Sly & the Family Stone: An Oral History
English
By (author): Joel Selvin
Their music changed pop history, but weve never known much about the people who made ituntil now.
...a first-hand account of both the kaleidoscopic talent that drove Stone to the top and attracted so many people to him, and the madness that he soon descended into and never truly returned from, a victim of ego, drug abuse sycophants and the era.... It amounts to a definitive history of one of the rock generations greatest and most tragic artists. Jem Aswad, Variety, The Best Music Books of 2022
the musical trajectory of Sly & The Family Stone, and especially its namesake and leader, Sly Stone (born Sylvester Stewart), makes even the most shocking episode of Behind the Music look like Nickelodeon programming. Esteemed music journo Joel Selvin chronicles the good, the bad, the ugly (and the really ugly), in a new reissue of his 1998 book, Sly & The Family Stone: An Oral History. Bob Ruggiero, Houston Press
Sly Stone shook the foundations of soul and turned it into a brand new sound that influenced and liberated musicians as varied as Miles Davis, Stevie Wonder, and Herbie Hancock. His groupconsisting of Blacks and whites, men and womensymbolized the Woodstock generation and crossed over to dominate pop charts with anthems like Everyday People, Dance to the Music, and I Want to Take You Higher.
Award-winning journalist and bestselling author Joel Selvin weaves an epic American tale from the voices of the people around this funk phenomenon: Slys parents, his family members and band members (sometimes one and the same), and rock figures including Grace Slick, Sal Valentino, Bobby Womack, Mickey Hart, Clive Davis, Bobby Freeman, and many more. In their own words, they candidly share the triumphs and tragedies of one of the most influential musical groups ever formeddifferent strokes from the immensely talented folks who were there when it all happened.
Joel Selvin, the veteran music critic of the San Francisco Chronicle, published a thoroughgoing, book-length oral history of the group in 1998 that is as disturbing and chilling a version as you'll ever find of the dashed 60s dream narrative: idealism giving way to disillusionment, soft drugs giving way to hard, ferment to rot. David Kamp, Sly Stones Higher Power Vanity Fair, August 2007
Available for the first time in years, Sly & the Family Stone: An Oral History, is an unflinching look at the rise and fall one of musics most enigmatic figures. See more
...a first-hand account of both the kaleidoscopic talent that drove Stone to the top and attracted so many people to him, and the madness that he soon descended into and never truly returned from, a victim of ego, drug abuse sycophants and the era.... It amounts to a definitive history of one of the rock generations greatest and most tragic artists. Jem Aswad, Variety, The Best Music Books of 2022
the musical trajectory of Sly & The Family Stone, and especially its namesake and leader, Sly Stone (born Sylvester Stewart), makes even the most shocking episode of Behind the Music look like Nickelodeon programming. Esteemed music journo Joel Selvin chronicles the good, the bad, the ugly (and the really ugly), in a new reissue of his 1998 book, Sly & The Family Stone: An Oral History. Bob Ruggiero, Houston Press
Sly Stone shook the foundations of soul and turned it into a brand new sound that influenced and liberated musicians as varied as Miles Davis, Stevie Wonder, and Herbie Hancock. His groupconsisting of Blacks and whites, men and womensymbolized the Woodstock generation and crossed over to dominate pop charts with anthems like Everyday People, Dance to the Music, and I Want to Take You Higher.
Award-winning journalist and bestselling author Joel Selvin weaves an epic American tale from the voices of the people around this funk phenomenon: Slys parents, his family members and band members (sometimes one and the same), and rock figures including Grace Slick, Sal Valentino, Bobby Womack, Mickey Hart, Clive Davis, Bobby Freeman, and many more. In their own words, they candidly share the triumphs and tragedies of one of the most influential musical groups ever formeddifferent strokes from the immensely talented folks who were there when it all happened.
Joel Selvin, the veteran music critic of the San Francisco Chronicle, published a thoroughgoing, book-length oral history of the group in 1998 that is as disturbing and chilling a version as you'll ever find of the dashed 60s dream narrative: idealism giving way to disillusionment, soft drugs giving way to hard, ferment to rot. David Kamp, Sly Stones Higher Power Vanity Fair, August 2007
Available for the first time in years, Sly & the Family Stone: An Oral History, is an unflinching look at the rise and fall one of musics most enigmatic figures. See more
Current price
€17.58
Original price
€18.50
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