Sly Stone, the US musician who lit up
generations of dancefloors with his gloriously funky and often socially
conscious songwriting, has died aged 82. "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," a family statement reads. "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."
With his group Sly and the Family Stone, Stone
tied together soul, psychedelic rock and gospel into fervent, uplifting
songs, and became one of the key progenitors of the 1970s funk sound
alongside James Brown and others. The group's
hits include 3 US No 1 singles – Everyday People, Thank You
(Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin) and Family Affair – plus Dance to the
Music, I Want to Take You Higher, Hot Fun in the Summertime and more. The 1971 album There's a Riot Goin' On,
a moody reflection on civil rights and the corrupted idealism of the
postwar era created predominantly by Stone apart from the rest of his
band, is widely regarded as one of the greatest of the 20th century.
Born as a Sylvester Stewart to a Pentecostal religious family in Texas in 1943,
Stone grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. His first music came in a
gospel quartet with three siblings, the Stewart Four, who put out a
locally released single in 1952. As a young man he became well known in the
fertile musical scene of countercultural San Francisco: a
multi-instrumentalist and radio DJ who had a series of local bands and
worked as a producer for garage rock and psychedelia groups such as the
Beau Brummels.
In 1966, he fused his band Sly
and the Stoners with his brother Freddie's group Freddie and the Stone
Souls, to form Sly and the Family Stone. Their breakthrough came the
following year with Dance to the Music, and success was fully
established by their fourth album in two years, Stand! (1969),
which eventually sold more than three million copies. The band's
stylistic and racial diversity attracted a broad audience, and they
played both of the defining music festivals of 1969, Woodstock and the
Harlem cultural festival.
Hits continued more
fitfully during the early 1970s, and the group – notorious for no-shows
at concerts – slowly fractured amid increasing drug use. Stone would
record There’s a Riot Goin' On predominantly on his own, applying one of
the earliest uses of a drum machine; albums such as Fresh!, with its
Richard Avedon portrait of Stone on the cover, were also primarily his
work. The band split entirely in 1975, though Stone continued to use the
band name for solo releases.
Despite having laid the rhythmic groundwork for
disco, Stone couldn't sustain his career in the late 1970s, and his
addiction to cocaine worsened. He continued to perform with peers such
as Funkadelic and Bobby Womack, but album releases dried up after 1982’s
Ain’t But the One Way.
He
was arrested in 1983 for cocaine possession, and for driving under the
influence of cocaine in 1987, prompting him to flee California for
Connecticut. He was apprehended two years later, and sentenced to 55
days in prison, five years’ probation and a fine. His difficulties meant
that he was little seen during the 1990s, and it wasn't until 2006 that
he performed in public again, at a tribute to Sly and the Family Stone
at the Grammy awards. He performed with the
Family Stone on a tour the following year, but often erratically, and
made a lacklustre appearance at 2010's Coachella festival. His final
album, I’m Back! Family & Friends, featuring re-recordings of old
songs alongside three new tracks, was released in 2011.
Back in 2015 he was awarded $5m
in a lawsuit against his former manager and attorney, successfully
arguing that royalty payments had been diverted from him, though he
ultimately wasn't awarded the money due to the terms of a 1989 royalties
agreement with a production company. Difficulties with royalties meant
that Stone spent many of his latter years in poverty; in 2011 he was
living in a campervan in a residential area of Los Angeles –
voluntarily, he claimed – and relying on a retired couple for food. “Sly
was a monumental figure, a groundbreaking innovator, and a true pioneer
who redefined the landscape of pop, funk, and rock music,” the family
statement added. “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.”
Stone
was married from 1974 to 1976 to Kathy Silva, with whom he had a son,
Sylvester Jr. He later had two further children: Sylvyette with Cynthia Robinson, and Novena Carmel.
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