Me too !! Our campground was just up the back road behind the stage. Loved Mountain !! My band at the time played "Dreams Of Milk And Honey" and "Southbound Train".
1. This is Jack Bruce’s greatest composition. Frigg’n brilliant. 2. No one sang this song better than Felix. Just amazing. 3. Leslie West was a beautiful guitarist and this old version is his best-even better than later versions when he added a lot of technical complexity. You all know what I mean: this is the boys in heaven talking to us still.
@miltonkeynes3090, YOU SAID ALL THAT CAN BE SAID . YOU KNOW GREAT TALENT WHEN YOU HEAR IT. Thankfully they left us some of the best music in ROCK HISTORY. CORKY AND STEVE MADE MOUNTAIN A COMPLETE BAND . Only these 4-MUSICIANS MADE TO THE TOP OF THEIR MOUNTAIN,! BY THE WAY , (MOUNTAIN,MOUNTAIN CLIMBING,HENDRIX, we’re MY FIRST ALBUMS I BROUGHT.🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶😎✌️BOB
No doubt about it. Beauty to the ears. Can and does get caught up in the throat. Thanking them for the Rollercoaster ride that is heavy super group delightfullness.
If you cheat on your wife. Don’t buy her a gun. Which is exactly what happened to Felix He was cheating and brought his wife a gun. His wife found out about it. And shot him.
Felix had such a golden tenor voice. And Leslie played the hell out of that Les Paul Jr. Mountain was one of my favorite groups from the Woodstock era.
Such a great song, so brilliantly played and sung. Nothing comes close anymore, there is more emotion and passion in one note of this song than on entire albums of most of todays crap. This is one of those rare tunes that literally makes the hair stand up on the back of your neck, unless you have no feelings.
@ Gary Clark , I feel it! That's what makes it real. Today..., I am numb. This new music is absent of soul. An occasional tune is alive, but for the most part it everything is dead. I need an itch scratched.
he just makes you want to track down this stuff and hear him jam. very few guitarists play so damn well that I think about putting them on simply because it's time to hear it again. among the best lead guitarists that ever lived. the rock BB King. their original 'Mississippi Queen' was and is, badass. if you threw theJAMES GANG into CREAM, you'd get something like this.
There is a strong presence of melancholy and sadness yet truth sung and played brilliantly....felix is joyous..leslie plays lead so inspired what can be said
I used to listen to this over and over in 1970 but somehow forgot all about it until today, 52 years later. So beautiful and so nostalgic the tears are flowing. You think you remember all the songs you loved over the years but a few slip out of mind. What else have I forgotten?
Not me… I’ve listened to this song through all these years. Got it on every playlist that I’ve got. Absolutely love everything about this song… never get tired of it and through all these years never forgot about it , never put it on the shelf. Great job Felix, Leslie and Corky.
Thank you. Love Jack Bruce’s 1969 composition from Songs For A Tailor, but I had no flippin’ idea that Mountain covered it for Woodstock. All we had was the selected acts for the movie release in March 1970. They changed the key from E to A and with Leslie’s violin-vibrato guitar solo and Felix’s Gibson EB-1 bass tones and lead vocal- I wish that I was aware that Jack’s music and Pete Brown’s lyrics had MADE it to WOODSTOCK. In 2020, I am getting what I didn’t see or hear in the 1970 movie theater. Thank you, very much. And thank you, Mountain.
Jack and his wife Janet Godfrey were close freinds with Felix and his wife Gail Collins. Remember that Felix produced all the American Cream stuff. After Mountain split Jack joined Leslie and Corky in West, Bruce & Laing. They were all buddies.
Eric rejected the song when Jack purposed it for the Goodbye album in late 1968. Eric thought it sounded like The Band. (he was into "Songs from the Big Pink" at the time) So Jack recorded it for "Songs For a Taylor" and gave it to his dear friend Felix. Jack also played Pappalardi' s old Gibson EB 1 bass on Cream' s reunion concerts in 2005. Together with "We're Going Wrong" It's the best material that Jack and Pete Brown ever wrote IMO. And Felix sings it very good here. But as I remember Mountain did the song a bit higher, in the key of A. Jack sang it in G. R.I.P Jack, Leslie and Felix!
What a beautiful melody sung with the quality voice of Felix Pappalardi and his bass, the nice fills of the organist, the rock solid drums, and then the incomparable expression on guitar of Mr. west. This performance is one of the reasons the Woodstock Concert of 1969 remains a musical milestone in the Golden Age of Popular Music. Pieces like these will be enjoyed long after the Age passes and many will marvel at the unique musical feel displayed at this magical event.
Everything u have said is correct.I add one point.The rich imaginative poetry in this song is splendid.Overall, this is one of the finest R&B songs ever made.
YES WE LOST TWO OF THE GREATEST MUSICIAN,s IN THE HISTORY OF MUSIC. SO,SO SAD ,JUST LISTEN TO LESLIE PLAY THAT GUITAR,FELIX WITH THAT WONDERFUL VOICE,MAN THIS WAS A SPECIAL BAND . Thankfully WE HAVE THIS MUSIC TO LISTEN TO.!🎶🎶🎶🎶😂✌️😎BOB
No Leslie is Not with Felix.. but on the Gods white throne judgement they will be alive one last time to be judged for their Godly works on earth and then I’m sure they will both go to Hell for Eternity
Damn...there's NOTHING like this out there today. I was born 40 years too late. The 60s were the most creative period for music. Felix's bass and voice and Leslie West's guitar are perfection.
+QueerAndUnplugged You are so right about this. I am old now (almost 64) but feel so damn lucky to have grown up in the wonderful 60's, so much great music by so many great musicians and bands, and they actually played their instruments. Starting with The Beatles, Stones, Kinks, etc; then Cream, Steppenwolf, Hendrix, Deep Purple, Mountain, Zeppelin, JethroTull, and on and on. It really was the most creative period for music. Peace
+Gary Clark Was a great time for sure! But you forgot the greatest American guitar driven band of all- the original Allman Brothers Band with the great, incomparable Duane Allman
+midrider335 Didn't forget them, just so many to mention them all, but you are right, ABB was (and still is) one of the great ones too. Duane Allman still stands as one of the greatest guitarists of all time, pretty remarkable considering his far too short career. Others worthy of mention too include Grand Funk Railroad, Free, Bad Company, Pink Floyd, Sabbath, so many.........
