Anthology

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (86 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 73:22

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Not The Best One, But Still Good

isaacmusicman

I had this one before the Essential collection, and it was at the time the best way to go. This was before Sony/BMG realized that they had to include more material from "There'a A Riot Going On". Still not bad at all, just not the best.

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Sly and The Family Stone - Anthology

dsims48912

Very good. I was happy to find a CD that had all of the older songs by Sly and The Family Stone that I like, plus some of the other songs that they did after that. I've been looking for this for a while now, glad to see that it's finally available

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poor sound quality

beatmeister

Avoid this one; go with the other greatest hits collection, 'The Essential Sly & The Family Stone' which is MUCH better sound quality.

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eMusic Features

Icon: Sly and The Family Stone

By Michaelangelo Matos

Maybe the most startling thing about Sly & the Family Stone's peak is how short it was. A mere four years elapsed from the Bay Area funk-rock septet's debut, A Whole New Thing, to the radical masterpiece, There's a Riot Goin 'On, which was recorded mostly by Sly alone. Granted, this arc coincided with the greatest mass-societal changes of 20th-century America, but it tells us plenty about Stone's singularity nevertheless. As a top-rated Bay Area DJ… more »

They Say All Media Guide

Anthology essentially replicates the previous collection Greatest Hits and adds singles from There’s a Riot Goin’ On and Fresh to the end of the album. Where Greatest Hits didn’t follow chronological order, Anthology presents every single in the order it was released — and, with the exception of the latter-day singles and the inclusion of “Don’t Call Me Nigger, Whitey,” that is the major difference between the two collections. Anthology goes for a sweeping, definitive overview, while Greatest Hits is a brief blast of 12 of the finest singles of the rock & roll era. Either compilation functions as an excellent introduction, but Anthology is more comprehensive, giving it the edge as a first purchase. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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