Stand

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Stand album cover
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Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 57:58

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Douglas Wolk

eMusic Contributor

Douglas Wolk writes about pop music and comic books for Time, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Wired and elsewhere. He's the author of Reading Comics: How Gra...more »

06.30.09
Everything good about funk and psychedelic rock at the same time
2007 | Label: Epic/Legacy

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 »

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The Best

beaglesayarf

Sly and the Family were the perfect union of what the hippie movement was supposed to be about. A mixed raced band urging us to Dance to the Music! Every album was like a concept album yet every song stood on it's own! That's why this album and their entire catalog remain classics 40 years later! If you want unbridled soul, get this!

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Stand Up For This Classic!!!!

isaacmusicman

Man, to be honest with you, I really do not know what to say here. Every song is tight, and by this time Sly and his Family Stone could not help but to show how good they were together. In fact you can almost say that this was the best thing to happen to them and the worse thing to happen to Sly, because after this and their spellbounding performace at Woodstock, Sly would never be the same (in the mind that is, not the music). He still would get better than even this, but right here is where he and the band made people Stand up for this classic!!!

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The Best of 60's Rock and Soul

ed.casper

There is so much excellent music here, it's unfair to one song to point out another. Catchy, upbeat, smart, intense. This album is a MUST for anyone who is serious about music.

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In my all time top 10

wcmcr

I bought this album at the same time as Janis Joplin's Kosmic Blues and to my surprise this was the one I couldn' take off the turntable - not to say Kosmic was not amazing but Stand just kind of forced itself on you - this is really timeless funk and can always get people moving. Sly just burned out way too soon.

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agreed--a classic

rocampion

very cool that this is available on e-music. a classic from sly just before he unraveled during/after riot"; in particular, tracks 1,4,5, and 6 are a must for any fan.

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Better Than OK

iSmellBubblegum

Excellent, if you like great, visionary, classic, genre-bending music.

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They Say All Music Guide

Stand! is the pinnacle of Sly & the Family Stone’s early work, a record that represents a culmination of the group’s musical vision and accomplishment. Life hinted at this record’s boundless enthusiasm and blurred stylistic boundaries, yet everything simply gels here, resulting in no separation between the astounding funk, effervescent irresistible melodies, wildly psychedelicized guitars, and deep rhythms that were tight, yet expansive, popping in knotty cadences while never coming close to losing the groove. Add to this a sharpened sense of pop songcraft (that was developing into a sophisticated art form by this time), elastic and instinctual band interplay, and a flowering of Sly’s political consciousness that didn’t need to be hidden by calls for dancing and other social forms, and the result is utterly stunning. Yes, the jams (“Don’t Call Me Nigger, Whitey,” “Sex Machine”) wind up meandering ever so slightly, but they’re surrounded by utter brilliance, from the rousing call to arms of “Stand!” to the unification anthem “Everyday People” to the unstoppable “I Want to Take You Higher.” All of it sounds like the Family Stone, thanks not just to the communal lead vocals but to the brilliant interplay of instruments, voices, and rhythms assembled so tightly. Each track is distinct, emphasizing a different side of the band’s musical personality. As a result, Stand! winds up as a creation that is infectious and informative, invigorating and thought-provoking — stimulating in every sense of the word. Few records of its time touched it, and Sly topped it only by offering its opposite the next time out. [Legacy's gorgeously remastered reissue of the album includes five bonus cuts. There are mono single versions of the title track and "I Want to Take You Higher," as well as a beautiful unissued single version of "You Can Make It If You Try," a freaky instrumental called "My Brain (Zig-Zag)," and the unreleased "Soul Clappin' II."] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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