+QueerAndUnplugged The music wasn't over produced and McDonaldized , so it had flavor. And there was no MTV so what the music sounded like was more important then looks. Add that the electric guitar amp were not just being used for volume, turn that shit up to 10 and the guitar becomes a different kind of animal, controlled feedback and sustain as an expressive tool. And a lot of bands were spiritual or had a theory, LSD made people think outside the box and stuff like Transcendental Meditation and Zen were being discovered. And there was a real nasty war happening with a draft lottery and at any moment your number could come up and in 8 weeks you'd be in hell. Assassinations, civil rights movement, the youth seriously questioning the government and the status quo, just a ton of factors making for some serious song writing with intense lyrics, Bob Dylan. And a lot of the music was about God and enlightenment, or peace and love. Folk music and the old blues masters being appreciated made for acceptance of a different kind of singing voice, less polished and trained, raw and down to Earth was good. All these factors made for a perfect storm. As to why music has gone down the tubes, it might not have, the good stuff might be hard to find. Music was just tossed out on the airwaves, like throw it at the wall and see if it sticks, see if it sells. Now I think they stick it to the wall, in other words they decide what we like. And those personal music devices, down loading one song at a time, whole albums often had a theme. Also through schools and universities there is a kind of censorship that is in the disguise of inclusive but is really constraining. Free speech and open discussion was encouraged, now there are safe zones all over a campus and a special little zone kicked off to the side is the only place where free speech is allowed. Last but not least, TV, American Idol, X Factor. New music was presented to us on shows like Ed Sulivan and Mid Night Special and other shows. Now it's a game show, and to top it off the winners are under contract and told what to do for 10 fucking years! Anyway, that is my take on what the hell is going on in the arts and why a Woodstock might not happen again for a long time.
@@namcat53 have you ever tried to sing that song? The word 'way' in the lyric 'having lost it along the way' is impossible to sing on key, at least for me.
Song was actually written by Jack Bruce of cream but I always thought mountain overall to be a much much better band more consistent and I actually prefer most of their versions of creams music I do not feel it Clapton had a passion as a blues player vocally or instrumentally that Leslie west did for one thing. Most underrated band of all time without a doubt although I do know of a couple of other exceptions to this
it is a beautiful song and reflects the struggle and the triumph of the pioneers but one part of the picture is omitted hence the "imaginary" western - the forceful dispossession and displacement and mass murder, to put it bluntly, of the original inhabitants - surprisingly, there are still people descended from them alive today
@@toddthedrysocketWelcome to human history 101. Not really that surprising that their descendants have survived though, as the vast majority of the indigenous folk who were wiped out succumbed to disease to which they had no immunity rather than a systematic genocide.
A tune from a mountain of a man, Leslie was way ahead of his time and thru all these years he kept putting out great music. Killer axeman...Thanks for posting this Classic..
This should have been on the original record but at least it made it to the 40th anniversary CD but not the DVD. For myself that version off Climbing was his best & most passionate . Truly one of the 70s most classic guitar solos.
To me, the live sound of this band and this song in particular are a complete and perfect representation of the sounds and moods of that particular time - 1969
agree with you for sure... song takes me back to when we were so hopeful of making positive change to fix the messed up world....think we dropped the ball in many areas but seeing now some of the youth are grabbing onto those values..
I saw West, Bruce and Laing play in North London and it was a joy to hear Jack sing this. Another link with Cream was that Felix worked with the group as a producer and, I seem to recall, playing instruments. I saw Mountain in London and they were the loudest group I had heard. When Felix played certain notes you could actually feel your stomach move. No wonder he lost his hearing. In the past when great musicians passed away there was always the consolation that others would be coming along. God knows what has happened. The supply line has been well and truly cut with nothing coming along. Watch Jack Bruce sing this live on TH-cam - he dedicates it to Felix.
I can't believe I didn't know about Leslie's passing until today. I woke this morning wondering what he'd been up to, then was looking up drummers, and stumbled onto the passing of my favorite guitarist ever. R.I.P. Leslie. This brings such sadness. Some of my buddies and I drove around six hours, to Little Rock sometime in the hot part of the summer of 1970 (I believe), in Johnny Daughrty's white Chevy Impala, to see Mountain. We figured we'd probably miss Ted Nugent and Edgar Winter's White Trash, but that was okay, if we got to see Mountain. By the time we got there, EWWT was just about finished, then we just slid right up to the front row of folding chairs, and I stood right in front of Felix and Leslie for the whole show. It was the definition of the overused word "awesome!". I'm sure none of us ever forgot that time we saw MOUNTAIN. LESLIE WEST and FELIX PAPALARDI !! I'm so glad I got that experience and the memory. I sang Theme for many years from behind the drumset, with a few different bands. I wish we'd gotten a recording of The AlaBastards doing it, back in the 0ughts. It was my favorite song ever to sing. My voice won't reach those highest notes anymore, but I still keep trying in the shower.
I played in a band called SYMON ASHER in the 90's and got to know JACK BRUCE the band was named for his Scottish family. When JACK was touring as a member of RINGO STARR'S All Star band he performed 'Theme For An Imaginary Western' solo with a huge grand piano his soaring vocals and the sheer emotion he brought to the song had me in tears by the time it was over. Just an incredible performance I will never forget.
This is where I first heard this song. I was a little boy. Eight years old. I was so amazed at EVERYTHING. the people, the music, the feeling all around. It was like nothing I ever experienced in my life 56 years later. nothing comes close. thank Ozzy, I had an older hippy Brother....
Can't add much - the most-beautiful of ANY of the live renditions of MOUNTAIN's best-ever songs. Steve's organ-contribution unusually well-placed & balanced. Corky's drumming at its most studied, syncopated and rhythmically-accomplished. Leslie's soulful out-front guitar unsurpassed. Felix's vocals and Bass superlative, unsurpassed for command and rounding-out of this 'best among the best' - comparable reference STORMY MONDAY (live at Atlanta 1970)
god, that LEAD! (I stole the double vinyl album from my firend just to have it in the 70's) He found it and took it back. Still besties and West is still a beast!
I love this song! It was this recording that I fell in love with Leslie West's guitar playing. His choice of notes and especially his vibrato, is just pure joy in the truest sense of the word. No wonder Randy Rhoades cited him as an influence. He let's the guitar breathe! His rhythmic sense is perfect. It's how he could bring out so many emotions out of the guitar. He gives the guitar sound life! RIP Leslie. Your now playing the the greatest band ever!
