Event Info
"The inventors of 70's FUNK": Family Stone featuring Sly Stone, Five Alarm Funk, Kuba Oms
100.3 The Q and High Tide Entertainment present...
The Family Stone Project fea...
8:00pm - 11:00pm Doors at: 7:00pm
$59.50/$57.50 + service charges
Artists
from San Francisco California
Five Alarm Funk
Afro-Funk from Vancouver BC
Soul Pop from Victoria BC
Hard-copy tickets
Physical tickets at: McPherson Box Office 250-386-6121, 1-888-717-6121, #3 Centennial Square, or online at www.rmts.bc.ca
Event Description
100.3 The Q and High Tide Entertainment present...
The Family Stone Project featuring special guest... Sly Stone
with opening guests... To be announced
Monday, June 30
The Royal Theatre
Doors 7pm - Showtime 8pm
Tickets: $59.50/$57.50 + service charges
Available at: The McPherson Box Office 250-386-6121, #3 Centennial Square or online at www.rmts.bc.ca
Sly Stone's website: www.slystonemusic.com
Family Stone Project's website: www.familystonemusic.com
Performing all of their hits including:
"I Want to Take You Higher", Everyday People", Thank You Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin", "Dance To The Music", "Hot Fun In The Summertime", "Family Affair", "Sing a Simple Song" and many more...
Sly and the Family Stone are credited as one of the first racially integrated bands in music history, belting their message of peace, love and social consciousness through a string of hit anthems that fused R&B, soul, funk and rock n roll. On 'Different Strokes by Different Folks' a stylistically, culturally and racially disparate group of chart-toppers mirrors that idealistic diversity. Understand this: There was no precedent for Sly & the Family Stone.
Sly and the Family Stone took the Sixties ideal of a generation coming together and turned it into deeply groove-driven music. Rock’s first integrated, multi-gender band became funky Pied Pipers to the Woodstock Generation, synthesizing rock, soul, R&B, funk and psychedelia into danceable, message-laden, high-energy music. In promoting their gospel of tolerance and celebration of differences, Sly and the Family Stone brought disparate audiences together during the latter half of the Sixties. The group’s greatest triumph came at the Woodstock Festival in August 1969. During their unforgettable nighttime set, leader Sly Stone initiated a fevered call-and-response with the audience of 400,000+ during an electrifying version of “I Want to Take You Higher.”
Sly Stone (born Sylvester Stewart) has been called a “great communicator” for his infectious mixture of message and music. Born in Dallas, he moved with his family to Vallejo, California, where he sang in a family gospel group as a child and later studied music theory and composition at the local junior college. He established himself in the San Francisco area as a disk jockey and a producer of such records as the Beau Brummels’ “Laugh Laugh” for Autumn Records. Sly and the Family Stone came together late in 1966, with keyboardist/vocalist Stone recruiting family members: his sister Rose (keyboards, vocals), brother Freddie Stone (guitar) and cousin Larry Graham (bass). The group was rounded out by Cynthia Robinson (trumpet), Greg Errico (drums) and Jerry Martini (sax). Their first single appeared on a local label in 1967, while their debut album, A Whole New Thing, was released nationally on Epic in 1968.
The group connected with the rising counterculture by means of songs that addressed issues of personal pride and liberation in the context of driving, insistent and sunny-tempered music that fused rock and soul, creating a template for Seventies funk. As proof that they were reaching a rainbow coalition among the young, Sly and the Family Stone dominated the late Sixties charts with such essential singles as “Dance to the Music” (#8 pop, #9 R&B), “Everyday People” (#1, pop and R&B), “Hot Fun in the Summertime” (#2 pop, #3 R&B) and “Thank You Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin” (#1, pop and R&B). Despite these heady peaks, the band’s fortunes began declining in tandem with Sly Stone’s mounting substance-abuse problems. A brilliant artist even under duress, Stone was largely responsible for the bleak, cryptic but undeniably powerful There’s a Riot Goin’ On (1971), which captured the souring mood of the country no less than the sound of his own ship going down. During this period, Sly and the Family Stone became notorious for missing concert dates, though they still enjoyed commercial success with singles such as “Family Affair” (#1, pop and R&B).
A realignment in group members occurred in 1972, and Stone led the band through a couple more albums - Fresh (1973) and Small Talk (1974) - that showed flashes of the old fire. After that, however, the releases became increasingly sporadic and Stone himself appeared to drop from sight. A flurry of activity in the early Eighties found him touring on his own and with George Clinton’s P-Funk All-Stars, and an album of new material, Ain’t But the One Way, appeared in 1983.
Sly's been sampled by Janet Jackson, Beastie Boys, Kid Rock, Fatboy Slim, Ice Cube and Public Enemy to name just a few! He was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame in 1992, and is the recipient of the 2002 R&B Foundation Pioneer Award.
Venue
805 Broughton Street
Open / Operational