UPC: 829421115328
Format: CD
Release Date: Mar 15, 2010
Regular price
$21.95 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$21.95 USD
Unit price
per
Couldn't load pickup availability
FREE SHIPPING
This item is expected to ship 3 business days after order placement.

Sly & The Family Stone: Sylvester Stewart (keyboards, harmonica); Freddie Stewart (guitar, background vocals); Hamp Banks, Joseph Baker (guitar); Cynthia Robinson, Pat Rizzo, Steve Madalo, Gary Gerbig (horns); Mark Davis, Walter Downing (keyboards); Keni Burke (bass); Alvin Taylor (drums); Ollie E. Brown (percussion); Rose Banks, Lisa Banks, Jo Baker (background vocals); .
Recorded at The Sound Factory, Hollywood, California. Originally released on Warner Bros (3303).
Personnel: Joseph Baker (guitar); Gary Herbig, Steve Madaio (horns); Rose Banks, Joe Baker (background vocals).
By the late '70s, Sly Stone had been so thoroughly written off as a has-been that few listeners checked out Back on the Right Track. Nor have listeners been inspired to rediscover the album, since his late-'60s/early-'70s classics cast such a huge shadow over his subsequent work. It comes as somewhat of a surprise, then, to find the basic Stone soul/rock/funk foundation still firmly in place here. There were two problems: the foundation didn't make any notable advancements on the territory he'd already mapped out by the early '70s, and the songs themselves weren't that special, sounding more like basic vamps or promising scraps than fully baked ideas. Judged solely on its own terms, it's actually a respectable slice of funk; it's only when stacked against Stone's other works that the disappointment becomes intense. ~ Richie Unterberger
Recorded at The Sound Factory, Hollywood, California. Originally released on Warner Bros (3303).
Personnel: Joseph Baker (guitar); Gary Herbig, Steve Madaio (horns); Rose Banks, Joe Baker (background vocals).
By the late '70s, Sly Stone had been so thoroughly written off as a has-been that few listeners checked out Back on the Right Track. Nor have listeners been inspired to rediscover the album, since his late-'60s/early-'70s classics cast such a huge shadow over his subsequent work. It comes as somewhat of a surprise, then, to find the basic Stone soul/rock/funk foundation still firmly in place here. There were two problems: the foundation didn't make any notable advancements on the territory he'd already mapped out by the early '70s, and the songs themselves weren't that special, sounding more like basic vamps or promising scraps than fully baked ideas. Judged solely on its own terms, it's actually a respectable slice of funk; it's only when stacked against Stone's other works that the disappointment becomes intense. ~ Richie Unterberger
Tracks:
1 - Remember Who You Are
2 - Back On The Right Track
3 - If It's Not Addin' Up...
4 - Same Thing (Makes You Laugh, Makes You Cry)
5 - Shine It On
6 - It Takes All Kinds
7 - Who's To Say?
8 - Sheer Energy
2 - Back On The Right Track
3 - If It's Not Addin' Up...
4 - Same Thing (Makes You Laugh, Makes You Cry)
5 - Shine It On
6 - It Takes All Kinds
7 - Who's To Say?
8 - Sheer Energy