I love this version more than any other they played. Leslie's playing is so smooth and clean. Damn shame there's no recorded video, should have been in the movie. Thank you Leslie, Felix, Corky, Peter and Jack!
This Song has so much emotion and feeling.... I never grow tired of this classic, Leslie West and Mountain, I saw them in 1970 at Crosley Field in Cinci... Cinci Music Festival. Too many Great Bands to recall. But truly grew up in a special era that will never be repeated... A theme for an Imaginary Western is in a Class by itself...
Played in a band that had a first day opening in a new club that were used to copy bands that all dressed alike. Mr. Lucky's in Denver. Big club. We played all our opening stuff trying to get people to dance or something. Stones, Dooby Brothers, Allman Bros, Eagles and original stuff. We thought we were going to be fired right away. I guess they were just sitting listening because they'd never heard something like us or such a diversity of material - ALL done very well. For our closing song I thought what the hell lets shoot the works and if they don't like us we'll soon know. We played "Theme from an Imaginary Western" and with my "Felix like" voice and loud guitar parts going on - brought down the house with a standing ovation. Almost tears on the stage. What a relief! We played and they liked it from then on and many more times at Mr. Lucky's. Saved by the Mountain!!
When the wagons leave the city For the forest and further on Painted wagons of the morning Dusty roads where they have gone Sometimes traveling through the darkness Met the summer coming home Fallen faces by the wayside Looked as if they might have known Oh the sun was in their eyes And the desert was dry In the country town Where the laughter sounds Oh the dancing and the singing Oh the music when they played Oh the fires that they started Oh the girls with no regret Sometimes they found it, sometimes they kept it Often lost it along the way Fought each other to possess it Often died in sight of day Oh the sun was in their eyes And the desert was dry In the country town Where the laughter sounds Oh the sun was in their eyes And the desert was dry In the country town Where the laughter sounds
When the wagons leave the city For the forest and futher on Painted wagons of the morning Dusty roads where they have gone Sometimes travelin´ through the darkness Met the summer comin' home Fallen faces by the wayside Look as if they might have known All the sun was in their eye And the desert that´s dry In the country town Where the laughter sound Oh the dancing and the singing Oh the music when they play Oh the fire that they started All the girls with no regret Sometimes they found it Sometimes they kept it Often lost it along the way Fought each other to posses it Sometimes die in sight of day Oh the sun was in their eye And the desert that´s dry In the country town where the laughter sound
thanks for the lyrics Sherrin, I just realized that after 50 years I had no idea what the lyrics were. I guess I just enjoyed the song and the great feeling it gave me listening to it.
Mountain sounded phenomenal to me when I first heard this song on the radio. Just like when I was a kid, when I heard White Room, I later heard Theme For An Imaginary Western on the radio and could not get enough that song either. The imaginary of..Where the laughter sounds...Oh, the sun was in their eye.....And the desert that dry...In the country towns....Where the laughter sound......love it!!.....I spent years following the shadows that run from themselves and other songs written by Pete Brown. The words to his songs always got me. Pete was a poet!! And today I will play this song too, quite few times in remembrance Rest in Peace Peter 'Pete' Constantine Brown, your songs made a difference to a lot of folk. Always, let the sunshine of love beam up to you Pete! When the wagons leave the city For the forest and further on Painted wagons of the morning Dusty roads where they have gone Sometimes travelin' through the darkness Met the summer comin' home Fallen faces by the wayside Looked as if they might have known Oh, the sun was in their eye And the desert that dry In the country towns Where the laughter sound Oh, the dancing and the singing Oh, the music when they played Oh, the fire that they started Oh, the girls with no regret Sometimes they found it, sometimes they kept it Often lost it along the way Fought each other to possess it Sometimes died in sight of day Oh, the sun was in their eye And the desert that dry In the country town Where the laughter sounds Oh, the sun was in their eye And the desert that dry In the country towns Where the laughter sound
I don't know the inspiration behind this song but it does not matter..it just tears through my soul in a way I can't explain. I shiver inside, hair on my arms stands on end, eyes start welling up and I feel that time in the "age of man" still rages in me. Great music has imagery that you see in your mind's eye. Listen to "Ghost Riders in the Sky" By Vaughn Monroe from 1949--tell me if you can "see the song". Thanks for listening..btw, I'm 69 and I still loves me some good rock 'n roll. Rock on brother..
Perhaps one of Leslie's greatest performances ever. I can see why Randy Rhoads loved his feel. His vibrato was perfect. I love it too. RIP Leslie. You and Randy and everyone else can jam forever!
You're right....The CSN&Y song 'Sea Of Madness' wasn't recorded at Woodstock either...They used a better sounding version from the Fillmore East on the first Woodstock album..Cool that you were there Edgar Cook...I was a couple of years too young to go...
I've read that also their "Blood of the Sun" was not from Woodstock performance. I compared the two ones: the true Woodstock one was good, but the one they put on the record is terrific!!👍
❤️ Mountain ❤️ Love you guys. RIP Leslie, Felix & Jack. I don’t know how or what you’ve done but I feel like a better human being every time I hear this, and that’s since 1969.
We miss you Felix. Gone 30 years this week. Godspeed my brother - thanks for all the great music. Only you could wrestle greatness out of Mountain and Cream, et. al.
I grew up with this music and it still knocks me out. Hope the kids today will be able to find 'something' to look back on from today that has anywhere near the emotional impact that this music has. Glad it's not me.
Leslie played our small local community center (Eckman) in Old Greenwich CT with the Vagrants multiple times before he hit the big time, what a sound. Our theory was that his sustain and resonance had something to do with his body, ha ! so amazing
Written by Jack Bruce (he of Cream fame) and lyricist Pete Brown, "Theme For An Imaginary Western" was included on Bruce's 1969 solo album Songs For A Tailor, released shortly after Cream's demise. Felix Pappalardi, who was Bruce's producer, recorded the song with his band Mountain for their 1970 album Climbing!. With Pappalardi on lead vocals, this became the most popular version of the song.
That's A Picture Of Joe Cocker...? WTF. MOUNTAIN ~ Originally comprising vocalist and guitarist Leslie West, bassist/vocalist Felix Pappalardi, keyboardist Steve Knight and drummer N. D. Smart, the band broke up in 1972 and has reunited frequently since 1973, remaining active today.
