
Felix Pappalardi – Bass
Felix Albert Pappalardi Jr. (December 30, 1939 – April 17, 1983) was an American music producer, songwriter, vocalist, and bassist. He is best known as the bassist and co-lead vocalist of the band Mountain, whose song “Mississippi Queen” peaked at number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 and became a classic rock radio staple.
Originating in the eclectic music scene in New York’s Greenwich Village, he became closely attached to the British power trio, Cream, writing, arranging, and producing for their second album ‘Disraeli Gears’. As a producer for Atlantic Records, he worked on several projects with guitarist Leslie West; in 1969 their partnership evolved into the band Mountain. The band lasted less than five years, but their work influenced the first generation of heavy metal and hard rock music. Pappalardi continued to work as a producer, session musician, and songwriter until he was shot and killed by his wife Gail Collins in 1983.
This is the complete Pappalardi bass part for the tune ‘Nantucket Sleighride’ from the 1971 Mountain album of the same name. The name of the title track is a reference to a Nantucket sleighride, the dragging of a whaleboat by a harpooned whale. Owen Coffin, to whom the song is dedicated, was a young seaman on the Nantucket whalter Essex, which was rammed and sunk by a sperm whale in 1820. In the aftermath of the wreck, Coffin was shot and eaten by his shipmates. The story of the Essex was recorded by its First Mate Owen Chase, one of eight survivors, in his 1821 Narrative of the Most Extraordinary and Distressing Shipwreck of the Whale-Ship Essex. The instrumental break in the second half of the track uses the melody of the traditional Scottish song “The Parting Glass”. The closing section of the song was used as the theme to the long-running British political television show Weekend World (1972-1988).
The chart has it’s moments and there are challenges in reading it cold but, in general, it is a tasty little part. I am proud of this one – it has been a track I have know for 50 years and it is nice to get it down on paper.