Sly answers: “Five feet taller than I usually am…” He asks Sly : “How do you feel, being back on stage?” At the end of the show, he does get one question, on camera… He asks for an interview but is not permitted one. In the end of the documentary Willem Alkema returns to see Sly perform at the Noth Sea Jazz festival 2007 (NL). Eventually with help from them, Sly’s sister and an old drum machine, Willem and ‘Da Funk Twinz’ succeed in meeting up with Sly in person, in a Disneyland hotel room, without cameras. In his quest Willem teams up with the twin brothers Arno and Edwin Konings, who have been working hard on a Sly Stone biography since 2002 (the book is expected early 2010). With the help of local policeman Peter Coogan, Willem manages to come up with an address, but it doesn’t bring him any closer to actually interviewing or talking to Sly. In 2005 Willem Alkema ( Dwars! Produkties) got struck by the same fascination and set out to LA, to try his luck in the search. Their film, “ Let Me Have It All” can be seen on YouTube. His disappearance from public life has become a fascinating subject in and of itself.Ī different Dutch crew, film students Jeroen Berkvens and Walter Stokman had already set out to track down Sly Stone in 1992, with no succes. Many people tried and failed to find him for a dozen years.
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There were a series of weird resurfacings, like Stone’s appearance at the 2006 Grammy Awards, where he performed a mere snippet of “I Want to Take You Higher” with some guest musicians paying him tribute. When the family Stone was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993 (the ceremony was presented by George Clinton), Sly slipped in and out of without saying much, unannounced. There was little of any note heard of Sly Stone in the 90’s. He was jailed for possession of cocaine in 1987 and ended the decade fighting further extradition charges. Stone became disillusioned with the ideals he had been preaching in his music, becoming addicted to a variety of drugs in the process. The story of Sly Stone began with enormous promise and, subsequently, proceeded along a rocky road that would see this hugely gifted singer/songwriter forced into musical retirement by a common Twentieth Century malaise… “There was probably no more Woodstockian moment at Woodstock than when he and the Family Stone, his multi-racial, four-man, two-woman band, took control of the festival in the wee hours of August 17, 1969, getting upwards of 400,000 people pulsing in unison to an extended version of “I Want to Take You Higher.” For one early morning, at least, the idea of “getting higher” wasn’t an empty pop-culture construct or a stoner joke, but a matter of transcendence. The Family Stone quickly became known as one of the best live bands, and their performance at Woodstock was widely hailed as one of the festival’s best. “ Everyday People“, released late in 1968 rocketed to the top of the pop and R&B charts and set the stage for the breakthrough success of 1969’s “ Stand!“. The album “ Dance To The Music“, generated a Top Ten pop and R&B hit with its title track early in 1968. Their music was joyous, but as the ’60s ended, so did the good times… The Family Stone was comprised of men and women, and blacks and whites, making the band one of the first fully integrated groups in history. The group formed in San Francisco, California, USA, in 1967, and disbanded in 1975. Sly and the Family Stone were pioneers of psychedelic soul-funk. Sly Stone has been one of music’s great recluses for some 20-odd years… he vanished into rumor in the 1980s. Dance to The Music | Sly Stone Documentaryĭecember 6th, Dutch broadcasting network NPS premiered the documentary “ Dance To The Music“, a search for funk legend Sly Stone.