Mountain at Woodstock was Leslie West, Felix Pappalardi and N.D. Smart. Steve Knight wasn't even performing with them at Woodstock. Knight joined them for the Climbing album in 1970, just after Corky Laing joined Mountain. I am pretty sure no actual video exist of Mountains Woodstock performance, and most photos are only of Leslie West on stage there. I could be wrong about the photos though.
This is the first time I've heard this version, and it's truly awesome. The whole band had such great dynamics, Felix's singing was even better perhaps than on the studio version, and of course Leslie's playing with that signature tone and melodic sensibility was heaven to my ears.
Simply the best version of this song. Felix vocals, Leslie’s solos (it’s all in the fingers man), Corky’s solid in the pocket, and the underrated coloring keyboards of Steve Knight. Best version audio; new PBS release of Mountain is close 😊
My all time !;!;! Favorite r/r band. I saw them twice at the masonic temple in Detroit in the earley 70;s. I played by bass for 7 years ;;; teenager diff bands. Good !;!; Ole days !;!!! Great video !!! Thanks !;!!;!
I was near the front of the stage for this set 51 years ago!
You should have 1000 thumbs up for that brother
Well Tony...it's 51 years later and I'm still jealous.
That’s great! Ok as someone who was there, who’d you rate the 3 best acts that played it, in order?
Me too !! Our campground was just up the back road behind the stage. Loved Mountain !! My band at the time played "Dreams Of Milk And Honey" and "Southbound Train".
I remember, I was standing right next to ya! Such a long, long time ago!
1. This is Jack Bruce’s greatest composition. Frigg’n brilliant.
2. No one sang this song better than Felix. Just amazing.
3. Leslie West was a beautiful guitarist and this old version is his best-even better than later versions when he added a lot of technical complexity.
You all know what I mean: this is the boys in heaven talking to us still.
Peter Brown co author. RIP
Agree on all three!!
@miltonkeynes3090, YOU SAID ALL THAT CAN BE SAID . YOU KNOW GREAT TALENT WHEN YOU HEAR IT. Thankfully they left us some of the best music in ROCK HISTORY. CORKY AND STEVE MADE MOUNTAIN A COMPLETE BAND . Only these 4-MUSICIANS MADE TO THE TOP OF THEIR MOUNTAIN,! BY THE WAY , (MOUNTAIN,MOUNTAIN CLIMBING,HENDRIX, we’re MY FIRST ALBUMS I BROUGHT.🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶😎✌️BOB
YOU SAID IT SO RIGHT ,THE ORIGINAL VERSION IS STILL THE BEST.THIS WAS ONE OF ROCK,s GREATEST BANDS!🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶😎✌️BOB
Amen, brother!
Felix Papalardi was a great singer bass player and producer he should definitely be in the rock and roll HOF.
I agree with you my friend !
His wife shot him with a gun HE BOUGHT HER! Never buy your WIFE a GUN
He was fantastic...one of my personal musical heroes.
One of the single greatest songs ever written
John Deegan I bet they were having some great sex though LOL
The guitar is so soulful in this song. Doesn't matter which version by Mountain it is, it never ceases to make me tear up.
One of the best guitar solos ever recorded
Felix's bass and voice almost brings me to tears,incredible song RIP FelixPappalardi.
Felix's voice was haunting during the song such a professional
Sorely missed along with Jack Bruce Leslie West...They brought joy, celebration, AMPED UP Music, POWERFUL .
No doubt about it. Beauty to the ears.
Can and does get caught up in the throat. Thanking them for the Rollercoaster ride that is heavy super group delightfullness.
If you cheat on your wife.
Don’t buy her a gun. Which is exactly what happened to Felix He was cheating and brought his wife a gun.
His wife found out about it. And shot him.
@@peterm1826 that's crazy. No sane person would kill someone (let alone someone so intimate) for such a trivial thing.
Felix had such a golden tenor voice. And Leslie played the hell out of that Les Paul Jr. Mountain was one of my favorite groups from the Woodstock era.
Ditto
Indeed
I listen to this song at least once a week. After all these years.
i do too
@@joeymac3969 I wish I could, I have to listen to it once a day.
This does a 60ish fellow good once a week at least. Therapy ya know
I put "Mountain Climbing" cd in my car player and then epoxied a cover over the access slot.
I can't claim to listen that often but, when I do, it consumes me. RIP Leslie West just today. :(
Such a great song, so brilliantly played and sung. Nothing comes close anymore, there is more emotion and passion in one note of this song than on entire albums of most of todays crap. This is one of those rare tunes that literally makes the hair stand up on the back of your neck, unless you have no feelings.
So absolutely true, Mr. Gary Clark. So very true.
+Gary Clark ....agreed..absolutely...today's crap has no soul compared to this.
It is just freakin' fabulous....
It is!!!
@ Gary Clark , I feel it! That's what makes it real. Today..., I am numb. This new music is absent of soul. An occasional tune is alive, but for the most part it everything is dead. I need an itch scratched.
Felix pappalardi has a beautiful voice. I think this must be one of the best guitar solos in history.
Well said. I discovered Mountain 6 months ago and I am hooked. I think I own pretty much everything they put out.
Sounds like Burton Cumming's voice kind of..
Always thought Leslie sung this one. Very nice voice anyway.
West rules wirth his tone!
One of Jack Bruce's best.
Probably one of the best songs ever written and Mountain's cover tops them all.
RIP Leslie West. Thank you for all of the memories and good times that your music provided me. Say hi to Felix for me!
I could hear this song a million times and it's still as fresh as the first day I heard it.
This song was perfect for Mountain, and we are so lucky they took it for their own. Simply one of the best songs of the rock n' roll era !
50 years ago, and Leslie West has a guitar tone I'd die for NOW.
May he RIP
One of my all time favorites.. RIP Leslie.
he just makes you want to track down this stuff and hear him jam. very few guitarists play so damn well that I think about putting them on simply because it's time to hear it again. among the best lead guitarists that ever lived. the rock BB King. their original 'Mississippi Queen' was and is, badass. if you threw theJAMES GANG into CREAM, you'd get something like this.
IT S IT,get sunn coliseum pa plug in mic jack adjust master/volumes,eq,get lp jr w/p-90 ,BUT OH THE FINGERS AND SOUL bless myn!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
There is a strong presence of melancholy and sadness yet truth sung and played brilliantly....felix is joyous..leslie plays lead so inspired what can be said
Well said...Thanks.
I used to listen to this over and over in 1970 but somehow forgot all about it until today, 52 years later. So beautiful and so nostalgic the tears are flowing. You think you remember all the songs you loved over the years but a few slip out of mind. What else have I forgotten?
