The breakup of
Cream in late 1968 had consequences that rippled across the rock music world -- in its wake was the direct formation of such bands as
Blind Faith (whose tragedy was they never had a chance to actually become a band) and
Ginger Baker's Air Force, as well as the rich solo careers of members
Eric Clapton and
Jack Bruce. And it yielded -- by way of
Cream associate and producer
Felix Pappalardi -- something of a successor band in 1969 in the form of
Mountain.
The band's history all started with a Long Island-based psychedelic/garage band called
the Vagrants, who'd acquired a serious local following and always seemed poised to break out without ever actually doing so. Their lead guitarist,
Leslie West, was a physically outsized figure as well as a musician extraordinaire whose style had been completely transformed by his experience hearing
Clapton's playing in
Cream.
The Vagrants and
West first crossed paths with
Pappalardi in 1968, when he saw their potential and got them signed to Atlantic Records, where he was working as a producer. He had already made a name for himself producing
Cream's
Disraeli Gears album, and had played numerous background instruments on their follow-up,
Wheels of Fire (and on the studio tracks that would comprise their
Goodbye album). He did produce some of the best work that
the Vagrants ever released, but none of it sold; and when
West left the band in late 1968 to do a solo album, titled
Mountain,
Pappalardi produced it for him, as well as played keyboards and bass on the record. The results were the most impressive of
West's career up to that time, a solid, blues-based hard rock workout, showing off just how profoundly he incorporated
Clapton's playing into his own style --
Mountain sounded a great deal like the by-then-disbanded
Cream, and was satisfying enough for the two to form a partnership, also called
Mountain. Their first lineup was built around the one used on the album, with
N.D. Smart on drums, and
Steve Knight added on keyboards, while
Pappalardi concentrated on playing the bass. Following a debut performance at the Fillmore West in July 1969, the group played its fourth live performance ever at Woodstock, in front of an audience of several hundred thousand on a bill with the likes of
Jimi Hendrix,
the Who,
the Jefferson Airplane,
Janis Joplin,
Creedence Clearwater Revival, and -- also getting their first national exposure at the same festival --
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. The event was an auspicious one, even though it was followed by a personnel shift, as
Smart was replaced by
Corky Laing,
West's oldest friend.
The group was signed to the Windfall label and released their debut LP, Mountain Climbing!, in the spring of 1970, accompanied by their debut single, "Mississippi Queen," which reached number 21 in June of 1970. That chart placement doesn't begin to delineate the impact of that single, a hard rock boogie that was a killer showcase for
West's guitar and an unlikely piece of Southern-fried rock & roll, coming from the pens of the Queens- and Brooklyn-born
West and
Pappalardi, and the Canadian-born
Laing -- it was as improbable as the California-born
John Fogerty authoring "Born on the Bayou" or "Green River," and almost as enduring in popular culture. The single may not have reached the Top 20, but the album it was on peaked at number 17, driven by listeners drawn to the single but wanting more from the band behind it, and the high-energy mix of hard rock and blues they generated. And the debut album offered some surprises, such as the quartet's successful digression into progressive rock with "Theme from an Imaginary Western" (co-authored by
Cream's
Jack Bruce, which only further emphasized the indirect connections and musical debt owed the other band). The latter got lots of play on FM radio, as did "Never in My Life."
Equally important to the band's fortunes, they were able to deliver on-stage what they promised on their records -- indeed, their albums were a surprisingly accurate representation of their actual sound, except that
Mountain was even louder live than they were in the studio. The group scored another hit at the Atlanta International Pop Festival in 1970, alongside
the Allman Brothers,
Cactus. and others.
Mountain's second album, Nantucket Sleighride, was equally successful commercially and unveiled the title track, which would take on epic proportions in concert. Flowers of Evil followed in November of 1971, just ten months after its predecessor, and it began to clearly show the strain of the pace the band had been keeping up since July of 1969 -- half of it consisted of lackluster studio originals, while the other half was a live medley and a concert version of "Mississippi Queen." Lackluster sales and reviews were inevitable, and the impression of a band running on empty was reinforced by their next release,
Mountain Live (The Road Goes Ever On) (1972), which had only four cuts on it, all of them characterized by extended solos. Hardcore fans appreciated the record as an extension of their recordings, but many listeners and most critics found it lacking musical cohesion.
The group broke up soon after the release of that album, due in part to
Pappalardi's concerns about his hearing, which been damaged by the high volume the band generated in concert. He returned to production, while
West and
Laing -- staying close to their hard rock roots, as well as the orbit from whence
Pappalardi had come -- teamed up with ex-
Cream bassist
Jack Bruce as
West, Bruce & Laing, a hard rock power trio that cut a brief but memorable swathe of their own across the musical landscape in the early to mid-'70s. Meanwhile, a
Best of Mountain LP released in the wake of the breakup helped to sustain interest in the group. And later in 1973,
Mountain was back together,
West and
Pappalardi reactivating the band with
Bob Mann on keyboards and guitar and
Allan Schwartzberg on drums for a tour of Japan. This resulted in the live double LP
Twin Peaks (1974), a much better representation of the group's concert sound, including a 32-minute version of "Nantucket Sleighride." During 1974, in the wake of the second live album,
West,
Laing, and
Pappalardi revived
Mountain again to record a studio LP, Avalanche. In subsequent years,
West and
Laing revived the group for live shows, sometimes joined by
Pappalardi;
West also performed with his own
Leslie West Band. Sadly,
Pappalardi was shot and killed by his wife in 1983. Two years later,
West and
Laing regrouped with
Mark Clarke on bass and recorded an album before once again calling it quits.
Laing served as PolyGram's A&R vice president in Canada between 1989 and 1995. In 1996, he reunited with
West and
Clarke for a new
Mountain album,
Man's World.
West and
Laing teamed up again in 2002 for another album as
Mountain,
Mystic Fire. 2004's Eruption was drawn from recordings of two live shows (one from 1985, the other from 2003), and
West and
Laing returned to the studio for 2007's
Masters of War, a set of
Bob Dylan covers. It was
Mountain's final album with
Leslie West, who died on December 22, 2020 at the age of 75. ~ Bruce Eder & Steve Huey