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The Family Stone is back in the recording studio But missing is Sly Stone BERKELEY, California (Reuters) -- The Family Stone, the California band that paved the way for modern funk,
But missing is Sly Stone is back in the recording studio for the first time in 32 years. -- the heart and soul of a band that blended race, gender, music and politics in a glorious evocation of Sixties idealism. "I'll put it like this," drummer Greg Errico told Reuters in an interview. "The B3 (Hammond organ) is on and running and idling, and the seat's warm, and whenever he (Sly) wants to come sit in it, he's more than welcome. "But he's been a recluse for the last 20 years or so ... I don't understand it. Your guess is as good as mine," Errico said. Sly Stone, 59, the innovative producer, singer, songwriter and keyboard player behind Sly and the Family Stone has not recorded an album since 1982. Drug-related legal and medical problems have haunted him over the decades and he declined comment for this story. Hailing mostly from the small northern California town of Vallejo, Sly and the Family Stone smashed cultural stereotypes with its black rock guitarist, white funk drummer, female horn player and blend of soul, rock and R&B in hits like "Dance to the Music." The band played at the 1968 Fillmore East concert, the 1969 Woodstock festival, and it was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. The seeds of reunion were planted 18 months ago after the Family Stone gathered in New York to accept an R&B Foundation Pioneer Award. "Everybody was there but Sly," said Errico. "We (wondered), 'Are we going to...put the group back together?' Everybody decided to do it. We waited for (guitarist) Larry (Graham) for about three or four months. After saying, yeah, he wanted to do it, he never responded." Undaunted by the absence not only of Sly but also of his cousin Graham on bass guitar, five of the original members of Sly and the Family Stone have been in the studio recording some 16 new songs. The B3 is on and running and idling, and the seat's warm, and whenever he wants to come sit in it, he's more than welcome. -- Greg Errico on welcoming Sly Stone back to the group The new tracks are being written and sung mostly by Sly's brother Freddie Stone and sister Rosie Stone, and the album is being produced by Freddie Stone and drummer Greg Errico. The band does not yet have a recording contract. The reunited group also includes Jerry Martini on saxophone and Cynthia Robinson on horn, all of whom backed Sly from 1967 to 1971 on such classics as "Everyday People" and "Stand!" Graham who went on to found the band Graham Central Station and has collaborated with Prince, is replaced by Rusty Allen, who played on Sly and the Family Stone's 1973 album "Fresh." Recalling the old days, Robinson said the group's songs always originated with Sly, who would write the material before coming into the studio. "He and Freddie used to work together ... at home, creating the songs," Robinson told Reuters in a telephone interview. Then he would give everyone their parts by playing riffs on his keyboards. She recalled Sly's striving for musical clarity in the session that produced the 1970 single "Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)." "He made sure stuff wasn't cluttered, that good lines weren't covered up by other good lines," Robinson said. For now, the Family Stone plans no live shows until after the new album is finished although several members -- Errico, Martini, Robinson and Rosie Stone -- are performing with others in the San Francisco Bay area in a funk jam group called the Funk Family Circus (formerly the Stone Family Circus). "If you think about it," says Errico, "that's a hard legacy to live up to, what we've done in the past." Or as Robinson put it, alluding to the title of the band's 1967 debut album, "This is a whole new thing again." | |
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Can't call it a Family Stone reunion without Sylvester. Just can't...ain't right. I could cry...just like a baby for that man. James may have sparked the funk but Sly took it to heights no one has managed to climb since...not even the beloved Prince. A bleedin' shame. Sly whatchu doin man? U must be nearin' 60. Are U under cloudy skies...with blunted eyes. Wish I could catch U smilin' again. Nothing against Graham...cept the fact that he's ridin' your funky coat-tails. Always be on my turntable Sly - Always. Love | |
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Red said: Can't call it a Family Stone reunion without Sylvester. Just can't...ain't right. I could cry...just like a baby for that man. James may have sparked the funk but Sly took it to heights no one has managed to climb since...not even the beloved Prince. A bleedin' shame. Sly whatchu doin man? U must be nearin' 60. Are U under cloudy skies...with blunted eyes. Wish I could catch U smilin' again. Nothing against Graham...cept the fact that he's ridin' your funky coat-tails. Always be on my turntable Sly - Always. Love
Gotta side with Red on this, people! I aint call it no Revolution reunion when all them folk was up at Paisley Park that day without Wendy and Lisa. Ah damn sho', aint bout to call this no Sly and the Family Stone without reunion without Sly and Larry. A REUNION is a RE-UNION people! Yeah.. but then I'm the same guy who'll call it Fleetwood Mac even without Christine. Oh well. Shame on me. | |
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It's not gonna work.This project is dead on arrival.No Sly? No Larry? That's absurd! | |
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CDHTUNE said: Yeah.. but then I'm the same guy who'll call it Fleetwood Mac even without Christine. Oh well. Shame on me.
I miss her input too, She balanced out Lindsey's neurosis and Stevie's hippy mysticism. | |
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