Not me… I’ve listened to this song through all these years. Got it on every playlist that I’ve got. Absolutely love everything about this song… never get tired of it and through all these years never forgot about it , never put it on the shelf. Great job Felix, Leslie and Corky.
Thank you. Love Jack Bruce’s 1969 composition from Songs For A Tailor, but I had no flippin’ idea that Mountain covered it for Woodstock. All we had was the selected acts for the movie release in March 1970. They changed the key from E to A and with Leslie’s violin-vibrato guitar solo and Felix’s Gibson EB-1 bass tones and lead vocal- I wish that I was aware that Jack’s music and Pete Brown’s lyrics had MADE it to WOODSTOCK. In 2020, I am getting what I didn’t see or hear in the 1970 movie theater. Thank you, very much. And thank you, Mountain.
The story is that Jack didn’t think it was good enough, so he gave it to Felix
Jack and his wife Janet Godfrey were close freinds with Felix and his wife Gail Collins.
Remember that Felix produced all the American Cream stuff.
After Mountain split Jack joined Leslie and Corky in West, Bruce & Laing.
They were all buddies.
Eric rejected the song when Jack purposed it for the Goodbye album in late 1968. Eric thought it sounded like The Band. (he was into "Songs from the Big Pink" at the time) So Jack recorded it for "Songs For a Taylor" and gave it to his dear friend Felix. Jack also played Pappalardi' s old Gibson EB 1 bass on Cream' s reunion concerts in 2005. Together with "We're Going Wrong" It's the best material that Jack and Pete Brown ever wrote IMO. And Felix sings it very good here. But as I remember Mountain did the song a bit higher, in the key of A. Jack sang it in G.
R.I.P Jack, Leslie and Felix!
What a beautiful melody sung with the quality voice of Felix Pappalardi and his bass, the nice fills of the organist, the rock solid drums, and then the incomparable expression on guitar of Mr. west. This performance is one of the reasons the Woodstock Concert of 1969 remains a musical milestone in the Golden Age of Popular Music. Pieces like these will be enjoyed long after the Age passes and many will marvel at the unique musical feel displayed at this magical event.
Love Felix's singing, and bass playing.....what a talented cat he was.
Everything u have said is correct.I add one point.The rich imaginative poetry in this song is splendid.Overall, this is one of the finest R&B songs ever made.
Yes you are right. The incomparable Jack Bruce wrote this song.
Like Felix Pappalardi, Jack Bruce was a great talent.Of Blessed Memory are both of these geniuses.
Eloquent, Neil.
RIP - Jack Bruce 10/25/2014. You will never be forgotten.
randy109 Randy 109, you are lucid and insiteful concerning Jack Bruce. What I would give to go back to these Halcyon days.
Take care brother
Jack was with Cream back then? Not at woodstock
Twigg Ster right on twig thank you send
Twigg Ster He wrote it.
@@billydotleeds C
R.I.P. Leslie West. You’re with Felix now.
And Jack Bruce!
Also, R.I.P. Felix Pappalardi
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏❤️
YES WE LOST TWO OF THE GREATEST MUSICIAN,s IN THE HISTORY OF MUSIC. SO,SO SAD ,JUST LISTEN TO LESLIE PLAY THAT GUITAR,FELIX WITH THAT WONDERFUL VOICE,MAN THIS WAS A SPECIAL BAND . Thankfully WE HAVE THIS MUSIC TO LISTEN TO.!🎶🎶🎶🎶😂✌️😎BOB
No Leslie is Not with Felix.. but on the Gods white throne judgement they will be alive one last time to be judged for their Godly works on earth and then I’m sure they will both go to Hell for Eternity
This is really beautiful. I'm an old rocker who somehow missed Mountain back in the day; glad to catch up now.
Leslie West = all about careful phrasing and tone. Lovely playing. I consider this to be the definitive version of Jack Bruce's song.
I was 14 years old during one of the greatest concerts that ever took place.
Such an experience for me. R.I.P. Mr. West💔💔💔💔😥
Damn...there's NOTHING like this out there today. I was born 40 years too late. The 60s were the most creative period for music. Felix's bass and voice and Leslie West's guitar are perfection.
+QueerAndUnplugged You are so right about this. I am old now (almost 64) but feel so damn lucky to have grown up in the wonderful 60's, so much great music by so many great musicians and bands, and they actually played their instruments. Starting with The Beatles, Stones, Kinks, etc; then Cream, Steppenwolf, Hendrix, Deep Purple, Mountain, Zeppelin, JethroTull, and on and on. It really was the most creative period for music. Peace
+Gary Clark you are so right Gary! Best music ever. Peace.
+Gary Clark Was a great time for sure! But you forgot the greatest American guitar driven band of all- the original Allman Brothers Band with the great, incomparable Duane Allman
+midrider335 Didn't forget them, just so many to mention them all, but you are right, ABB was (and still is) one of the great ones too. Duane Allman still stands as one of the greatest guitarists of all time, pretty remarkable considering his far too short career. Others worthy of mention too include Grand Funk Railroad, Free, Bad Company, Pink Floyd, Sabbath, so many.........
+QueerAndUnplugged The music wasn't over produced and McDonaldized , so it had flavor. And there was no MTV so what the music sounded like was more important then looks. Add that the electric guitar amp were not just being used for volume, turn that shit up to 10 and the guitar becomes a different kind of animal, controlled feedback and sustain as an expressive tool. And a lot of bands were spiritual or had a theory, LSD made people think outside the box and stuff like Transcendental Meditation and Zen were being discovered. And there was a real nasty war happening with a draft lottery and at any moment your number could come up and in 8 weeks you'd be in hell. Assassinations, civil rights movement, the youth seriously questioning the government and the status quo, just a ton of factors making for some serious song writing with intense lyrics, Bob Dylan. And a lot of the music was about God and enlightenment, or peace and love. Folk music and the old blues masters being appreciated made for acceptance of a different kind of singing voice, less polished and trained, raw and down to Earth was good. All these factors made for a perfect storm. As to why music has gone down the tubes, it might not have, the good stuff might be hard to find. Music was just tossed out on the airwaves, like throw it at the wall and see if it sticks, see if it sells. Now I think they stick it to the wall, in other words they decide what we like. And those personal music devices, down loading one song at a time, whole albums often had a theme. Also through schools and universities there is a kind of censorship that is in the disguise of inclusive but is really constraining. Free speech and open discussion was encouraged, now there are safe zones all over a campus and a special little zone kicked off to the side is the only place where free speech is allowed. Last but not least, TV, American Idol, X Factor. New music was presented to us on shows like Ed Sulivan and Mid Night Special and other shows. Now it's a game show, and to top it off the winners are under contract and told what to do for 10 fucking years! Anyway, that is my take on what the hell is going on in the arts and why a Woodstock might not happen again for a long time.
r.i.p. Jack Bruce and thanks for writing this great song.
indeed...
