Stone Jam is the fifth album by the American funk band Slave. It was released in 1980 on Cotillion Records and reissued in 1997 on Rhino Records. It was produced by Jimmy Douglass and Steve Washington. The album was listed on the Billboard 200, Billboard's 1981 Year-End Chart and was certified Gold by the RIAA. It contains the hit singles "Sizzlin' Hot", "Feel My Love", and "Watching You".
Stone Jam | ||||
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Studio albumby | ||||
Released | November 1980 (1980-11) | |||
Genre | Funk | |||
Label | Cotillion | |||
Producer | Jimmy Douglass, Steve Washington | |||
Slave chronology | ||||
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Slave's fifth album, Stone Jam, was their highest charting since their first, Slave,[1] and their second to be certified Gold,[2] Slave received the certification in 1977.[3] The band's drummer, Steve Arrington, took on more singing responsibilities than on previous albums and this, combined with the vocals of Starleana Young, contributed to the album's success.[4] The single "Watching You" entered the Billboard Hot 100 and also joined "Sizzlin' Hot" and "Feel My Love" on the R&B Singles Chart.[5]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [4] |
The Morning Call deemed the album "musically boring," but conceded that "Sizzlin' Hot" and "Let's Spend Some Time" "may cut it on the dance floor."[6]
Alex Henderson of AllMusic breaks Slave's brand of funk into two categories; 'hardcore' and 'sophisticated'. He notes that their earlier work falls into the former category but, with the exception of the tracks "Stone Jam" and "Sizzlin' Hot", this album is in the later. He goes on to write that this "sleeker" approach is "every bit as appealing" as their earlier more aggressive work. He describes the tracks "Dreamin'", "Feel My Love" and "Let's Spend Some Time" as "addictive jams" and the album as "consistently melodic".[4]
Jam-Master JayofRun–D.M.C. has named it as one of his favorite albums.[7] The album made the Billboard 1981 Year-End Pop Chart at number 99[8] and the Soul Chart at number 7.[9]
The song "Watching You" was interpolated twice by rapper Snoop Dogg, first in the chorus of "Gin and Juice" in 1993,[10] then in "Let's Get Blown" in 2004.[11]
Year | Chart | Peak |
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1981 | Billboard 200 | 53[1][12] |
R&B Albums | 5[12] |
Year | Single | Chart | Peak |
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1980 | "Sizzlin' Hot" | R&B Singles Chart | 57[5] |
1981 | "Feel My Love" | 62[5] | |
"Watching You" | 6[5] | ||
Billboard Hot 100 | 78[5] |
Format | Certification | Date |
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Album | Gold | 30 March 1981[13] |
Year | Format | Label | Catalog |
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1980 | Vinyl | Cotillion | SD 5224 |
1997 | CD | Rhino | 72625[14] |