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Did any of you see Sly Stone in L.A? Sorry if there's a thread already that I'm missing,
but did any of y'all funkateers in here happened to see The Family Stone feat Sly at the House of Blues Jan 13? /peace Manki | |
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hey Manki
Did you hear about those Sly and The Family Stone remasters? We had a thread about it a few days ago. | |
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manki said: Sorry if there's a thread already that I'm missing,
but did any of y'all funkateers in here happened to see The Family Stone feat Sly at the House of Blues Jan 13? /peace Manki You mean this one??? http://www.youtube.com/wa...i_WKfWR2to | |
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I know the Dutch Twinns did !! I AM LOOKING FOR USED PRINCE CONCERT TICKETS ... https://www.facebook.com/...erttickets | |
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a pic from the latest family stone newsletter, which i got in my e-mail this morning! | |
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Space for sale... | |
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From the reports, it sounds like Sly came out late, noodled on the piano, sang a bit of Thank You and a few lines from I Want To Take You Higher, but that's it. From what I can tell, it was a lot like the Grammy performance. a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on | |
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Stax said: From the reports, it sounds like Sly came out late, noodled on the piano, sang a bit of Thank You and a few lines from I Want To Take You Higher, but that's it. From what I can tell, it was a lot like the Grammy performance.
yup - i've read a couple of reports. he just came out and fiddled around a bit, then waddled off stage. | |
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From the PhattaDatta mailing list newsletter:
On January 13, 2007, the Family Stone appeared and performed at the House of Blues Anaheim, starting off the year in celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King’s Birthday. The show started at about 10:00 PM (though the House of Blues never changed their ads that ran the wrong start time). Once it started, it was TOO HOT & FUNKY!!!!!
If you missed the Show, then you didn’t heed the words in the Newsletter last month and Sly’s own admonition “you MOST DEFINITELY DO NOT WANT TO MISS THIS ONE!!!” It was indeed a history-making event. For those of you who missed it, hopefully you’ll get in on the next Show. The show got started with Dance to The Music, which we all couldn’t help doing. The flow was all there, from Vet Stone’s smooth white leather outfit to her beautiful voice, so reminiscent of her oldest brother’s. I’ve read some comments that Skyler Jett’s soulful voice can’t touch some of the old members’. I’ll just say I am so thankful you’re here now, Sky! Brotha-man was jammin’ and putting it down big time! You represent extremely well and that call-and-response you had going with Tony Yates was off the hook! Lisa Stone’s smooth voice, as always, was irresistible. That girl was blowing her butt off!!!!! The Brothers Yates played so expertly. Pete, the way you handled that bass---too too funky, Man! Tony Yates---you made that guitar speak and we liked what it was sayin’! Stefon Dubose played those drums like he was trying to get a message back three generations…..on foot! There was a point during your solo that I thought “he can’t still be on the beat that the rest of the band is”……and you proved me so wrong! Dude, you master your craft fa sho! Tony Stead on that B3 Hammond……….I don’t even like to listen to any organ, unless it’s from somebody in Sly Stone’s family---until you. You played it like nobody’s business. And the horns were heavenly! Mike Rinta on the trombone; Cynthia Robinson made that trumpet command our attention; and Johnnie Bamont serenaded us with his saxophone. We also had Pat Rizzo’s saxophone jamming and helping take us back to a place we were all too glad to go. When Sly Stone graced the stage, he promptly introduced his oldest daughter, Phunne. My girl was slinging the lyrics of a verse she wrote as the Smooth Poet that her Daddy produced! Then he called his daughter Novie. She played some classical piano to show us that the range does extend beyond funk and then dropped a line of one of Pop’s songs to reveal, “oh yeah, I sing too”. Last of the family introductions of this night was his niece, Toddy, who ad-libbed and echoed what her Uncle was singing as well as added a little of her own flavor to it. It was as though we were on a journey in their set, when Vet and Lisa did the hambone---it was great! You could see some of the younger ones asking “what was that?” As the songs reached towards the end of the set, the Family Stone not only took us to church with a twist and variation on Thank You, they interpreted with the tambourine and congregational chants. Not to be forgotten, they paid tribute to the Godfather of Soul—Dr. James Brown, with Sex Machine. They gave us an encore performance, and Sly gave us another peek and wave during Higher. The total show was fabulous on the funky for real and went off as the Family intended!!!!! | |
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I cant believe they turned Sly into a Circus Side Show. Pathetic if you ask me.