Pete Brown lyricist.
@@namcat53 have you ever tried to sing that song? The word 'way' in the lyric 'having lost it along the way' is impossible to sing on key, at least for me.
Mountain never got their due! Songs like this and Nantucket Sleigh Ride are so beautiful!
Agreed. I have so much of their music on vinyl that I will never give up. I never saw them play, but I sure loved them.
Brings tears to my eyes
Jack Bruce wrote it in 64
Song was actually written by Jack Bruce of cream but I always thought mountain overall to be a much much better band more consistent and I actually prefer most of their versions of creams music I do not feel it Clapton had a passion as a blues player vocally or instrumentally that Leslie west did for one thing. Most underrated band of all time without a doubt although I do know of a couple of other exceptions to this
, and: Long Red.
What a true work of art..A masterpiece in music.
Felix Pappalardi's voice and Leslie's guitar solo give me chills to this day
A British poet/musician captures America's past in such a brief and eloquent way. Makes me cry
it is a beautiful song and reflects the struggle and the triumph of the pioneers but one part of the picture is omitted hence the "imaginary" western - the forceful dispossession and displacement and mass murder, to put it bluntly, of the original inhabitants - surprisingly, there are still people descended from them alive today
@@toddthedrysocketWelcome to human history 101. Not really that surprising that their descendants have survived though, as the vast majority of the indigenous folk who were wiped out succumbed to disease to which they had no immunity rather than a systematic genocide.
A tune from a mountain of a man, Leslie was way ahead of his time and thru all these years he kept putting out great music. Killer axeman...Thanks for posting this Classic..
This should have been on the original record but at least it made it to the 40th anniversary CD but not the DVD. For myself that version off Climbing was his best & most passionate . Truly one of the 70s most classic guitar solos.
Donnie Maxwell .
That's about as good a live performance as I ever did hear. Just incredible
To me, the live sound of this band and this song in particular are a complete and perfect representation of the sounds and moods of that particular time - 1969
agree with you for sure... song takes me back to when we were so hopeful of making positive change to fix the messed up world....think we dropped the ball in many areas but seeing now some of the youth are grabbing onto those values..
haunting music from another time and an extraordinary voice with an unforgettable solo
blistering tone so pure legendary performance on this stage
I saw West, Bruce and Laing play in North London and it was a joy to hear Jack sing this. Another link with Cream was that Felix worked with the group as a producer and, I seem to recall, playing instruments. I saw Mountain in London and they were the loudest group I had heard. When Felix played certain notes you could actually feel your stomach move. No wonder he lost his hearing. In the past when great musicians passed away there was always the consolation that others would be coming along. God knows what has happened. The supply line has been well and truly cut with nothing coming along. Watch Jack Bruce sing this live on TH-cam - he dedicates it to Felix.
I can't believe I didn't know about Leslie's passing until today. I woke this morning wondering what he'd been up to, then was looking up drummers, and stumbled onto the passing of my favorite guitarist ever. R.I.P. Leslie. This brings such sadness. Some of my buddies and I drove around six hours, to Little Rock sometime in the hot part of the summer of 1970 (I believe), in Johnny Daughrty's white Chevy Impala, to see Mountain. We figured we'd probably miss Ted Nugent and Edgar Winter's White Trash, but that was okay, if we got to see Mountain.
By the time we got there, EWWT was just about finished, then we just slid right up to the front row of folding chairs, and I stood right in front of Felix and Leslie for the whole show. It was the definition of the overused word "awesome!". I'm sure none of us ever forgot that time we saw MOUNTAIN. LESLIE WEST and FELIX PAPALARDI !!
I'm so glad I got that experience and the memory. I sang Theme for many years from behind the drumset, with a few different bands. I wish we'd gotten a recording of The AlaBastards doing it, back in the 0ughts. It was my favorite song ever to sing. My voice won't reach those highest notes anymore, but I still keep trying in the shower.
Thank you for posting this!
THE IMMORTAL ROCK SOUND OF MOUNTAIN!
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
One of my favorite song by Mountain and Leslie West's solo is perfect and doesn't waste a single note.
saw Mountain in UK supporting Deep Purple on reunion in 1980's, Richie Blackmore wanted Leslie West to play...says it all.
I played in a band called SYMON ASHER in the 90's and got to know JACK BRUCE the band was named for his Scottish family. When JACK was touring as a member of RINGO STARR'S All Star band he performed 'Theme For An Imaginary Western' solo with a huge grand piano his soaring vocals and the sheer emotion he brought to the song had me in tears by the time it was over. Just an incredible performance I will never forget.
This is where I first heard this song. I was a little boy. Eight years old. I was so amazed at EVERYTHING. the people, the music, the feeling all around. It was like nothing I ever experienced in my life 56 years later. nothing comes close. thank Ozzy, I had an older hippy Brother....
That is a great story, it must have been a stunning experience.
Can't add much - the most-beautiful of ANY of the live renditions of MOUNTAIN's best-ever songs. Steve's organ-contribution unusually well-placed & balanced. Corky's drumming at its most studied, syncopated and rhythmically-accomplished. Leslie's soulful out-front guitar unsurpassed. Felix's vocals and Bass superlative, unsurpassed for command and rounding-out of this 'best among the best' - comparable reference STORMY MONDAY (live at Atlanta 1970)
god, that LEAD! (I stole the double vinyl album from my firend just to have it in the 70's)
He found it and took it back. Still besties and West is still a beast!
I love this song! It was this recording that I fell in love with Leslie West's guitar playing. His choice of notes and especially his vibrato, is just pure joy in the truest sense of the word. No wonder Randy Rhoades cited him as an influence. He let's the guitar breathe! His rhythmic sense is perfect. It's how he could bring out so many emotions out of the guitar. He gives the guitar sound life! RIP Leslie. Your now playing the the greatest band ever!
