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Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)

A Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Not many memoirs are generational events. But when Sly Stone, one of the few true musical geniuses of the last century, decides to finally tell his life story, it can't be called anything else.
As the front man for the sixties pop-rock-funk band Sly and the Family Stone, a songwriter who created some of the most memorable anthems of the 1960s and 1970s ("Everyday People," "Family Affair"), and a performer who electrified audiences at Woodstock and elsewhere, Sly Stone's influence on modern music and culture is indisputable. But as much as people know the music, the man remains a mystery. After a rapid rise to superstardom, Sly spent decades in the grips of addiction.
Now he is ready to relate the ups and downs and ins and outs of his amazing life in his memoir, Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin). The book moves from Sly's early career as a radio DJ and record producer through the dizzying heights of the San Francisco music scene in the late 1960s and into the darker, denser life (and music) of 1970s and 1980s Los Angeles. Set on stages and in mansions, in the company of family and of other celebrities, it's a story about flawed humanity and flawless artistry.
Written with Ben Greenman, who has also worked on memoirs with George Clinton and Brian Wilson, and in collaboration with Arlene Hirschkowitz, Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin) is a vivid, gripping, sometimes terrifying, and ultimately affirming tour through Sly's life and career. Like Sly, it's honest and playful, sharp and blunt, emotional and analytical, always moving and never standing still.

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    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2023

      A groundbreaker whose famed 1960s--70s songs (e.g., "Everyday People") created a new kind of music that blended Black and white, male and female, funk and rock, Stone was a galvanizing performer who nevertheless leapt out of the spotlight and has remained a mystery to many. Finally, with this first book, he's telling his story. With a 200,000-copy first printing and an introduction by Questlove, who has just launched the imprint AUWA with Farrar's MCD. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from August 1, 2023
      Funk pioneer Sly Stone famously retreated from public life, so his memoir is a gift to fans, a forthright telling of his extraordinary rise from musical prodigy to genre-bending superstar, followed by a decline wrought by the intense pressure of success and heavy drug use. The ascent of Sly and the Family Stone is joyous. Stone writes about the band's deliberate embodiment of integration, "White and Black together, male and female both, and women not just singing but playing instruments." After a string of unforgettable hits like "Dance to the Music" and "Everyday People," the band reaches new heights with an electrifying performance at Woodstock. In describing these heady years, Stone's language is vibrant, laced with playful rhymes and clever turns of phrase: "when a song is knocking at your head, you have to open as many doors as possible to try to let it out." He addresses the escalating drug-fueled chaos of his later life as best he can, with coauthor Greenman's expert backing, and the account of Stone's decline is painful, with arrests, unsuccessful rehabilitation, and creeping paranoia. But the book ends with 80-year-old Stone in a comfortable apartment, gold and platinum records on the wall, finally free of drugs and enjoying visits from his grandchildren. Thank You is as complicated and beautiful as Stone himself.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Not only does the great Sly Stone tell his story for the first time, but his memoir is also the first book in a new imprint directed by the multitalented, Academy Award-winning Questlove.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2023
      An autobiography by the recording artist who scored numerous hits with his band, Sly and the Family Stone. Sylvester Stewart (b. 1943) was born in Texas but moved to California at an early age. In this memoir, written in collaboration with Greenman and Stone's manager, Arlene Hirschkowitz, Stone writes about his upbringing in a musical family, chronicling his experiences singing in church with his parents and siblings and teaching himself to play instruments. Bored in school, he began to focus entirely on music, writing songs and working as a session player with other musicians. Stone adopted his stage name while working as a DJ at a local radio station. "I went on the air and introduced myself as Sly Stone," he writes. "I was cooking with a bunch of ingredients. It sounded right. I was already smoking marijuana. And there was a tension in the name. Sly was strategic, slick. Stone was solid." Along the way, he met various musicians who would become members of his band, which began playing gigs in 1966. At this point, too much of the text becomes a list of venues with vague comments on events the author remembers from several decades earlier. Stone offers interesting commentary on individual songs the band recorded, and his recollections of various offstage incidents offer insights into the era--especially given the band's racially mixed personnel. The author is candid about his full embrace of the rock-star lifestyle and time lost to jail or rehab. After the mid-1970s, when the hits were slower to appear and the original personnel began to fall away, the book becomes unfocused. Stone's voice isn't sufficiently compelling to compensate for the shift to largely non-musical material, too much of it finger-pointing at those he blames for his troubles. Questlove provides the foreword, and the book includes a discography. An inside look at an important band and its music, but it loses interest when the music is no longer central.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 2, 2023
      Funk legend Sylvester “Sly Stone” Stewart revisits the ups and downs of his life in this electric tell-all. One of the most creative and controversial musicians of the 1970s, Sly went from singing gospel in his Vallejo, Calif., church (“My mother said that I really came alive in front of a crowd. More than that: If they didn’t respond I would cry”) to getting married on the main stage at Madison Square Garden in 1974. With a unique groove and swooning swagger, his band—Sly and the Family Stone, formed in 1966 and disbanded in 1983—revolutionized popular music and helped shape funk, soul, and R&B with such hits as “Everyday People,” “Stand!” and “Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin).” Though the narrative sags when Sly rehashes variety show interviews verbatim, readers will be captivated by the candid renderings of his struggles with a range of mind-altering drugs across a 50-year period and his accounts of interactions with the likes of Muhammad Ali, Doris Day, Jimi Hendrix, and George Clinton. By the end, this chronicle of how a man can go from being “High on life. High on coke. High on everything” at Woodstock through living in his car “by choice” to now, in his 80s, keeping “my ears open for songs that connect back to my music” strikes a melancholy and poignant note. It’s unadulterated, unapologetic Sly.

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2023

      Stone created one of the most influential and revolutionary groups of the 1960s and '70s, Sly and the Family Stone. His story of music and fame is at the heart of this engaging memoir, coauthored with Ben Greenman, who also cowrote Questlove's Mo' Meta Blues and Brian Wilson's I Am Brian Wilson. Stone, born Sylvester Stewart in 1943 in Denton, TX, moved with his family to Vallejo, CA, in 1950. As a young adult, he became one of the most popular DJs and songwriters in the Bay Area. In 1966, he assembled a multiracial group of talented men and women musical artists to create Sly and the Family Stone. Their music incorporated funky beats, candid wisdom, and playful wordplay, all of which united masses of people and fans. This book is full of remembrances of songwriting, performances, and collaborations with other musicians such as Bobby Womack and George Clinton. The authors also offer much insight and do not shy away from stories about Stone's many years of excessive partying and drug abuse. VERDICT Stone's memoir will certainly appeal to curious readers and fans of this icon of rock and soul music.--Leah K. Huey

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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