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27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The True Story Behind This Album,
By obi odobi (Washington, D.C.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ain't But the One Way (Audio CD)
Since no one has really gotten into it here, I thought I'd write and clarify the circumstances of this recording for all of the Sly freaks, funk freaks, and other potentially-interested buyers.
By 1976, Sly's career was at an extremely low point. He hadn't had a significant commercial hit in years, he had lost his management, the original Family Stone was long gone, Sly's drug problems were apparently getting the best of him, and former bassist Larry Graham was putting Sly to shame (on record and in concert) with his more funky, pop, and upbeat version of the original Family Stone formula with his band Graham Central Station. In fact, Sly was struggling so much at this time that he actually toured (in support of his attempt at Philly International soul "Heard Ya Missed Me, Now I'm Back") as an opening act for the famous P-Funk Earth Tour in late 1976. It was a sad irony to see Sly opening for two bands (P-Funk and Bootsy's Rubber Band) that had been so inspired by HIM in the first place. At the end of tour, in fact, two of Sly's backup singers (one of which was his cousin) defected and joined P-Funk where they later recorded as The Brides of Funkenstein. Sly dropped out of visibility, surfacing two years later in 1978 when he had left Epic and signed to Warner Brothers, and began working on his latest in a series of "comeback" LPs, "Back On the Right Track." Opinions are varied on the musical quality of this album (I think there are some great songs on there, but nothing resembling a chart hit) but commercially, it fared poorly. That must have hurt Sly after all the comeback hype. I don't think he even toured in support of the album. And I remember seeing Sly on the Mike Douglas show at this time. He was dispirited and so out of it on drugs that he could barely speak. Mike and the other guests just stared at him in disbelief. He dropped out of sight again until around 1980, when word was that Sly was now in George Clinton's camp. The plan was for Sly to guest on some P-Funk releases, and for Clinton to produce (or co-produce) Sly's next album for Warners. This made sense, since Sly and Clinton were label mates at Warners (via Funkadelic and Bootsy). Clinton was talking the Sly project up in the press, Sly made cameo appearances during P-Funk's 1981 tour, and he and original Family Stone trumpeter Cynthia Robinson are on two versions of "Funk Gets Stronger" from Funkadelic's summer 1981 LP "The Electric Spanking of War Babies." Supposedly, the original version took up an entire side of a projected double album, but was later edited down. Personally, I love these tracks but objectively, they sound as if the main priority in the studio that day was getting extremely high, there happened to be a few instruments laying about, and the tape recorder was running. The same can be said for most of the Sly/P-Funk collaborations, the most significant of which is the P-Funk All Stars' 3-part "Hydraulic Pump" 12-inch (the complete version is available on the P-Funk All-Stars CD "Hydraulic Funk"). Like a lot of Sly's material with P-Funk (which is spread out over several releases), it sounds like they were trying to take a little bit of music and make a lot of out of it. By late 1981, Clinton had become involved in a bitter dispute with Warners, with the end result that Funkadelic left Warners (they haven't released an album under the Funkadelic name since then). That also threw a wrench into the Sly project, which hadn't yet been completed. And supposedly, Sly just vanished, leaving the album unfinished. Warners brought producer Stewart Levine in to salvage and complete the project, and the album was released two years later in the spring of 1983 with the title "Ain't But the One Way." The cover photo (with Sly jumping over a fence wearing camouflage pants) dated back 5 years to the "Back On the Right Track" photo sessions. Sly must have been long gone if they couldn't even get an up-to-date photo for the cover of his album! If you look at the album's personnel listing, you will see the names of many original Family Stone members, and also the names of many studio session players. That suggests that the basic tracks were cut with Sly, Clinton, the Family Stone (maybe augmented by some players from P-Funk), and that the project was completed later with Levine and the studio musicians. That's probably why the album has a glossy, generic sound to it. If you listen closely, you can hear traces of the Sly/Clinton approach underneath, especially in Sly's lyrics, singing attitude, and electric piano playing. If you want to compare the two approaches, listen to the demo version of "Who In the Funk Do You Think You Are" from the first