IMO: This is a truly iconic mellow classic rock recording! Thank you for putting it up!!! Leslie West at his immortal best!
This is for all the kids that think a thousand notes played fast really matters.
Leslie West is a master of feel and tone, he can make three notes sound better than 30.
Too many notes? th-cam.com/video/dCud8H7z7vU/w-d-xo.html
So true
my fav ..ever!! saw him back at the capital in NJ a few times as a kid..
It's not the notes that make a song great, it's the space in between that makes it soar!
Looks like Joe Cocker in the photo. Awesome version of my favorite Mountain song.
agreed
It is.
omg, it's got to be over 40yrs since I've heard this. SO great.
I love this version more than any other they played. Leslie's playing is so smooth and clean. Damn shame there's no recorded video, should have been in the movie. Thank you Leslie, Felix, Corky, Peter and Jack!
This Song has so much emotion and feeling.... I never grow tired of this classic, Leslie West and Mountain, I saw them in 1970 at Crosley Field in Cinci... Cinci Music Festival. Too many Great Bands to recall. But truly grew up in a special era that will never be repeated... A theme for an Imaginary Western is in a Class by itself...
Tim look for that video on here. I just viewed it.
Jack, Felix, and Leslie. True to the music. They will never be forgotten.
RIP Felix, we miss you
Such a clear, natural voice. Also great songwriter. I also miss him greatly.
I miss Jack too
Played in a band that had a first day opening in a new club that were used to copy bands that all dressed alike. Mr. Lucky's in Denver. Big club. We played all our opening stuff trying to get people to dance or something. Stones, Dooby Brothers, Allman Bros, Eagles and original stuff. We thought we were going to be fired right away. I guess they were just sitting listening because they'd never heard something like us or such a diversity of material - ALL done very well. For our closing song I thought what the hell lets shoot the works and if they don't like us we'll soon know. We played "Theme from an Imaginary Western" and with my "Felix like" voice and loud guitar parts going on - brought down the house with a standing ovation. Almost tears on the stage. What a relief! We played and they liked it from then on and many more times at Mr. Lucky's. Saved by the Mountain!!
Very cool story !!
I still can't get enough of Theme for a imanginary western given I first heared it back in the day. Thank you again Mountain!!
+Nicole Murdock One of my all-time favorite songs. So beautiful.
When the wagons leave the city
For the forest and further on
Painted wagons of the morning
Dusty roads where they have gone
Sometimes traveling through the darkness
Met the summer coming home
Fallen faces by the wayside
Looked as if they might have known
Oh the sun was in their eyes
And the desert was dry
In the country town
Where the laughter sounds
Oh the dancing and the singing
Oh the music when they played
Oh the fires that they started
Oh the girls with no regret
Sometimes they found it, sometimes they kept it
Often lost it along the way
Fought each other to possess it
Often died in sight of day
Oh the sun was in their eyes
And the desert was dry
In the country town
Where the laughter sounds
Oh the sun was in their eyes
And the desert was dry
In the country town
Where the laughter sounds
Thank You
Thank you
Beautiful....
When the wagons leave the city
For the forest and futher on
Painted wagons of the morning
Dusty roads where they have gone
Sometimes travelin´ through the darkness
Met the summer comin' home
Fallen faces by the wayside
Look as if they might have known
All the sun was in their eye
And the desert that´s dry
In the country town
Where the laughter sound
Oh the dancing and the singing
Oh the music when they play
Oh the fire that they started
All the girls with no regret
Sometimes they found it
Sometimes they kept it
Often lost it along the way
Fought each other to posses it
Sometimes die in sight of day
Oh the sun was in their eye
And the desert that´s dry
In the country town
where the laughter sound
thanks for the lyrics Sherrin, I just realized that after 50 years I had no idea what the lyrics were. I guess I just enjoyed the song and the great feeling it gave me listening to it.
Thx love
Thanks for posting that.👍👍👍
Takes me back 3rd row, amazing sitting so close listening to this amazing band.
Hendrix might have been out there but he wasn't out there alone.
Hendrix used to ask people if they thought he was as good as Leslie West.
Great comment! I love it!
Could not have said it better
Loved this 50 years ago and still do today! I still think wow, when I hear it!
So some pole dancer named Madonna gets into the Rock and Roll hall of fame but not Mountain?
They have zero credibility as far as I'm concerned.
Less than 0@@josephminutella2888
@@josephminutella2888 They're just tools of the tools that run Rolling Stone magazine.
Hear, hear
No Mountain, no Foghat, no Guess Who, no Blue Oyster Cult!! But ,hey, they put Dolly Parton in there ??🤮🤮🤮
Mountain sounded phenomenal to me when I first heard this song on the radio. Just like when I was a kid, when I heard White Room, I later heard Theme For An Imaginary Western on the radio and could not get enough that song either. The imaginary of..Where the laughter sounds...Oh, the sun was in their eye.....And the desert that dry...In the country towns....Where the laughter sound......love it!!.....I spent years following the shadows that run from themselves and other songs written by Pete Brown. The words to his songs always got me. Pete was a poet!!
And today I will play this song too, quite few times in remembrance
Rest in Peace Peter 'Pete' Constantine Brown, your songs made a difference to a lot of folk.
Always, let the sunshine of love beam up to you Pete!
When the wagons leave the city
For the forest and further on
Painted wagons of the morning
Dusty roads where they have gone
Sometimes travelin' through the darkness
Met the summer comin' home
Fallen faces by the wayside
Looked as if they might have known
Oh, the sun was in their eye
And the desert that dry
In the country towns
Where the laughter sound
Oh, the dancing and the singing
Oh, the music when they played
Oh, the fire that they started
Oh, the girls with no regret
Sometimes they found it, sometimes they kept it
Often lost it along the way
Fought each other to possess it
Sometimes died in sight of day
Oh, the sun was in their eye
And the desert that dry
In the country town
Where the laughter sounds
Oh, the sun was in their eye
And the desert that dry
In the country towns
Where the laughter sound
love this...R.I.P Jack...A bloody Legend...
And now... Leslie West...
Amen sister
Definitely 😢😢
A beautiful melody w/ a kick ass heavy bottom. have loved these guys for more than 45 years!
So wonderful. Such a fine song. So much emotional power.
Mountain and The Mighty Leslie West...
Each note pierces your heart...
because each note he gave to us was torn from his own.
I don't know the inspiration behind this song but it does not matter..it just tears through my soul in a way I can't explain. I shiver inside, hair on my arms stands on end, eyes start welling up and I feel that time in the "age of man" still rages in me.
