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Leslie West

Lyrical guitarist who moved mountains to achieve a distinct blend of blues and metal

March 19, 2021 11:49
Leslie West CD8JME
CD8JME Nov 15, 2008 - San Francisco, California, USA - MOUNTAIN featuring LESLIE WEST on guitar, CORKY LAING on drums & REV JONES on bass, performing live at the Warfield theater. (Credit Image: © Jerome Brunet/ZUMA Press)
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With his mane of frizzy hair, towering height and larger than life presence, Leslie West, one of the earliest instigators of (what would become) heavy metal, dominated the stage. Once described by a critic as a “300-pounder dressed in blue velvet, suede and snakeskin”, his huge physicality was matched by his powerful, full throated vocals and massive guitar sound.

According to Kiss’s Paul Stanley, “Leslie’s tone could stop a rhino in full charge. ” West played with the force (and volume) of a hurricane, as evidenced by his band Mountain’s 1969 appearance at Woodstock. “I think I had the most amplifiers of anybody there,” claimed West in a 1989 Rolling Stone interview. “The sound was so loud and shocking that I got scared. But once I started playing, I just kept going because I was afraid to stop.” It was only their fourth gig, but it provided West with a unique opportunity to expose the band to the half-a-million strong crowd that had come along to see the likes of The Who, Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin.

Like the ubiquitous Spinal Tap quote, West’s guitar did go all the way to 11 but despite the reputation for his eardrum-blasting sound, he was a surprisingly lyrical and melodic player. Dee Snider, lead singer of Twisted Sister, wrote on Twitter: “As a singer, while I respect great players, vocalists spoke to me with their melodies. (West) is the only guitarist who I connected with cause I could sing every one of his solos!”

West enjoyed experimenting with and expanding the typical boundaries of what a guitar could do. “I wanted us to be like a heavy rock orchestra band, so I made my guitar sound like a violin, a viola and a cello.”