Malloy changed the call letters to KSOL and strengthened the rhythm and blues/soul music format targeting the African-American community; the station launched the career of popular 1960s and '70s musician Sly Stone, who was one of the station's DJs.
This is a discography for the work of Sly Stone (Sylvester Stewart) outside of his most famous band, Sly and the Family Stone.
Rolling Stone | Oliver Stone | Sharon Stone | Stone Cold Steve Austin | Queens of the Stone Age | The Stone Roses | Joss Stone | Stone Temple Pilots | Stone Age | Sly Stone | Stone Sour | Lucy Stone | Eli Stone | Bush Stone-curlew | Stone Gossard | Stone | Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone | Emma Stone | Turning Stone Resort & Casino | Sovereign Stone | Mike Stone | I. F. Stone | foundation stone | Sly and the Family Stone | Shane Stone | Rosetta Stone | Romancing the Stone | Power Stone | Mississippian stone statuary | Like a Rolling Stone |
# "Lazyitis" (Mark Day, Paul Davis, Paul Ryder, Gary Whelan, Shaun Ryder, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Sly Stone, David Essex) - 3:56
Greene made portraits of other prominent musicians including Jeff Beck, Joe Cocker, The Pointer Sisters, Janis Joplin, Led Zeppelin, Carlos Santana, Sly Stone, and Rod Stewart.
Martha Davis (of the Motels) and Sly Stone perform a duet of the song which appeared on the 1986 soundtrack for Soul Man.
Fisher took a job at United Artists Records, where he became an recording engineer and recorded artists such as John Buck Wilkins, Rita Coolidge, Brenda Russell, Sly Stone, Bobby Womack, The Curtis Brothers, Waylan Jennings, Pablo Cruz, and Michael Jackson.
The band’s A&R director and photographer Stephen Paley recalled how "together" Sly Stone was while working on Stand!, down to his constant referencing of Orchestration, a how-to book on orchestral arrangement by Walter Piston.