|
Tuesday
15th February @ The Park Hotel, Tynemouth -
£14.50
Doors 7.00pm
No Support
Mountain 9.00pm
We suggest you arrive by
8.450m at the latest.
Venue
Details |
|
|
Over
the past forty years the work of only a few artists can be credited with
forging a style and sound that would forever change the face of rock
music. The innovative studio and live music of Leslie West
and his
seminal rock band, Mountain, is one of those elite examples.
No other guitarist has approached the
mastery of the Gibson that West has. He coaxes sounds from a simple body,
neck and pickup that seem impossible to duplicate. Of course, there is a
secret to his style, and it's called 'feel'. West has some component of
his being that allows him to meld with the guitar -- the man and the axe
become one entity.
Today, Leslie West continues to roar on.
Despite the various ups and downs he has experienced in his 30+ year
career, he has persevered to remain one of the most influential
guitarists of our time.
The following article appeared in Mix
Magazine in October 2001
MOUNTAIN'S “MISSISSIPPI QUEEN”
By Gary Eskow
In the late 1960s, it seemed as though
every corner of the pop music playing field was covered. On any given day,
an AM station might send out a bit of confection like The Archies' “Sugar,
Sugar,” follow it with the Fifth Dimension's version of
“The Age of Aquarius” from the Broadway show Hair,
pop in The Beatles' “Hey Jude” and end the set
with some greasy funk, maybe James Brown's “Say It Loud (I'm Black
and I'm Proud).”
During this period, the guitar gods, led by Eric
Clapton and Jimi Hendrix, were attempting to deconstruct the
very nature of popular music as it had been written, recorded and
performed up to that point. For starters, the notion that song structure
(principally the 32-bar form) must be worshipped was trashed. Although the
material of Cream, the Jimi Hendrix Experience and countless
other bands they influenced was built on traditional forms, the emphasis
on extended solos often blurred them. (Although it may be argued that the
lasting gems from these groups are songs such as “Purple Haze”
and “Sunshine of Your Love,” which feature condensed
solos that highlight, rather than obliterate, form.)
While the legends were experimenting, a legion of
up-and-coming talent was taking it all in and preparing to make
contributions of their own. One of them, guitar player Leslie West,
was racking up a huge East Coast following with his group The Vagrants.
Although they never broke nationally, The Vagrants attracted some serious
attention from the industry. When West left the group to record a solo
album, Felix Pappalardi signed on to produce. Although most
historians know that Pappalardi also produced Cream, the
quintessential “power trio,” his musical roots were far-reaching. “Felix
was Dinah Shore's arranger at one time,” notes West. “I didn't know
anything about music when I met him. I still don't! Felix explained music
in ways that I could understand.”
After completing the solo album, West and Pappalardi
decided to put together a band and in 1969 Mountain was formed.
Drummer N.D. Smart and keyboardist Steve Knight rounded out
the group, who recorded their first album, Mountain Climbing,
in 1970. This album, recorded and mixed at The Record Plant in New York
City, featured a new drummer, Corky Laing. It yielded the memorable
hit single, “Mississippi Queen.”
At its heart, the song was just a simple variation
on the standard I/IV/V blues form that every basement band was hacking
away at. So what made “Mississippi Queen” so special
that it's sometimes listed among the Top 50 rock songs of all time? One
clue may be found in West's approach to music making.
“I don't play over words or through lines,”
he says. “It's like an orchestra. The first-chair violin stands up.
Then the trombone has a solo. Everything has its place. Small little
bursts you can sing back to yourself. I see guys playing all over the neck
— long, drawn-out solos. I thought of a solo as a song within a song; it
has to help the song. My whole theory is not to play anything you wouldn't
say.”
That philosophy is clearly at work throughout the 24
bars that make up “Mississippi Queen's” structure.
Consisting of 12 two-bar phrases, the first 10 of these are memorable,
one-bar guitar licks answered by a bar of vocals. The last two reverse the
pattern. That's it! No wasted notes or verbiage, and no solo, although
West, who has a distinct sound, was more than capable of spraying out his
thoughts, paragraphs at a time, in concert. The brevity of these intensely
musical licks helped lodge them in the minds of a generation of rock music
fans.
It was Corky Laing who actually came up with
the idea for “Mississippi Queen.” Recently he recalled,
“I had a band called Energy back in '69. Felix was supposed to
produce us, but then Cream came along. Back in August of '69, we were
playing at a funky beach club called 30 Acres. It was the hottest summer
ever in Nantucket, and one night the power blew [out] across the entire
island! I was in the middle of playing some dance tune when the bass and
organ went down. I found myself rapping this song on the spot!"
“You see, a buddy of mine had a girlfriend with
him at the club who was visiting from Mississippi. She had on a
see-through dress — I can still remember this; she was amazing! Look,
there were also Dexedrine's in my system, and I was on overdrive. I looked
at this beautiful girl and began screaming this song, 'cause there was no
power."
