Sly & the Family Stone
Anthology
Play Anthology
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AMG Review of Anthology
Stephen Thomas Erlewine
All Music GuideAnthology essentially replicates the previous collection Greatest Hits and adds singles from There's a Riot Goin' On and Fresh to the end of the album. Where Greatest Hits didn't follow chronological order, Anthology presents every single in the order it was released -- and, with the exception of the latter-day singles and the inclusion of "Don't Call Me Nigger, Whitey," that is the major difference between the two collections. Anthology goes for a sweeping, definitive overview, while Greatest Hits is a brief blast of 12 of the finest singles of the ock & roll era. Either compilation functions as an excellent introduction, but Anthology is more comprehensive, giving it the edge as a first purchase.
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I was intially pissed when my father took me on a detour to his accountants office instead of straight home. But hey this was free ride so i just went with the flow.Had to step over miles of shreeded paper just to reach a chair and as my father and him went over "business" (and i put that in conotations because...well because i can) i heard the guitar sound i was not familair with and it went ...
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