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Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010


28 сентября 2013. Разместил: ALLexxess
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Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010

Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics
5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010 ● Reupload


Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010


Performer:
Sly & The Family Stone
Box:
Original Album Classics (5CD Box Set Epic Records)
Albums:
1967 A Whole New Thing 1968 Dance To The Music
1968 Life 1969 Stand! 1971 There's A Riot Goin' On
Info:
Epic Records / Legacy Recordings / Sony Music Entertainment
© 2010 Sony Music Entertainment / Originally Released 1967, 1968, 1969, 1971
℗ 1995, 2006, 2010 Sony Music Entertainment
Made in the EU
Catalog Box: 88697770802
Catalog CDs:
88697770802CD1 / 88697770802CD2
88697770802CD3 / 88697770802CD4 / 88697770802CD5
Label Code: LC00199

Genre / Style: Soul / Funk / Psychedelic Soul / Rock
Released Year: 2010
[Format: FLAC / Level 8 (img + *cue + log, AccurateRip)
Covers: format PNG 600dpi, full scans
Size:
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Каждый CD можно скачать отдельно
Each CD can be downloaded separately

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Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010
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Диски упакованы в картонные конверты и вложены в коробку. Оформление картонных конвертов соотвествует оригинальному оформлению первых изданий виниловых пластинок.

Five CD set containing a quintet of albums from the R&B / Funk / Soul legend packaged in mini LP sleeves and housed in a slipcase. During the late '60s and early '70s, Sly Stone and his family of funkateers were one of the most popular outfits in the U.S. and beyond. Their blend of classic Soul and future Funk created the blueprint that many other bands still follow over four decades later. This box includes great albums like A Whole New Thing (1967), Dance To The Music (1968), Life (1968), Stand! (1969) and There's A Riot Goin' On (1971).
Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010


Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010


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ru.wikipedia.org
Sly & the Family Stone - существовавший в 1967-1975 годах музыкальный коллектив Слая Стоуна, игравший эклектичную музыку с преобладанием жесткого фанка, подчас с налётом психоделики. Это была первая группа в истории американской сцены, в которой на равных участвовали белые и чёрные, мужчины и женщины. Историки популярной музыки значение Sly & the Family Stone видят ещё и в том, что они привили музыке чернокожих (соул, фанк, хип-хоп) традицию социально-политического комментария. В 1993 году группа была включена в Зал славы рок-н-ролла. Группа была сформирована в начале 1967 г. в Сан-Франциско музыкантом Слаем Стоуном, который дал ей своё имя. Среди её участников оказалась и Синтия Робинсон, с которой Стоун за год до этого выступал в группе The Stoners. Что было совершенно нехарактерно для музыки того времени, участники группы происходили из совершенно различных этнических сред. Именно это выделяло их среди многочисленных калифорнийских коллективов «лета любви». Они были быстро замечены и получили контракт с местным лейблом Loadstone. Над записью дебютного альбома «A Whole New Thing» работали следующие музыканты:

Слай Стоун - вокал / Фред Стюарт -гитара, вокал / Ларри Грэм - бас, вокал
Грег Эррико - ударные / Джери Мартини - саксофон / Роузи Стоун - клавишные

В начале 1968 года вышел второй альбом группы, «Dance to the Music», заглавный трек с которого дошёл в поп-чартах США до первой десятки. В конце года группа записала свой самый большой хит, «Everyday People», взобравшийся в Billboard Hot 100 на 1-е место. Эта прославляющая этническое равенство песня стала визитной карточкой группы и обеспечила успех их 4-го альбома «Stand!» (1969). В 1969 году Sly & the Family Stone закрепились на музыкальном олимпе США с жёсткими фанковыми импровизациями вроде «Sex Machine». Наибольшая слава сопутствовала их живым выступлениям, что лишний раз подтвердило их участие на фестивале в Вудстоке, ставшее одним из наиболее запоминающихся. В конце года группа вернулась на 1-е место в чартах с новой песней «Hot Fun in the Summertime». К 1970 году группа записала достаточно материала, чтобы выпустить подборку лучших песен (2-е место в США). Между тем Слай Стоун пристрастился к наркотикам, всё чаще опаздывая на концерты и пропуская репетиции. Наблюдатели объясняли его движение по наклонной разочарованием в том, как заглохло движение за гражданские права. Эти настроения выплеснулись в самой мрачной пластинке группы - «There’s a Riot Goin' On» (1971). Несмотря на грандиозный успех экспериментального хита «Family Affair» (1-е место в США), популярность коллектива после выхода диска пошла на убыль. Накопившиеся в группе разногласия относительно путей её дальнейшего развития привели к тому, что Грэм и Эррико в 1972 г. покинули коллектив. Слай Стоун выпустил под именем группы ещё два альбома, не имевшие резонанса предыдущих записей. После 1975 г. записи Слая выпускались под его собственным именем, и группа перестала существовать до 2007 года, когда её участники воссоединились для гастрольного тура по США. О том, что память о Sly & the Family Stone жива, свидетельствует тот факт, что опрошенные журналом Rolling Stone музыканты и журналисты, подводя итоги XX века, включили группу в число 50-ти наиболее влиятельных исполнителей эпохи рок-н-ролла.


