
-
New Athletic captain Williams 'lucky' to represent migrants in Spain
-
Musetti, Rune set winning pace for ATP seeds in Toronto
-
Venus Williams gets US Open mixed doubles wild card spot
-
Global stocks mixed as market focus shifts to earnings deluge
-
Tens of thousands of Catholics head to Vatican's Jubilee of Youth
-
Trump says fell out with Epstein because he was taking Mar-a-Lago spa staff
-
Russia strikes kill 25 in Ukraine as Trump shortens Moscow deadline
-
US pushes to revoke scientific ruling that underpins climate regulations
-
US says Trump has 'final call' on China trade truce
-
Goalkeeper Trafford returns to Man City from Burnley
-
Boeing reports smaller loss as CEO sees progress in turnaround
-
Qatar, Saudi, Egypt join call for Hamas to disarm, give up Gaza rule
-
Trump opens Scottish golf course and vows 'peaceful world'
-
Aubameyang close to Marseille return: club
-
Gucci owner Kering posts 46% profit slump before new CEO arrives
-
Cambodia-Thailand truce broadly holds despite shaky start
-
P&G estimates $1 bn tariff hit, plans some US price hikes
-
Wiebes claims Tour de France stage as Vos holds lead
-
Mbeumo looks forward to Fernandes link-up at Man Utd
-
Displaced Cambodians return home after Thailand truce
-
Stock market attention shifts from trade deals to company results
-
Tens of thousands in Rome for Vatican's Jubilee of Youth
-
Pogacar to skip Vuelta after Tour de France triumph
-
New York mass shooter blamed NFL for his brain injuries
-
Impressive Scandinavia delivers O'Brien Goodwood Cup 1-2
-
US to overturn foundational climate ruling on Tuesday
-
Russia strikes kill 25 in Ukraine as Kremlin notes new Trump deadline
-
Boeing reports smaller loss, sees more 'stability' in operations
-
Jeep owner Stellantis says has turned corner on sales
-
India coach Gambhir clashes with Oval staff ahead of final Test
-
Netherlands bars two hardline Israeli ministers
-
IMF lifts 2025 growth forecast on 'fragile' easing in trade tensions
-
Portugal's Joao Felix joins Ronaldo at Al Nassr in Saudi
-
Ledecky wins 22nd world title as Popovici savours 'scary' gold
-
Stock markets rise as attention shifts from trade deals to company results
-
'Nervous' McKeown beats rival Smith for more backstroke gold
-
Fossil-fuel pledge in EU-Trump deal sparks climate fears
-
Novo Nordisk cuts earning forecasts again, names new CEO
-
Popovici says came close to going home before winning world gold
-
LA wildfires push insurance losses to highest since 2011: Munich Re
-
Spotify sees 12% rise in paid subscribers
-
England's Lionesses party in London after Euro 2025 triumph
-
European pharma industry still worried about tariffs
-
Ageless Ledecky wins 1,500m freestyle for 22nd world gold
-
Russia kills 25 in Ukraine, as Kremlin says 'committed' to peace
-
French health experts speak out against bee-killing pesticide
-
'Better than Olympics' as Popovici wins world 200m free gold
-
European stocks rally with eyes on earnings, trade deal
-
Former Olympic champion Dujardin makes dressage comeback after whipping ban
-
Gaza famine warning as Israel resists ceasefire calls
RBGPF | 4.73% | 77.55 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.49% | 22.61 | $ | |
NGG | 0.28% | 70.52 | $ | |
RYCEF | 1.79% | 13.38 | $ | |
BP | 0.88% | 32.96 | $ | |
SCS | -3.24% | 10.51 | $ | |
BTI | 1.88% | 52.77 | $ | |
SCU | 0% | 12.72 | $ | |
GSK | 0.58% | 37.67 | $ | |
RELX | 0.29% | 51.92 | $ | |
RIO | 0.13% | 62.27 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.95% | 23.12 | $ | |
BCC | -0.7% | 86.14 | $ | |
JRI | 0.23% | 13.06 | $ | |
AZN | 2.91% | 73.98 | $ | |
BCE | -0.72% | 23.66 | $ | |
VOD | -0.45% | 11.11 | $ |

Sly Stone: soul music's groundbreaking, elusive superstar
Funk master and iconic music innovator Sly Stone, whose songs drove a civil rights-inflected soul explosion in the 1960s, sparking influential albums but also a slide into drug addiction, has died, his family said Monday. He was 82.
