Released

A stunning record that only grew in stature when its frontman masterminded an even more astonishing self-rebuttal two years later, Stand! is the last album Sly & the Family Stone cut in peak togetherness mode before There’s A Riot Goin’ On flipped the table. And good thing, too; after this, where else could they have gone once this album became the apotheosis of everything they’d worked towards? Stand! is Sly and the Family Stone’s best expression of a socially aware yet still guardedly hopeful outlook, made all the more potent by the way they expressed it through both a tighter sense of soul than any outfit West of Memphis and an ability to rock harder than any Haight-Ashbury hippie-dips in a 50-mile radius. They were savvy enough to sneak in the provocative stuff onto freeform radio-and-concert-friendly jam sessions — proto-Riot racial animosity deconstructions (“Don’t Call Me Nigger, Whitey”) and don’t-stop-rolling instrumental blues-as-innuendo (“Sex Machine”) — while their most potent pop-ready numbers, from the kickoff title cut to “Sing a Simple Song,” “You Can Make It If You Try,” and #1 hit “Everyday People,” found so much strength in their statements of anti-despair that even the harsh realities they addressed felt easy to overcome. All that, and you get “I Want to Take You Higher,” too — boomshakalaka.

Nate Patrin

Suggestions
Hypnotic Brass Ensemble cover

Hypnotic Brass Ensemble

Hypnotic Brass Ensemble
Sir Joe Quarterman & Free Soul cover

Sir Joe Quarterman & Free Soul

Sir Joe Quarterman & Free Soul
Supa Dupa Fly cover

Supa Dupa Fly

Missy Elliott
A Pocket Full of Miracles cover

A Pocket Full of Miracles

Smokey Robinson, The Miracles
Mainstream Funk cover

Mainstream Funk

Various Artists
Urban Renewal cover

Urban Renewal

Tower of Power
16 Slabs of Funk cover

16 Slabs of Funk

The Jimmy Castor Bunch
A Quiet Storm cover

A Quiet Storm

Smokey Robinson