‘‘I’M PAST DEADLINE,” QUESTLOVE confesses with a smile and a sigh as he looks intently at the television screen suspended over a dining table in his apartment. The picture-window view from his perch in a lower-Manhattan skyscraper goes to Brooklyn and beyond. But the producer, DJ, author, filmmaker and founding drummer of hip-hop institution The Roots is glued to the new, opening sequence – a rapid-fire montage of interview clips and kinetic live footage – for his documentary on the kamikaze R&B genius Sly Stone, the follow-up to Questlove’s 2021 Academy Award-winning debut as a director, Summer Of Soul. WAY
“I’m realising that every project I work on has a surprise element,” he says, turning off the TV and jumping right into three, winding hours of knockout anecdotes, acute musical analysis and candid, personal reflection for MOJO. “With Summer Of Soul, you learn one thing: ‘Oh, I didn’t know a music festival happened in Harlem [in 1969].’ But you also learn that black joy is as important as the black tears and bloodshed of the civil rights movement.” In turn, “This Sly doc isn’t really about Sly,” Questlove warns. “It’s about why artists self-sabotage.”
Questlove, 53, is too busy and jubilant in the workload to get in his own way – literally “the king of ‘yes’” as he puts it in his latest book, Hip-Hop Is History, a roller-coaster guide to the author’s life in the music since he was six years old, hearing the Sugarhill Gang’s Rapper’s Delight on the radio in Philadelphia. Today, Questlove reveals that within two weeks of winning his Oscar, he agreed to direct another six films. Meanwhile, The Roots are “damn near 80 per cent done” with their first LP in 10 years and have “four songs on the back burner” for a project with fellow Philly icon Todd Rundgren. And that’s on top of Questlove’s productions for other artists, DJ bookings and The Roots’ 15 years on TV as the house band for talkshow host Jimmy Fallon, the last 10 of them on The Tonight Show.