Nov 1974

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Sly Stone

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Echo Chamber

Playing hide and funk: Sly Stone slips through stardom on his own terms

Funk architect Sly Stone, whose genre-crossing records operate somewhere between psychedelic rock, R&B, and social commentary, steps away from the spotlight while his influence spins endlessly through today's tracks. From studio wizardry to assembling Sly and the Family Stone, Stone’s vision hardwires integration into the stage long before labels start marketing diversity like a product line.

Producer Terry Lewis credits Stone with prying open doors that refused to budge—especially for musicians of color navigating an industry not exactly built for access. Sly isn't closing the curtain so much as stepping into the wings, the echoes of his innovation still ricocheting across airwaves.


Source: Music Industry News – Published on June 10, 2025

Sly Stone poses, preens, and disappears—his life told frame by frame.

Sly Stone moves through the decades like a man both pursued and in retreat, leaving glitter and chaos in equal measure. His style—part funk prophet, part cosmic trickster—shifts with each era, changing hairstyles almost as frequently as band line-ups.

Whether wrapped in furs or sequins, posing onstage or disappearing off the radar entirely, Stone never quite plays by the rules. The photos capture this: a visual catalog of brilliance, volatility, and a talent that resists tidy framing.


Source: Music – Rolling Stone – Published on November 30, -0001

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