LESLIE WEST - STILL CLIMBING
Featuring guest appearances from Johnny Winter,
Mark Tremonti
(Creed & Alter Bridge), Jonny Lang and Dee Snider (Twisted Sister)
THE NEW ALBUM RELEASED 28th OCTOBER 2013
PROVOGUE RECORDS / MASCOT LABEL GROUP
Leslie West is set to release his new album
"Still Climbing" on
28th October 2013 via Provogue Records / Mascot Label Group.
Originality, excitement, honesty and survival are all part of what
makes a legend, and those qualities ripple through every song on West’s
upcoming release.
The new album is a testimonial to the strength and durability of
West’s artistry. Born October 22, 1945, as he approaches his 68th
birthday, West has packed some of the most soulful and searing vocal
performances of his half-century career into these 11 tracks. His guitar
has never sounded more massive or riff-orientated.
West, who ascended rock’s Mt. Olympus with
Mountain in a historic performance at 1969’s
Woodstock Festival,
accomplished all of that despite a life threatening battle with
diabetes that cost him most of his right leg in 2011, just after his
previous Mascot Label Group release
"Unusual Suspects" was recorded.
"I’m lucky it wasn’t one of my hands or I’d be screwed," says
West. "It was a difficult struggle, and after the amputation I didn’t
know whether I’d ever want to or be able to perform again. But a month
later I played at the Rock ‘n’ Roll Fantasy Camp in New York City, and I
heard my guitar on stage and that was it. I knew I had to keep going."
Following the success of
"Unusual Suspects," West
approached the new release with vision of tying the albums
together. "The new album is a sequel to Unusual Suspects, where I had
friends of mine that include Slash, Zakk Wylde, Steve Lukather, Joe
Bonamassa and Billy Gibbons come to the studio and play," West
explains.
This time Jonny Lang, Johnny Winter, Twisted Sister’s Dee Snider and
Alter Bridge and Creed’s Mark Tremonti do the honours. "What’s
different on
"Still Climbing" is that I wanted my
guitars to sound as big as I look. So I used four of my Dean Signature
model guitars with my Mountain of Tone humbucking pickups. I plugged
them into my Blackstar amps - no pedals - and turned them up loud and
raw, and what you hear is exactly what I did in the studio. These
Blackstar amps deliver everything I need without 'confidence' pedals. I
played one of the early tracks we recorded for Slash, and he said,
‘That is as heavy as it gets.’"
"Still Climbing" - Track Listing
01. Dyin’ Since The Day I Was Born (With special guest
Mark Tremonti)
02. Busted, Disgusted or Dead (With special guest
Johnny Winter)
03. Fade Into You
04. Not Over You At All
05. Tales Of Woe
06. Feeling Good (with special guest
Dee Snider)
07. Hatfield or McCoy
08. When A Man Loves A Woman (With special guest
Jonny Lang)
09. Long Red
10. Don’t Ever Let Me Go (With special guest
Dylan Rose)
11. Rev Jones Time (Somewhere Over The Rainbow)
"Still Climbing" is co-produced by West and
Mike "Metal" Goldberg, who engineered all of the sessions. Songs like
"Dyin' Since The Day I Was Born," "Hatfield or McCoy," and
"Busted, Disgusted or Dead" establish a new litmus test for "heavy."
The latter features West and
Johnny Winter on
duelling slide guitars. West also gave up smoking cigarettes and pot
after a bout with bladder cancer, so it’s no wonder many of Still
Climbing’s numbers explore the theme of survival and, ultimately,
triumph. To that end, West avows, "Not only am I lucky to be here, but
because I stopped smoking my voice is now stronger than it’s ever been -
as strong as my guitar playing."
His inclusion of
"Feeling Good,"
a song by British actor-musician Anthony Newley that was made famous
by Steve Winwood’s group Traffic, is a testimonial to all of that. Its
lyrics celebrate a "new dawn for me" as West and his long-time buddy
Dee Snider (Twisted Sister) trade vocal lines.
West has always been an outstanding vocalist, earning comparisons to
soul legends like Otis Redding since his 1969 debut Mountain, which
gave his historic band its name. On
"Still Climbing" West revisits the catalogue of another classic soul man, Percy Sledge, with the enduring
"When a Man Loves a Woman." He’s joined by now 32 year-old soul man
Jonny Lang,
who he met 15 years ago when Lang was a rising guitar prodigy. West
says they cut the tune side-by-side in the studio, their soaring
guitars and voices twining to bring fresh blood and a blues-soaked
arrangement to the song.
"When a Man Loves a Woman," "Never Let Me Go" and
"Fade Into You"
explore a romantic theme. In 2009 West married his wife Jenni, who
co-wrote many of Still Climbing’s songs with the guitar giant.
They exchanged vows on stage at the Woodstock 40th Anniversary
Concert. West credits her with saving his life - first with her love,
and then by making the difficult decision to permit his doctors to
amputate while he was in a coma.
"Being in Mountain was one of the most satisfying things I have ever
done in my professional life," says West. "I became a musician, not
just a guitar player."
"Being in
Mountain with
Felix Pappalardi was
an honour. He was so talented as a producer, arranger, bass player,
guitar player - all the things I aspired to be. We had some great years
together, and some rocky roads. His wife Gail, who by the way shot and
killed Felix, could suck the fun out of a clown. It left a terrible
taste in my mouth about working with my wife, Jenni. I did not want to
risk going down that path where your wife was involved in every aspect
of your musical life. Jenni has become so good at expressing thoughts
to paper. She has become my primary collaborator on the lyrical side of
my new recordings."
West has been performing since 1965, when he fronted the soul-fired Vagrants in his native New York City.
Rolling Stone placed him at
#66 on their list of the
"100 Greatest Guitarists."
His repertoire continues to be relevant with enduring appeal to this
day as top selling rap recordings are built around samples from
"Long Red," which appeared on the Mountain album.
Jay-Z tapped the tune for his 2004 mega-smash
"99 Problems." So did
Kanye West, for
"Barry Bonds" and
"The Glory," and
Common’s "The People," along with others.
Recently,
Lana Del Rey sampled West's voice and features it in the beginning, middle and end of the worldwide smash
"Born To Die." For
"Still Climbing," West re-recorded
"Long Red" with his brother and former Vagrants-mate
Larry West
on bass. He offers, "It was time for me to let people hear that song
the way I do it now. I used a B-3 organ on it again, but this time it
has a lot more balls."
Balls, guts, heart - more words that are part of West’s legend and describe the roaring crescendos and deep emotional roots of
"Still Climbing"
- and West himself. "You know, when it comes to talent, we don’t all
move at the same rate of speed," West muses. "Some people start at the
top of their game and after 10 or 20 years you wonder what the hell
happened to them. I like to joke that the older I get the better I used
to be, but after giving up drugs and smoking, my voice can hit notes
that I never could reach before. I’m thankful for that."