in the music business particularly with disco swooping in led to those mid to late 1970s albums being all but kicked to the curb. Even Small Talk suffered some of that fate. Now, we can really appreciate just how good he still was at that point. Can't help but wonder if those works had been better accepted and more successful if his total descent into drug-addicted reclusiveness and anonymity might have been avoided or at least lessened, which could have given us better output for some of the 1980s at least.

If you've got funk, you've got style.
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Reply #64 posted 07/21/15 11:22am

CoolMF

Personal favorite is Fresh but I understand why others choose Riot or Stand as #1.

DISCLAIMER- I got into Fresh by way of compact disc, not vinyl, so I've always appreciated the way Fresh flows from start to finish. As opposed to Riot and Stand, I don't know which song started "side 2" on Fresh.

By the way, I downloaded "Live At The Filmore" today. I'm only halfway through the 1st show and it's tight as fuck- mainly because I've never heard live versions of these songs and these shows were recorded sometime around the Life period. Also, I wasn't prepared for the download to contain 4 complete shows. Still, it's well worth the money!!!

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Reply #65 posted 07/21/15 1:04pm

HardcoreJollie
s

avatar

For me the most impressive single work from Sly might be Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin). That was so insanely funky, original, unique, from a different place and ahead of its time that it boggles my mind. Listen to what else was on the airwaves before and around the time of its release and there is nothing else anything like it. I remember becoming familiar with it for the first time in the late 1970s and being in disbelief of when it was released because it sounded brand new still and just far different from anything else of its era.

If you've got funk, you've got style.
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Reply #66 posted 07/21/15 1:51pm

madhattter

HardcoreJollies said:

madhattter said:

"Back on the right track" and "High On You" are very underated albums.

It is a crime High on You is not easily available on domestic release. His erratic behavior combined with major tradewind changes in the music business particularly with disco swooping in led to those mid to late 1970s albums being all but kicked to the curb. Even Small Talk suffered some of that fate. Now, we can really appreciate just how good he still was at that point. Can't help but wonder if those works had been better accepted and more successful if his total descent into drug-addicted reclusiveness and anonymity might have been avoided or at least lessened, which could have given us better output for some of the 1980s at least.

You are exactly right ! Buy the way, there is a song on the new "Live At The Filmore East" called "St. James Infirmary". you can hear it on YouTube. It reminds me of something from Miles Davis! It sounds like Cynthia Robinson on trumpet showcasing her skills!!

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Reply #67 posted 07/24/15 12:43am

BombSquad

avatar

oh boy, tough question... for me this is mainly a tie between Stand an Fresh

but forced at gunpoint I'd probably pick Fresh

Has anyone tried unplugging the United States and plugging it back in?
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Reply #68 posted 07/24/15 2:22pm

Slave2daGroove

Fresh is my go to, the rest are "must owns" for the deep cuts.

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Reply #69 posted 07/24/15 7:26pm

HardcoreJollie
s

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Just got filled in on the new Fillmore live set. Talk about energy! The chugging rhythm section is a force of nature. Pricey for the CD set but download is reasonable.Also, any y'all hip to Finding the Funk documentary from last year? Sly, such as he is, is interviewed in it. Cool flick at any rate. http://www.okayplayer.com...video.html
If you've got funk, you've got style.
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Reply #70 posted 07/30/15 3:39pm

Hamad

avatar

HardcoreJollies said:

Just got filled in on the new Fillmore live set. Talk about energy! The chugging rhythm section is a force of nature. Pricey for the CD set but download is reasonable.Also, any y'all hip to Finding the Funk documentary from last year? Sly, such as he is, is interviewed in it. Cool flick at any rate. http://www.okayplayer.com...video.html

Thanks for sharing.

In regards to his innovative sound in "Thank You", wouldn't "Dynamite" be considered the real first disco song too? Even though it came in the late 60s, the bassline reminds me so much of the disco hits that were released 10 years later.

Every saint has a past, and every sinner has a future...

Twitter: https://twitter.com/QLH82
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Reply #71 posted 07/30/15 3:49pm

kidmelody2012

The one with Jesse Johnson on it!

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Reply #72 posted 07/31/15 7:19am

madhattter

kidmelody2012 said:

The one with Jesse Johnson on it!

"crazzy" was the name of the song with Jesse Johnson and it was the last charting single for him. I havent yet heard anyone of our modern artis utilizing his vocal skills as of yet.

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Reply #73 posted 07/31/15 2:10pm

SPYZFAN1

Speaking of Sly, does anyone know what ever became of the two documentaries that were supposed to be released in 2010-11? "Searching For Sly" was one of them.

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Reply #74 posted 08/01/15 1:50am

NorthC

SPYZFAN1 said:

Speaking of Sly, does anyone know what ever became of the two documentaries that were supposed to be released in 2010-11? "Searching For Sly" was one of them.


Dutch filmmaker Willem Alkema recently said in a tv interview that he's working on a second part of his documentary Coming Back For More. So he is still in touch with Sly.
[Edited 8/1/15 2:20am]
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