What gets me more is they send a newsletter out to everyone to tell them how good they were. Who are they trying to fool by trying to convince everyone they were tight. OMG The lady in the white needs to put some clothes on. It was a bit embarrassing to say the least. | |
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sosgemini said: you.aint.right. A happy face, A Thumpin Bass, For A Lovin' Race. PEACE. | |
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xenophobia2002 said: I know the Dutch Twinns did !!
Yep. "I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven | |
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Sly Stone Reappears The House of Blues, Downtown Disney, Anaheim, CA
(A Night Out in The Orange County Triangle) FULLERTON, GARDEN GROVE, ANAHEIM, Jan. 13, 2007 Attending this "concert" definitely ranks up there with the silliest things I've ever done. All indications -- a San Francisco Chronicle brief reporting that Sly wouldn't appear, the removal of Sly's name from the billing, more than two decades of Sly Stone comeback rumours -- pointed to a no-show. But we had free tickets, for Chrissakes, and what if he showed up? Djoe St. John, who won the tix on the radio, and I, who was honored to share in his bounty, vowed to manage our rock 'n' roll expectations and enjoy a night out in The O. C. Around 3:00 p.m., when I should be pre-partying, I start to get seriously ill: chills, sore throat, fever, mild nausea. Maybe this was g-d trying to tell me something. Fortunately I've never been one to listen to g-d so when Joe picks me up we head straight for the Continental Room and down a couple of manhattans. Our resolve thus fortified, we continue to Garden Grove for a Vietnamese dinner at Brodard's aka Nem Nuong (don't ask, I don't get it either). Man, this joint seems SO good. It's jam packed with eaters, our food looks fantastic, but my body will not permit me to eat; I stare at my vittles and they stare back, mocking me with savory fragrance and vibrant color. Djoe tells me that I look pale, that all I need do is say the word and we'll head for home. I thank him for his kindness and tell him that I'll be alright and besides, dude, "[David] Rosen will kill me if I miss this show." Djoe concurs. We put a meal's worth of leftovers into doggy foam and off we go to Downtown Disney.1 As we drive along Katella I reminisce about the amazing collection of space-age and tiki craze motels that used to line this avenue. None of them remains, the last one having been demolished around the time of Sly's last gig. And so it goes in the land of Disney: through the power of eminent domain the space age gives way to the retail age and before you know it Mr. St. John and I are parked (3 hours free) at Downtown Disney. Djoe, who's really worried about me at this point -- not only am I pale but I've made no attempt to smoke anything at all before attending a [Sly and The?] Family Stone concert -- asks me if I'm cool. I affirm my readiness to push forward and we walk to the mall. We reach the HOB quickly because a) it's 38 degrees outside, and b) Djoe is trying to escape the fan who just bummed a smoke from him (I told him to take her back to the car but he wouldn't bite). The marquee reads like a disclaimer: "Tonight: The Family Stone." Nevertheless we sprint for the entrance because we figure they have heating. Now we're in and the heat is for real. It's old skool night in Anaheim: the blacks and the whites are enjoying the DJ's stunningly predictable 70's funk play list: "Flashlight," "Got To Give It Up," "You Dropped a Bomb On Me," "Hollywood Swinging," etc. I love these songs and all but an hour-and-a-half of the same tempo and no place to sit does not enhance my health or Djoe's patience. Finally the DJ cuts his set and the curtain opens to the sound of a slow funky hip hop beat and some noodling keyboard. Is this a preview of the long-awaited "new material"? We'd have to wait to find out because, despite the MC's promise that this would be a "historical night," the band that took the stage looked and sounded like a Vegas cover band, complete with a fringed-red-leather-jacket-clad frontman. Original Family Stone trumpeter Cynthia Robinson and Sly's sis Vet Stone kept it real, and they dragged out late-era "original" band member Pat Rizzo 2 for sax and flute solos but after about a half-hour of an admittedly competent set of hits, those of us who were