"Time needs another minute"
About this Quote
"Time needs another minute" lands like a sly hook because it flips the usual power dynamic. We treat time as the boss: the clock runs, we scramble. Sly Stone turns it into something needy, even a little flimsy. Time, that supposedly unstoppable force, suddenly sounds like a bandmate asking for one more take. It’s funny in the way Sly often is: a casual line that quietly rearranges reality.
The intent feels less like a philosophical thesis than a survival tactic. In Sly’s universe, everything is in motion - fame, desire, politics, the churn of a culture racing toward the next thing. Asking for "another minute" isn’t just procrastination; it’s a demand for breath. The subtext is control: if you can make time wait, even briefly, you’ve stolen back agency from deadlines, trends, and the machinery that packages artists and audiences alike.
Context matters because Sly Stone emerged from an era that fetishized urgency: the late-60s and early-70s were all acceleration, from protest to psychedelia to the music industry’s appetite for constant novelty. His work often stages that tension between liberation and pressure, between communal joy and private unraveling. "Time needs another minute" reads like a wink and a warning: the culture insists everything must happen now, but the human cost of "now" is steep. So he negotiates with time, not as an abstract concept, but as something you can talk back to - one extra minute at a time.
The intent feels less like a philosophical thesis than a survival tactic. In Sly’s universe, everything is in motion - fame, desire, politics, the churn of a culture racing toward the next thing. Asking for "another minute" isn’t just procrastination; it’s a demand for breath. The subtext is control: if you can make time wait, even briefly, you’ve stolen back agency from deadlines, trends, and the machinery that packages artists and audiences alike.
Context matters because Sly Stone emerged from an era that fetishized urgency: the late-60s and early-70s were all acceleration, from protest to psychedelia to the music industry’s appetite for constant novelty. His work often stages that tension between liberation and pressure, between communal joy and private unraveling. "Time needs another minute" reads like a wink and a warning: the culture insists everything must happen now, but the human cost of "now" is steep. So he negotiates with time, not as an abstract concept, but as something you can talk back to - one extra minute at a time.
Quote Details
| Topic | Time |
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