volume of George Clinton's Family Series, and compare it with the Levine-produced version on the "...One Way" album. As far as the music, it sounds far more inventive and inspired than Sly's previous LP "Back On The Right Track." Hardcore Sly fans know that there is not a single Sly LP without at least a few moments of genius, however fragmentary. If you're sensitive to Sly's musical "codes," you can hear that they had some good ideas going, lyrically and musically. You can hear Sly's stoned wit in good effect. But you can also hear that the ideas were left in a skeletal and incomplete state, and were completed by someone else with a very different production concept. The strongest songs to me are the poignant rehab ballad "Ha Ha Hee Hee," the cover of the Kinks "You Really Got Me," the vignette "Sylvester" (another song seemingly dedicated to Sly's mother), the "I Want to Take You Higher" retread (called "High Y'all"), and a few others. You have to give Clinton credit for inspiring Sly to break out of the playing-it-safe mold of his recent records and push the envelope here. And Stewart Levine also deserves a bit of credit for achieving a professional sound in the end with what he had to work with. If they had completed this album with the original team, it would probably have been the strongest and most interesting Sly album in a LONG time. It might have even been a commercial success. But unfortunately, it fell victim to music business chicanery and drug excess. "Ain't But The One Way" turned out to be Sly's de-facto farewell to the music business. He hasn't relased an album since then and for the rest of the 1980s, it seemed like he was in the news for one drug-related offence after another. The funny thing about it is that on the Mike Douglas show I mentioned above, one of the few coherent things I remember Sly saying was - and this is a quote as best I can remember - "I'm gonna release one more album and if it doesn't go platinum - BYE Y'ALL..."
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Modern Sly,
By A Customer
This review is from: Ain't But the One Way (Audio CD)
First of all, this album was recorded in the beginning of the 80's, when Sly was trying a new formula, just like everyone else, due to the latest crash of the disco era. Even in the cover art he seems like being skating, flying in a jump. Modern, and shinning bright like in "Fresh". He bounces like a new gifted artist in "Ha Ha Hee Hee" in a kool groove line. He surprises in "You Really Got Me". This song, that was a trade mark from the Kinks and Van Halen, always dressed as a heavy rock, gains a new funky stomp here, something that seemed almost impossible before. In "Who In The Funk Do You Think You Are" he question this new situation in a nice drive around the old funky disco beat. This is one of the best cds from his latest work but for sure you won't buy it. You would prefer to buy the new Rhino collection "Sly And The Family Stone - Who In The Funk Do You Think You Are: The Warner Bros. Recordings". You will find all the tracks here available and much more.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not on Par,
This review is from: Ain't But the One Way (Audio CD)
outside of "Who in the Funk do you think you are"?&Parts of "Sylvester" is this worth listening to.this is one of the Records by a Artist that you hope in many ways is Bootlegged&never put out fully because it doesn't even begin to Capture the Greatness that this Artist once displayed so well.this Album is like a Boxing Match when a Guy has been knocked down two times&He is getting ready to take another fall&then you have to throw in the White Towel well this is the Scene with this Album.SLy Stone Sadly here was doing a 3rd-Tier Version of Himself Here.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
The turd that busted the camel's booty,
By liber8 "liber8" (Earthville) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ain't But the One Way (Audio CD)
People, i love and worship Sly, so i really hate to say it, but i took a vow to tell the truth, and the truth is that this is Sly's worst official release. It's downright depressing - you can practically see him in the studio with everybody out of their minds on doG knows what, bummin 'cos disco was givin way to new wave and the funk was long deceased... so it seems they thought they'd make a record with a "modern" sound that the coked-up kids might like. Ouch.If you want good Sly, buy (1) Fresh, (2) Small Talk, (3) Anthology, (4) Back on the Right Track, (5) There's a Riot Goin' on, (6) High On You... after that, you're gambling.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Sly Is This Really The Last We'll Be Hearing From You?,
By
This review is from: Ain't But the One Way (Audio CD)