going to tear the club down if Sly didn't show started to pace back and forth (including, thanks god, an especially vintage type of dude wearing handstitched-black-leather everything including a wide-brimmed hat, all carefully layered on top of a white turtleneck and accented with goldness). Squirrely types aside, the crowd as a whole showed surprising patience and enthusiasm for the show. Their tolerance of stage-borne shouts such as "Do any of you out there own any Sly and the Family Stone records?" was a testament to the power of nostalgia. But the pacing continued and even (Formerly) Cool Dad gave up; he put the kibosh on the whole thing and led his sullen-faced adolescents right on out of there. 3 Meanwhile, Djoe and I are reduced to sitting on the sticky HOB floor and even contemplating how we can get out of there without telling Rosen. Even the world's greatest bass line, now blaring out of the P. A., becomes just another reason for my worsening headache. And then it happens: as the band vamps on "Thank You," Vet Stone introduces Sly and he enters, stage left. He looks a little shy but he's Sly! Sporting the full-length studded leather coattails 4 and blond mohawk he infamized at last-year's Grammy's, he's escorted on stage by his provocatively-dressed daughter Nobi who, as the band stops playing, sits down at a keyboard and plays a shaky rendition of a baroque-ish student piano piece 5 He appears somewhat gigglish. He brings an older daughter, Phunne, on stage and whispers, "I've been making babies." She raps and solos on tambourine. The band, having resumed after the piano exhibition, becomes hesitant and confused as Sly, holding a microphone, makes movements toward the keyboard and threatens to say something. A joint-smokin' woman carrying a djembe and wearing a "PhattaDatta" jacket appears at the margins of the stage and prowls around with heavy attitude. Abruptly, the drummer segués into the same beat that played as the curtain opened; Sly sits down at the keyboard to noodle a couple of two-fingered percussive phrases then gets up. The band finds its way back to "Thank You" and Sly actually sings the chorus a couple of times, his finger thrust into the air. He ambles around the stage a little while longer, still shy and giggly, then wanders off, leaving the band stalled and confused. And what's a Vegas-style pro cover band supposed to do when an uncomfortable vacuum fills the stage? Solo motherfuckers, solo! There's a bass solo (after the bass player convinces the sound guy to turn his volume back on), a guitar solo, a drum solo, a vocal solo (ouch) and finally a merciful return (did I mention Phunne's tambourine solo?), by the entire band, to "Thank You." The tune thankfully concluded, Vet Stone, after many hopeful offstage glances, promises that Sly will be back. It's a tempting invitation to stay until the finale, but one that will be declined. Sly made his return and we were there; now it's time to take him for granted and smile. ----- 1 Downtown Disney, an outdoor mall, was, along with California Adventure, part of Disneyland's turn-of-the-century expansion. Tenants include ESPN Zone, Jamba Juice, Ralph Brennan's Jazz Kitchen and House of Blues (Anaheim). continue 2 Dave, I know I told you it was Jerry Martini but I was in a weakened condition and even at full strength I'm not very good with band member names. I'm glad that it wasn't Martini because this guy sounded terrible. I mean, if you haven't played in a while, just come out and wave hello and get off of the stage because a flute amplified by rock and roll sound guys is painful enough without the added complication of weak chops. continue 3 Gerald Rosen would never have done that. continue 4 The L. A. Times reported a "glittery black cape". This was not a cape, alright? A cape does not have sleeves. And who is this Rich Kane reporter guy who can't tell the difference between glitter and studs? See The Orange County Register for a much better account of the show. continue 5 The L. A. Times reported that it was "Mozart" but they've lost all credibility. If Rich Kane is so up on his Mozart he should be reporting from Disney Hall, not Downtown Disney. continue | |
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novabrkr said: He may look a little like Gary Oldman in 'Bram Stoker's Dracula' here, but you can tell he's Sly when he smiles. | |
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