eMusic Review 0
In May 1969, when Sly and the Family Stone's fourth album was released, pop music desperately needed a convincing message of unity, and a mixed-gender, mixed-race, mixed-genre band of freaks from San Francisco was perfectly placed to deliver it. Stand! was a brilliant piece of politics: it didn't try to gloss over the racial tensions of its moment, it just acknowledged them and tried to move past them.
The title song universalizes a word with civil rights and gospel overtones; most of "Don't Call Me Nigger, Whitey" is cross-talking voices distorted to the point where they've abandoned words for pure tone; "Everyday People" reels off difference-based distastes to a nanny-nanny-boo-boo melody to underscore how dumb they are.
More enduringly, though, the album is a brilliant piece of music. The band's trick of alternating singers, line by line, to give the effect of a crowd spontaneously bursting into song is still galvanizing. "I Want To Take You Higher," a single-chord pulse with uncountable whirling chants and solos and ululations layered on top of it, is everything good about funk and psychedelic rock at the same time.
Within a year or so later, Sly Stone and his mortal shell Sylvester Stewart would start to confront… read more »