Music historian and documentarian Questlove outlines subversive messages in Sly Stone and Michael Jackson hits you probably missed.
Questlove talks about his new movie 'Sly Lives!,' new music from D'Angelo, and much more in our new interview.
Sly and the Family Stone’s mix of Black and white musicians and women and men not only felt new but radical, particularly considering the social turmoil of the 1960s. The utopian inclusiveness of hit ...
In “Sly Lives!” and “Becoming Led Zeppelin,” the divergent expectations faced by White and Black musical artists become ...
Questlove's new documentary 'Sly Lives' on Hulu explores the life of Sly Stone, a legendary music producer and lead singer of ...
The film focuses on Sly Stone, a funk musician who headed up Sly & the Family ... What people don’t know is that Sly basically considered “Dance to the Music” his sell-out song. Sly had released this ...
The original Sly and the Family Stone was comprised of six musicians ... saying who they are and explaining how their part of the song helps build the whole. The movie similarly examines how ...
Ostensibly it covers the career of Sly Stone, the prodigious musician who, during the late '60s and '70s, generated some of ...
He compares music to a Polaroid, a snapshot of where you were in life when you first heard a song or album. For him, his snapshot of Sly Stone's music comes from early childhood, an unconventional ...