Stone was the multi-instrumentalist frontman for Sly and the Family Stone -- rock's first racially integrated, mixed-gender lineup.
He "passed away peacefully, surrounded by his three children, his closest friend and his extended family," after a prolonged battle with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other health issues, Stone's family said in a statement.
"While we mourn his absence, we take solace in knowing that his extraordinary musical legacy will continue to resonate and inspire for generations to come," it added.
With his vibrant on-stage energy, killer hooks and lyrics that often decried prejudice, Stone became a superstar, releasing pivotal records that straddled musical genres and performing a memorable set at Woodstock.
But he retreated to the shadows in the early 1970s, emerging sporadically for unfulfilling concert tours, erratic TV appearances and a flopped 2006 reunion on the Grammy Awards stage.
An effervescent hybrid of psychedelic soul, hippie consciousness, bluesy funk and rock built on Black gospel, Stone's music proved to be a melodic powerhouse that attracted millions during a golden age of exploratory pop -- until it fell apart in a spiral of drug use.
Over the course of five years, his diverse sound cooperative left an indelible impact, from the group's debut 1967 hit "Dance to the Music" and their first of three number one songs, "Everyday People" a year later, to the 1970s rhythm and blues masterpiece "If You Want Me To Stay."
For many, Sly was a musical genius creating the sound of the future.
It was "like seeing a Black version of the Beatles," funk legend George Clinton told CBS News of his longtime friend's stage presence.
"He had the sensibility of the street, the church, and then like the qualities of a Motown," Clinton added. "He was all of that in one person."
- Huge influence -
The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inducted the band in 1993, saying: "Their songs were more than danceable hits -- they were a force for positive change."
But Stone struggled to contain the forces and pressures that came with fame. He slid into addiction. He missed concerts. His musical output, once bankable, became erratic.
The music, though, proved extraordinarily influential, laying the groundwork for Prince, Miles Davis, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, and OutKast.
By 1973, the band imploded.
Asked why by talk show host David Letterman a decade later, the elusive star was cryptic: "I couldn't make all the gigs, is what happened."
Multiple drug-related arrests followed. By 2011, he was homeless and living in a van.
In his 2023 memoir, Stone acknowledged he was lost in a deluge of cocaine and PCP, but that he finally went clean in 2019.
Drugs gave him "confidence" and energy, he wrote.
But he regretted "the way I let drugs run my life," he added.
"I thought I could control them but then at some point they were controlling me."
- Family affair -
Sly Stone was born Sylvester Stewart on March 15, 1943 in Denton, Texas. His parents moved the family to San Francisco's suburbs, and built ties with the Church of God in Christ.
He was a musical prodigy; by age seven, Stone was proficient at keyboards, and by 11, he played guitar, bass and drums. He sang gospel in church with his sisters and joined high school bands.
Stone studied music at California's Solano Community College, worked as a disc jockey and became a songwriter and record producer. He played keyboards for Marvin Gaye.
By 1966 Sly and the Family Stone had emerged, with brother Freddie on guitar and vocals, and sisters Rose on keyboards and Vaetta on background vocals.
White musicians Greg Errico on drums and saxophonist Jerry Martini joined them, at a time when such integration was rare.
Their first album fell flat. But when influential music executive Clive Davis urged Stone to make a more commercial record, the band stormed up the charts in 1968, with "Everyday People" reaching number one.
"We got to live together," Stone belted out.
It was a period of tumult in America, with civil rights showdowns, Martin Luther King Jr's assassination and anti-war riots.
"I was scared. At the time it was almost too much all at once," Stone, who is survived by a son and two daughters, once told an interviewer.
In 1969, Stone and his band released the album "Stand!" It was a commercial triumph including the summer smash of the same name that became a touchstone for Black empowerment.
That year, they played a frenetic post-midnight set before half a million people at Woodstock.
More than a generation later, the 2025 documentary "SLY LIVES: AKA, the Burden of Black Genius" shed light on one of soul music's groundbreaking figures.
"Sly opened the floodgates for all musicians of color," music producer Terry Lewis said in the film, "to just do whatever they felt like."
S.Jackson--AT