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Wednesday, June 11, 2025
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Sly Stone
I never intended the Defining Generation X series to turn into a series of obituaries, but these are the moments when I feel like we need to write something about these important figures.
Another member of the Silent Generation who had a huge influence on Generation X. Sylvester Stewart, Sly Stone, died yesterday at age 82. If you know much about his personal story it is hard to imagine he made it this long. For the sake of this piece though I want to focus on not just Sly, but Sly & the Family Stone.
Their first three albums are good, but if you don't know much about Sly & the Family Stone and you want to introduce yourself to them, start with Stand! their big breakout hit album from 1969. This would be the start of a 3 album run that would establish them as one of the most influential bands in the history of popular music. 1971 they came out with There's a Riot Goin' On, then Fresh in 1973.
There were critical bands in the 60's that would have a huge influence on Generation X. If you wanted to break it down to just 3, ignoring country and folk I would say it was The Beatles, The Velvet Underground, and Sly & the Family Stone.
You might think I'm crazy but their music would have a massive influence on early Gen X rap and the move to embed components of rap and funk into pop. Of course they also hugely influenced artists like Prince, who would then be a major influence on many Gen X R&B artists. Their ability to marry blues, funk, and gospel all in a pop wrapper is something that still today you hear from many young experimental R&B artists. You can't listen to Willow experimenting with jazz and funk and not think about Sly & the Family Stone, or listen to an artist like XXXTENTACION and not think of Sly & the Family Stone and these are modern artists.
So why did I match up Sly & the Family Stone with The Beatles and The Velvet Underground? The Beatles are the basis of pretty much all modern rock forms. They married the blues, rock, and R&B that so influenced them into a pop and rock package that really has been the basis of most rock music since. They didn't invent rock or blues or R&B, but they packaged it in a way that became incredibly influential. The Velvet Underground did something different. They took their influences from jazz, folk, and R&B and merged them into something not quite rock and not quite pop, something uniquely it's own thing. That creation would go on to be in many ways just as influential as The Beatles. This then brings us to Sly. Sly married R&B, blues, gospel, world music, and jazz together to create something again quite unique that again would go on to become hugely influential.
If you want to know who is influencing the artist you are listening to, remember we aren't looking at country that would be a completely different conversation, then you really just have to go back to these three artists. For hip hop, modern R&B, modern funk, funk jazz fusion, etc. you can look to Sly & the Family Stone. If it is punk, experimental rock, rock jazz fusion, performance you can look to The Velvet Underground. If it is based on traditional R&B, blues and rock then it's The Beatles.
The funny thing is I believe that people place The Beatles and The Velvet Underground up there, but not Sly & the Family Stone and they really should. In fact I would argue that they music they hold the most influence over is the music currently dominating popular music.
They had a short run, like many artists, but it was incredibly important and had a profound effect on Generation X, but also the generations that followed Gen X.