
We'll kick off the BBQ weekend and holiday dance party with a very necessary memorial to an irreplaceable cultural figure.

I've been working on this thing, so I could say I came up with something worthy of today's icon. I think I succeeded, but then I just spent days manually making all the tunes in it the same volume, so I might be a little judgmentally compromised right this second.

When he passed away at 82 this past June 9th, he left a legacy that will define, animate and tower over everything that will come after, like a looming shadow of light.

When Sly and the Family Stone first hit in 1967, their advent literally altered the DNA of music from the first note.

Of course he hadn't come from nowhere. He had a degree in Composition from SF State and a very popular radio show on KSOL-FM in San Francisco well before he became, arguably, the first modern Rock Star.

But when the band hit, at the height of Summer of Love hysteria, it turned a regional Bay Area figure into a global superstar that helped redefine and recalibrate the whole paradigm of popular music.

To repeat the umpteenth cliché about how No One Had Ever Seen Anything Like This Before, that bands didn't typically have multigender and multiracial makeups prior to these guys, is beyond the obvious.

Everything about them -- not just their appearance -- was totally unprecedented, principally the way they pretzeltwisted James Brown's New Bag and the multicolored psychedelic pastiche then prevalent in Pop into something irresistible in its Sunny Soul Funkness, which could break your hips and blow your mind at the same time.

There's no overstating Sly Stone's importance to the All Of Everything, and most of it's been said a million times even before he died.

Like, for instance, this compilation of covers of his tunes that came out -- just weeks before he left us, in what must surely be the most timely reissue promotion in music business history -- on the swell Ace label over in the UK. It features a 22-track compendium of some of the many versions of Sly and the Family Stone classics by other artists: tribute takes of his tunes that have made their way into the world since the mid-1960s.

Of course, once my mania mind gets a hold of an idea such as that, it will only be a matter of time before I jinn up a rejoinder to it that's 3 times as long and features even weirder and more obscure choices, some of which are/were harder to find in lossless form than the narrative illusion formerly known as American Democracy.

So anyway... if you want me to stay, I'll be around today. Happy 4th of July, and here goes your holiday weekend Party Mix in 3....2...1...

1.36 GB FLAC/direct link

I mastered my thing to play at essentially the same volume as the Ace CD, so if you get that one you can plug them together and enjoy the full Family Stone songbook experience on Sly shuffle play. Heck, I even remixed a full, longer playout version of the original Family Affair, straight from the 16-track stems. Who says I don't bring the favors to the party?