Great music has imagery that you see in your mind's eye.
Listen to "Ghost Riders in the Sky" By Vaughn Monroe from 1949--tell me if you can "see the song". Thanks for listening..btw, I'm 69 and I still loves me some good rock 'n roll.
Rock on brother..
Felix, what a talent! He played so heavy and sang like a bird...
Perhaps one of Leslie's greatest performances ever. I can see why Randy Rhoads loved his feel. His vibrato was perfect. I love it too. RIP Leslie. You and Randy and everyone else can jam forever!
Never got to see Mountain, but did get to see West, Bruce and Lang! Nice.
Every time I hear Leslies 2 solo breaks, I just wish they'd go on for hours, just so freakin good...
I remember once Leslie said, 'I always thought the best guitar solos are the ones you can hum". He was right.
That is brilliant. If Leslie said it, it only reinforces what a thoughtful person he was
He's so right
Bless you Leslie, guitar God...Glad I was there. I have tears in my eyes today.
Rock music at its finest!!!
I am told this take was not from Woodstock,anyway they played at night. It was put on the Woodstock album as the best take available. Yes I was there.
You're right....The CSN&Y song 'Sea Of Madness' wasn't recorded at Woodstock either...They used a better sounding version from the Fillmore East on the first Woodstock album..Cool that you were there Edgar Cook...I was a couple of years too young to go...
I've read that also their "Blood of the Sun" was not from Woodstock performance. I compared the two ones: the true Woodstock one was good, but the one they put on the record is terrific!!👍
Such a MONSTER song! Sadly, A soulful reprieve that will lost upon the heaps of excellent performances in the 70's, 80's and 90's
Bellissima!!!!!
❤️ Mountain ❤️ Love you guys.
RIP Leslie, Felix & Jack.
I don’t know how or what you’ve done but I feel like a better human being every time I hear this, and that’s since 1969.
MOUNTAIN is the Name of the Band and they were the loudest and most ass kicking fucking band on the planet.
HAVING SEEN THEM TWICE I WOULD SAY YOU ARE CORRECT
So F-in underrated!
thumbsucker[avalanch] maybe not chronologically, but sound wise the birth of metal
We miss you Felix. Gone 30 years this week. Godspeed my brother - thanks for all the great music. Only you could wrestle greatness out of Mountain and Cream, et. al.
I grew up with this music and it still knocks me out. Hope the kids today will be able to find 'something' to look back on from today that has anywhere near the emotional impact that this music has. Glad it's not me.
One of the greatest tunes ever, still holds up after all these years. Keith Lien
RIP LESLIE WEST DECEMBER 23 2020. I WISH SOMEONE WOULD REMASTER THIS CLASSIC
I agree. Mountain had great music. It's unfortunate that the production quality in the studio was not better.
Legend 🎸 guitar, amazing voice, powerful musician.
Was backstage with these guys in Atlanta, GA no ROCK STAR attitudes great guys same with CACTUS & Small Faces with 25 yo Rod on vocals
Beautiful. I love Jack Bruce's stuff with Cream, so I'm not surprised. Awesome vocal by Felix and Leslie's guitar solo really hits it just right.
Wonderful take on a stunningly beautiful song by JB. Not a fluffed note anywhere. And Felix's voice...WOW! Shame this didn't make it to the movie.
I heard on a podcast that Mountains manager was like "do we get paid to be in the movie? no? pass", haha big mistake
@@brookskaplan66 This isn't really the same version from Woodstock anyway. The real version isn't quite so good.
Timeless and brilliant I have heard about 30 versions of this song this is the best by miles
only regret i wasn't there to see them
Love the vocal on this-never heard this before.
In terms of gut wrenching emotion & expressiveness, this has to be my all time favorite guitar solo - RIP Mr. Leslie West.......
ya just have to love it, and next up is Alvin lee, could you ask for more
One of the most beautiful songs of the festival ..... great Leslie West..R.I.P
Leslie played our small local community center (Eckman) in Old Greenwich CT with the Vagrants multiple times before he hit the big time, what a sound. Our theory was that his sustain and resonance had something to do with his body, ha ! so amazing
Written by Jack Bruce (he of Cream fame) and lyricist Pete Brown, "Theme For An Imaginary Western" was included on Bruce's 1969 solo album Songs For A Tailor, released shortly after Cream's demise. Felix Pappalardi, who was Bruce's producer, recorded the song with his band Mountain for their 1970 album Climbing!. With Pappalardi on lead vocals, this became the most popular version of the song.
Amazing song...Great melody...descending chords...astonishing guitar and vocals!!! Do you want more? Ha ha...Impossible...CLASSIC!
Just Wonderful!
That's A Picture Of Joe Cocker...?
WTF.
MOUNTAIN ~ Originally comprising vocalist and guitarist Leslie West, bassist/vocalist Felix Pappalardi, keyboardist Steve Knight and drummer N. D. Smart, the band broke up in 1972 and has reunited frequently since 1973, remaining active today.
Mountain at Woodstock was Leslie West, Felix Pappalardi and N.D. Smart. Steve Knight wasn't even performing with them at Woodstock. Knight joined them for the Climbing album in 1970, just after Corky Laing joined Mountain. I am pretty sure no actual video exist of Mountains Woodstock performance, and most photos are only of Leslie West on stage there. I could be wrong about the photos though.
arthur8557
There is some footage of them at Woodstock.
yes, joe cocker at woodstock
People think Steve Knight was there because the Woodstock double album with this song on it was from 1970 studio not 1969 Woodstock.
+Max Grifone Benetti and reversed at that - left handed drummer - lejft handed bass player :)
This is the first time I've heard this version, and it's truly awesome. The whole band had such great dynamics, Felix's singing was even better perhaps than on the studio version, and of course Leslie's playing with that signature tone and melodic sensibility was heaven to my ears.
Simply the best version of this song. Felix vocals, Leslie’s solos (it’s all in the fingers man), Corky’s solid in the pocket, and the underrated coloring keyboards of Steve Knight. Best version audio; new PBS release of Mountain is close 😊
My all time !;!;! Favorite r/r band. I saw them twice at the masonic temple in Detroit in the earley 70;s. I played by bass for 7 years ;;; teenager diff bands. Good !;!; Ole days !;!!! Great video !!! Thanks !;!!;!
RIP Jack Bruce and Felix.
RIP Leslie, thank you for the music!