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via Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images Stone attended broadcasting school in San Francisco and was then a D.J. at two local AM stations: KSOL, based out of San Mateo, and then KDIA, in Oakland.
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He ventured into the world of music when he worked as a disc jockey, in the 1960s, at San Francisco’s KSOL. He soon formed Sly and the Stoners, the band that morphed into the iconic Sly and the ...
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By the mid '60s, he had left school to work as a DJ for San Francisco’s KSOL, which became known as KSOUL because of its focus on the soul genre. He also worked with many emerging acts.
In the mid-1960s, he was a DJ for the soul radio station KSOL in San Francisco and later became a producer for Autumn Records, working with bands like the Mojo Men and the Great Society.
However, his music career began as he left school to work as a DJ for San Francisco radio station KSOL and worked with many emerging acts. Then in 1966, he and his brother combined their bands.
Image Mr. Stone in 1967 at the San Francisco AM radio station KSOL. He was a popular disc jockey in the Bay Area from 1964 to 1967.Credit...via Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images Around the same ...
He was also a DJ on KSOL and KDIA, and later noted that “in radio, I found out about a lot of things I don’t like. Like, I think there shoudn’t be ‘Black radio.’ Just radio. Everybody be ...
Now rechristened “Sly Stone,” he became a popular disc jockey at the Bay Area stations KSOL and KDIA. While both were putatively R&B outlets, Stone spun the soul hits of the day side-by-side ...