en.wikipedia.org
Sly and the Family Stone were an American rock, funk, and soul band from San Francisco, California. Active from 1966 to 1983, the band was pivotal in the development of soul, funk, and psychedelic music. Headed by singer, songwriter, record producer, and multi-instrumentalist Sly Stone, and containing several of his family members and friends, the band was the first major American rock band to have an "integrated, multi-gender" lineup. Brothers Sly Stone and singer/guitarist Freddie Stone combined their bands (Sly & the Stoners and Freddie & the Stone Souls) in 1967. Sly and Freddie Stone, trumpeter Cynthia Robinson, drummer Gregg Errico, saxophonist Jerry Martini, and bassist Larry Graham completed the original lineup; Sly and Freddie's sister, singer/keyboardist Rose Stone, joined within a year. This collective recorded five Billboard Hot 100 hits which reached the top 10, and four ground-breaking albums, which greatly influenced the sound of American pop music, soul, R&B, funk, and hip hop music. In the preface of his 1998 book For the Record: Sly and the Family Stone: An Oral History, Joel Selvin sums up the importance of Sly and the Family Stone's influence on African American music by stating "there are two types of black music: black music before Sly Stone, and black music after Sly Stone". The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. During the early 1970s, the band switched to a grittier funk sound, which was as influential on the music industry as their earlier work. The band began to fall apart during this period because of drug abuse and ego clashes; consequently, the fortunes and reliability of the band deteriorated, leading to its dissolution in 1975. Sly Stone continued to record albums and tour with a new rotating lineup under the "Sly and the Family Stone" name from 1975 to 1983. In 1987, Sly Stone was arrested and sentenced for cocaine use, after which he went into effective retirement.

Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010

1967 A Whole New Thing
Originally released: Epic US Mono LN 24324 / Stereo BN 26324

Allmusic / Review by Richie Unterberger
Sly & the Family Stone's debut album is more restrained and not nearly as funky or psychedelic as their subsequent efforts, owing far more to traditional soul arrangements. These aren't that traditional, though; Sly is already using goofier and/or more thoughtful lyrics than the soul norm, and taking some cues from rock in his adventurous and unexpected song construction. The Family Stone, similarly, aren't as innovative as they would shortly become, but are already a tight unit, particularly in the interplay between lead and backup vocals and the sharp horn riffs.
205MB (1 Part) + 160MB (1 Part) / Covers Box

01 Underdog
02 If This Room Could Talk
03 Run Run Run
04 Turn Me Loose
05 Let Me Hear It From You
06 Advice
07 I Cannot Make It
08 Trip To Your Heart
09 I Hate To Love Her
10 Bad Risk
11 That Kind Of Person
12 Dog
Bonus Tracks
13 Underdog (Single Version)
14 Let Me Hear It From You (Single Version)
15 Only One Way Out Of This Mess
16 What Would I Do
17 You Better Help Yourself (Instrumental)

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Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010

1968 Dance To The Music
Originally released: Epic US BN 26371

Allmusic / Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Sly & the Family Stone came into their own with their second album, Dance to the Music. This is exuberant music, bursting with joy and invention. If there's a shortage of classic material, with only the title track being a genuine classic, that winds up being nearly incidental, since it's so easy to get sucked into the freewheeling spirit and cavalier virtuosity of the group. Consider this - prior to this record no one, not even the Family Stone, treated soul as a psychedelic sun splash, filled with bright melodies, kaleidoscopic arrangements, inextricably intertwined interplay, and deft, fast rhythms. Yes, they wound up turning "Higher" into the better "I Want to Take You Higher" and they recycle the title track in the long jam "Dance to the Medley," but there's such imagination to this jam that the similarities fade as they play. And, if these are just vamps, well, so are James Brown's records, and those didn't have the vitality or friendliness of this. Not a perfect record, but a fine one all the same.
200MB (1 Part) + 197MB (1 Part)

01 Dance To The Music
02 Higher
03 I Ain't Got Nobody (For Real)
04 Dance To The Medley: Music Is Alive / Dance In / Music Lover
05 Ride The Rhythm
06 Color Me True
07 Are You Ready
08 Don't Burn Baby
09 Never Will I Fall In Love Again
Bonus Tracks
10 Dance To The Music (Single Version)
11 Higher (Single Version)
12 Soul Clappin'
13 We Love All
14 I Can't Turn You Loose
15 Never Do Your Woman Wrong (Instrumental)