'Ain't But The One Way' is the last Sly & The Family Stone album ever released.It is often described as being from 1983 but it's not-it was released in 1980 as a follow up to the previous years 'Back On The Right Track'.Unfortunately the album is nothing really special.Sly seems to wish the album to be a little slicker but that slickness is tracing paper thin and only works well on "Ha Ha,Hee Hee" and that only sounds like an weak Earth Wind & Fire."L.O.V.I.N U","One Way","Hobo Man" and "We Can Do It" are all highly funky and try at pop hooks but for some reason end up sounding very,very,very,very formuliac and boring.There is really nothing here that Sly Stone hasn't done since 1973 and he sounds pretty board a lot."Who The Funk Do You Think You Are" is by far the best thing on the album-it draws Sly back to the rock ideom he'd abandoned early in the 70's:if he's taken a cue from this song and arranged an album of songs in a more diverse mode this album would be salvagable.A cover of "You Really Got Me" is nice but Sly isn't known for covers and it just shows he's down to the end of his bag of tricks."High,Y'all" is a fairly pleasant attempt at replicated Sly's late 60's sound but it also points out this albums main weaknessess:'Ain't But The One Way' is just Sly Stone recycling the past because he has nothing new and innovative to offer.This should be a testement to all artists facing drug addiction in some way because that was a large part of Sly's decline.If your one of those people who has to have every Sly album around by all means get this one.But me,even being a person tolerant of R&B mishaps of all kinds and especially of the Family Stone I found this dissappointing.Maybe you'll feel differently.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Sly's Last Stand: Who In the Funk Do You Think He Was? Syl's Final Album,
By mvconsults (San Francisco, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ain't But the One Way (Audio CD)
As described above, this was a reclamation project by producer Stewart Levine and I'd have to say he did a darn fine job. "Ain't But the One Way" still grooves underneath the studio gloss Levine produced. It actually mostly worked!
Starting off with the poppy bass and horn lines on L.O.V.I.N.U., Sly keeps the old Family Stone vibe together. The old school funk of the title track keeps it going. HA, HA, HEE, HEE, written by Pat Rizzo, who ended up replacing original member Jerry Martini, also has a nice old band vibe to it -- breezy and light, not dark and heavy. HOBO KEN follows next, ostensibly a sort of a tribute to his last manager, Ken Roberts. "Hobo Ken, be your friend/If you let him" it goes over and over. The uptempo standout WHO IN THE FUNK DO YOU THINK YOU ARE tells us, "Remember facts are easy to find/If in the max/Is what you're trying to climb". Huh? The zoned out version of the Kinks' YOU REALLY GOT ME doesn't work. The 44 second confessional SYLVESTER, however, works and might have been something more had Syl made it longer. WE CAN DO IT sounds like a rote workout with horn charts galore that fail to cover up the lack of anything here. HIGH Y'ALL closes the album with a little play on S&FS' earlier hit I WANT TO TAKE YOU HIGHER and tries to capture some of the old spark. However it degenerates into the same canned generic funk that permeated the tune before. Overall "Ain't But the Way" is an interesting view into Sly's final released recording, now about 25 years old, before he went off to a reclusive life of being an ex-rockstar living in the 90210 zip code. Album credits include original members, his brother Freddie Stewart, Jerry Martini, Rose Banks, Cynthia Robinson and latter-day members, sax player Pat Rizzo and drummer Andy Newmark (a well-known LA session drummer later on), as well as scads of LA session players. Sly we're still waiting for your follow up album!
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
ONE FOR COLLECTORS,
By
This review is from: Ain't But the One Way (Audio CD)
This album came out as the eighties were dawning, and as such, is past sly's peak of creativity. But considering it came out in a time of awful mechanical production values, it sounds pretty good! This is not sly's worst album either it just lacks the musical brilliance that his early band(Larry Graham et al) afforded him.Sly wrestles too hard with the discoish sound of L.O.V.I.N.U. and Who in the funk do we think we are? and comes off sounding slightly wooden, the latter is still a good tune though. It will certainly dissapoint slightly unless youre a die hard fan.But that being said dont be too put off as it's cheap, has an interesting lyric book and is better than buying some of the dodgy compilations of very early material.In a nutshell a better late period sly album, just not as gritty as the stuff i love. Try graham central station and betty davis if you want more sly like music.
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Ain't But The One Way (Original Recording Remastered) by Sly & The Family Stone (Audio CD - 2010)
$15.61
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