“Fast forward to the fall of that year. We were
recording Mountain Climbing in New York City, and Felix kept saying that
we needed one more good rocker. Leslie had just moved to Park Avenue. He
was having a lot of virgins just show up at his house at this time. It was
great! On the day we decided to work on the song, Leslie blew off the
chicks who were hanging around and we got down to business. He came out
with a lick — you know the one. I was madly in love with The Band,
and I decided to put a ‘Cripple Creek’ feel behind it. Later
on, I told Levon Helm that I felt bad about ripping him off, but he
said that he didn't hear any similarity between the two songs, and that we
didn't owe them any money!”
Being a producer, especially when you're also a
member of the band, as bassist Felix Pappalardi was, can be tricky,
especially when you have to criticize the artists you're working with. “We
cut the track a number of times,” Laing says. “I thought many
of the takes were great, but Felix kept throwing them out, demanding that
we polish the phrasing. Finally, we played it exactly right — or so I
thought. Felix maintained that the time was strange, and asked that I give
him some time he could hear. I was totally pissed; it was like the
fourteenth take, and I thought we had it! So I started smashing the cow
bell, very angrily. Felix said, ‘Keep it right there!’ That cow bell
intro became a hook for the record. By the way, I've always used Latin
equipment. I'm not a Latin drummer, but I'm very fond of the sound. Right
from the beginning, I'd often use timbales instead of tom toms. I grew up
in Montreal, and my mother turned me on to a lot of Cuban music. We didn't
have a cold war with Cuba, so I guess it was easier from a cultural point
of view to get into that music in Canada.”
West has similar memories of how he and Laing wrote
their most famous song. “When Corky brought me the idea, it was a
one-chord dance song. We got real high, took out a napkin, and I came up
with the main riff and the chords. Then we fit the words over the sound.”
Mountain recorded basic tracks together at the
Record Plant, with veteran engineer Bob D'Orleans at the board. “It
really wasn't that involved technically,” says Laing. “I was fond
of the big boom directional mics. I used two different bass drums for
tonal purposes. I do remember that the Record Plant had a standard mic
cabinet back then.
“Jimi Hendrix had just finished mixing his Band
of Gypsies record, and I remember him walking in while we were mixing
‘Mississippi Queen.’ He put his head down and listened to the
entire album and was very positive. Back then, the vocals and guitar solos
were the only parts that were overdubbed. The energy of the music was in
part dictated by the fact that guitar and bass players had huge
amplifiers, but drummers had nothing — just their physical strength. I'd
be out there with these monster players who had a wall of sound, sitting
there bashing my head out! Come to think of it, that's how I play today!
Felix let me put everything I wanted into ‘Mississippi Queen.’ Every
part of my body was going full out. I was completely indulgent with the
two-bass drum beat.”
“Felix was a great producer,” adds West. “When
I'd go into the studio to overdub guitar parts, as I did on ‘Mississippi
Queen,’ I'd start to think. Felix would say, ‘Don't think; I'll
think.’ I remember that I filled up the little holes in that song with
four or five different passes of fills. We patched together a solo, and
then I had to learn the one we'd made, and go back in the studio to record
it all over again. That's how I learned to answer myself! Eric Clapton
does the same thing.
“Felix gave me choices on the guitar takes, but he
made all the decisions on which vocals were keepers. I'd say the guitar
and vocal sessions took about 40 minutes each. As I remember, I sang the
verses down, and then came back and sang all of the ‘Mississippi
Queen’ lines. The mix took care of itself.”
The name of the group Mountain played on the girth
(long gone) of its celebrated guitarist. Underneath it all, though, there
was more than a touch of Vienna in West's musicianship. Listening to him
warm up before an outdoor concert in Crystal Lake, England, in 1970, on a
bill that also featured the Small Faces and Pink Floyd, I
remember the delicacy that showed through even in West's most furious
impulses. He had an uncanny ability to create harmonics of subtly
differing nuances. “I discovered that eight different harmonics can
be gotten out of any one note,” West says. “It's all in the
angle of the right hand. I designed some guitar picks recently that should
be coming to market soon. One of them is made to help even the novice
discover how to get those harmonics.” West also used the pinky on
his right hand to subtly modulate the volume controls on his Les Paul to
soften the attack of pick on string.
Tragically, Felix Pappalardi was the victim
of a shooting incident in 1983, but Leslie West and Corky Laing
have remained active. West is currently producing an Atlantic Records band
called Clutch with his partner, engineer Jason Corsaro. He recently
completed an instructional video, Leslie West Big Phat Ass Guitar.
More information on him can be found at his Website,
www.lesliewest.cjb.net. Corky Laing has his own band, Cork, which features
Eric Schenkman, the Spin Doctors' lead guitarist. Their second CD, Under
the Radar, will be released on King Biscuit Records in the fall.
© 2001, PRIMEDIA Business Magazines
& Media Inc. All rights reserved.
|
|
Tickets
details.
There will be
tickets available at the door.
To
avoid any possible delays in using the web site ordering
system, please call 07760 400 226.
If the answer
machine is on, please leave your name and number and we
will call you back. |