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Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010

1968 Life
Originally released: Epic US BN 26397

Allmusic / Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Just a matter of months after Dance to the Music, Sly & the Family Stone turned around and delivered Life, a record that leapfrogged over its predecessor in terms of accomplishment and achievement. The most noteworthy difference is the heavier reliance on psychedelics and fuzz guitars, plus a sharpening of songcraft that extends to even throwaways like "Chicken." As it turned out, Life didn't have any hits - the double A-sided single "Life" / "M'Lady" barely cracked the Top 100 - yet this feels considerably more song-oriented than its predecessor, as each track is a concise slice of tightly wound dance-funk. All the more impressive is that the group is able to strut their stuff within this context, trading off vocals and blending into an unstoppable force where it's impossible to separate the instruments, even as they solo. The songwriting might still be perfunctory or derivative in spots - listen to how they appropriate "Eleanor Rigby" on "Plastic Jim" - but what's impressive is how even the borrowed or recycled moments sound fresh in context. And then there are the cuts that work on their own, whether it's the aforementioned double-sided single, "Fun," "Dynamite!," or several other cuts here - these are brilliant, intoxicating slices of funk-pop that get by as much on sound as song, and they're hard to resist.
200MB (1 Part) + 108MB (1 Part)

01 Dynamite
02 Chicken
03 Plastic Jim
04 Fun
05 Into My Own Thing
06 Harmony
07 Life
08 Love City
09 I'm An Animal
10 M'Lady
11 Jane Is A Groupee
Bonus Tracks
12 Dynamite! (Single Version)
13 Seven More Days
14 Pressure
15 Sorrow (Instrumental)

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Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010

1969 Stand!
Originally released: Epic US BN 26456

Allmusic / Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
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, psychedelicized guitars, and deep rhythms. Add to this a sharpened sense of pop songcraft, elastic band interplay, and a flowering of Sly's social consciousness, 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, but each track is distinct, emphasizing a different side of their musical personality. As a result, Stand! winds up 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.
209MB (1 Part) + 201MB (1 Part)

01 Stand!
02 Don't Call Me Nigger Whitey
03 I Want To Take You Higher
04 Somebody's Watching You
05 Sing A Simple Song
06 Everyday People
07 Sex Machine
08 You Can Make It If You Try
Bonus Tracks
09 Stand! (Single Version)
10 I Want To Take You Higher (Single Version)
11 You Can Make It If You Try (Single Version)
12 Soul Clappin' II
13 My Brain (Zig-Zag) (Instrumental)

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Sly & The Family Stone: Original Album Classics ● 5CD Box Set Epic Records 2010

1971 There's A Riot Goin' On
Originally released: Epic US KE 30986

Allmusic / Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
It's easy to write off There's a Riot Goin' On as one of two things - Sly Stone's disgusted social commentary or the beginning of his slow descent into addiction. It's both of these things, of course, but pigeonholing it as either winds up dismissing the album as a whole, since it is so bloody hard to categorize. What's certain is that Riot is unlike any of Sly & the Family Stone's other albums, stripped of the effervescence that flowed through even such politically aware records as Stand! This is idealism soured, as hope is slowly replaced by cynicism, joy by skepticism, enthusiasm by weariness, sex by pornography, thrills by narcotics. Joy isn't entirely gone - it creeps through the cracks every once and awhile and, more disturbing, Sly revels in his stoned decadence. What makes Riot so remarkable is that it's hard not to get drawn in with him, as you're seduced by the narcotic grooves, seductive vocals slurs, leering electric pianos, and crawling guitars. As the themes surface, it's hard not to nod in agreement, but it's a junkie nod, induced by the comforting coma of the music. And damn if this music isn't funk at its deepest and most impenetrable - this is dense music, nearly impenetrable, but not from its deep grooves, but its utter weariness. Sly's songwriting remains remarkably sharp, but only when he wants to write - the foreboding opener "Luv N' Haight," the scarily resigned "Family Affair," the cracked cynical blues "Time," and "(You Caught Me) Smilin'." Ultimately, the music is the message, and while it's dark music, it's not alienating - it's seductive despair, and that's the scariest thing about it.
209MB (1 Part) + 204MB (1 Part)

01 Luv N' Haight
02 Just Like A Baby
03 Poet
04 Family Affair
05 Africa Talks To You (The Asphalt Jungle)
06 There's A Riot Goin' On
07 Brave And Strong
08 (You Caught Me) Smilin'
09 Time
10 Spaced Cowboy
11 Runnin' Away
12 Thank You For Talkin' To Me, Africa
Bonus Tracks
13 Runnin' Away (Single Version)
14 My Gorilla Is My Butler (Instrumental)
15 Do You Know What (Instrumental)
16 That's Pretty Clean (Instrumental)

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