Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Greatest Hits is a compilation album by the American group Sly and the Family Stone. It was first released on November 21, 1970, by Epic Records. [1] The album includes all of the singles from the albums Dance to the Music (1968), Life (1968), and Stand! (1969).

  3. The album features re-recorded versions of Sly and the Family Stone's greatest hits with guest appearances from Jeff Beck, Ray Manzarek, Bootsy Collins, Ann Wilson, Carmine Appice, and Johnny Winter, as well as three previously unreleased songs.

    • The Beau Brummels, “Laugh, Laugh” (1965) Sly Stone's first taste of national notoriety began at the tender age of 19 when he produced the moody pop single, "Laugh, Laugh," for the San Mateo folk-rock band the Beau Brummels.
    • “Rock Dirge” (circa 1965) During Stone's brief stint at Autumn Records, he made use of their studios to mess around with his own compositions, including this funky, chattering instrumental, likely concocted in 1965.
    • “I Ain’t Got Nobody” (1967) Using proceeds earned from Autumn, Stone set himself and his family up in Daly City, just outside of San Francisco. This is where the Family Stone band began to cohere in the mid 1960s and their first official release came on this single for the local Loadstone label.
    • “Underdog” (1967) As the first single and first song on the group's first album, A Whole New Thing, "Underdog" introduced Sly and the Family Stone in as raucous a way possible.
  4. Nov 7, 2020 · There was already discord within Sly & the Family Stone when the band's Greatest Hits compilation debuted on the Billboard albums chart on Nov. 7, 1970.

    • Michael Gallucci
  5. Oct 27, 2021 · Sly Stone, the Family mastermind, was one of the Sixties’ most ambitious artists, mixing up the hardest funk beats with hippie psychedelia on hits such as “Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf...

  6. LP, Album, Stereo. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for Greatest Hits by Sly & The Family Stone. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.

  7. Sly was a bringer of people, and this is him at his very peak. A genuine pop landmark, this song often gets overlooked at creating the phrase, for Gary Coleman's 'Humerous' T.V show "Diffr'nt Strokes".

  1. People also search for