Showing posts with label Peter Frampton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Frampton. Show all posts

Humble Pie discography [1969-2000] (FLAC)


Humble Pie was a rock band from England, finding success both in the UK and the US. They are remembered for songs such as "30 Days in the Hole", "I Don't Need No Doctor", and "Natural Born Bugie". The original band lineup featured Steve Marriott from Small Faces, vocalist and guitarist Peter Frampton from The Herd, Greg Ridley former bassist from Spooky Tooth and seventeen-year-old drummer Jerry Shirley.


1969 - As Safe As Yesterday Is
1969 - Town & Country
1970 - Humble Pie
1971 - Performance Rockin' The Fillmore
1971 - Rock On
1972 - Smokin'
1973 - Eat It
1974 - Thunderbox
1975 - Street Rats
1980 - On To Victory 
1981 - Go For The Throat
1994 - Hot 'N' Nasty - The Anthology
1995 - In Concert
2000 - Natural Born Bugie - The Immediate Anthology


 



Peter Frampton - Best Of FCA!35 Tour: An Evening With Peter Frampton (3 CD, 2012/FLAC)


 FCA! 35 Tour: An Evening With Peter Frampton, directed and produced by Pierre & François Lamoureux, features two February 2012 shows—one performance in Milwaukee at the Pabst Theater and another in New York City at the Beacon Theatre. The Best Of FCA! 35 Tour 3CD was executive produced by Zach Bair and Mark Fischer of Disc Live Network.

The performances featured classics such as “Show Me The Way” and “Do You Feel Like We Do” as well as tracks from Frampton’s most recent albums Thank You Mr. Churchill and the Grammy®-Award winning instrumental album Fingerprints. The 2 DVD/Blu-Ray/3CD set features Peter's favorite tracks culled from the world tour.


From 2011 to 2012 Frampton toured the world in celebration of the 35th anniversary of his landmark 17 million selling live album Frampton Comes Alive! Each stop on the tour was divided into two sets: a first set featuring Frampton Comes Alive! performed in its entirety and a second set including songs from throughout his career.




 

Humble Pie - Performance : Rockin' The Fillmore - The Complete Recordings [4 CD, 2013/FLAC]

 
In 1971, the concept of a hard-rock band achieving its big commercial breakthrough with a double live album was nothing new. But the experience had to be a particularly satisfying one for Humble Pie.

In a way, they were one of the era’s supergroups. Three of the band’s four members — guitarist Peter Frampton, singer-guitarist Steve Marriott and bassist Greg Ridley — had already tasted success with the Herd, Small Faces and Spooky Tooth, respectively. At a mere 17, Jerry Shirley was less well known but was gaining a reputation as a formidable power drummer in the John Bonham mold.

Still, in spite of their lineup and reputation for explosive live shows, Humble Pie weren’t able to duplicate their onstage energy in the studio. Their four studio albums aren’t bad, but they sold only moderately well.

On 1971′s ‘Performance: Rockin’ the Fillmore,’ Humble Pie finally captured lightning in a bottle. Recorded over a four-show, two-night stand at the legendary Fillmore East — home to some of the most storied concert recordings ever made, from Aretha to the Allmans — the live double album showcased the band blowing the roof off the grand old joint. Marriott is a pint-sized powerhouse of a blues-rock singer, and his thunderous riffs perfectly complemented Frampton’s more fluid, precise approach. The rhythm section of Ridley and Shirley held the foundation up from the bottom, driving it home with all the nuance of a Molotov cocktail.







 

Peter Frampton Band - Frampton Forgets The Words (2021 FLAC)


 Released on the heels of his New York Times Best Selling memoir, 'Do You Feel Like I Do?', the rock 'n' roll legend and Grammy winning artist Peter Frampton turns his focus back to music with the studio album 'Frampton Forgets the Words'. With his 1954 Les Paul Phenix, Frampton brings virtuosic guitar playing to 10 instrumental tributes to some of his favourite songs, including 'Isn't It a Pity' by George Harrison, 'Reckoner' by Radiohead, 'Loving the Alien' by David Bowie, and more.

Peter Frampton - Playing With Fire: Two Classic Broadcasts from the 1970's [2020, FLAC]

 


Live broadcasts from 1979 and 1972. When Peter Frampton finally made his breakthrough as a solo act, it was with a live album. While his earlier records had been well-regarded critically, the praise had failed to translate to record sales, but the release of Frampton Comes Alive! in 1976 finally changed all that. A new studio album, I m In You, the following year consolidated the success, rising to number 2 on the US billboard chart and featuring a constellation of the biggest stars in rock Ringo Starr, Mick Jagger, Stevie Wonder and Richie Hayward all of whom had lined up to be a part of the project. In 1978, however, the wheels came off literally. Frampton was almost killed in a serious car accident while in The Bahamas. He escaped the wreck, but with numerous broken bones, muscle damage and concussion. After slowly nursing himself back to health, Frampton made his comeback in 1979 with the album Where I Should Be and a hit single in I Can t Stand It No More. He sought to confirm his comeback with a summer tour that included a July 2nd show at the Convention Center in Fort Worth, Texas and a July 4th show at the Sam Houston Coliseum, in Houston, selections of which would be broadcast on the ABC Radio Network s Supergroups In Concert series. The broadcast, presented here in full on Playing With Fire, showcases Frampton at his best as a live act, a stellar performance in which he runs through the best of Frampton Comes Alive!, with selections from Where I Should Be and I m In You also included in the set list. Also included in this collection is the earliest live recording of Camel, Frampton s early-70s group project, broadcast by the BBC on the 11th of September 1972. The band perform several numbers from both Wind of Change and Frampton s Camel in an essential document of the formative years in Frampton s solo career.