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Guitarist/vocalist Frampton is,
apart from his solo career, best
known for his work with Humble
Pie, the band he helped form with
Steve Marriott in the late
sixties. Prior to co-founding The
Pie, Frampton had also been in The
Herd, a mid-sixties pop outfit. He
left Humble Pie to embark on a
solo career in October 1971 and
released his debut album, "Wind of
Change" for A&M Records in 1972
with assistance from Ringo Starr,
Billy Preston and other session
men. Later that year, he formed
Frampton's Camel with drummer Mike
Kellie (Spooky Tooth), keyboard
player Mickey Gallagher and
bassist Rick Wills, and they
recorded one album, "Frampton's
Camel" under that name in 1973.
The album met with limited success
in the US, where it peaked at
number 110, but was largely
ignored in the UK. Frampton went
on to record two further albums in
1974 and 1975 before recording his
famous double live album at San
Francisco's Winterland. This album
became the most successful live
album in history, selling in
excess of 10 million copies
worldwide. Frampton continued to
record and tour into the 80's and
90's and is still around today,
having guested with Grand Funk on
their "Bosnia" album.
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Biography by Steve Huey
Peter Frampton was one of the
biggest arena rock stars of the
'70s, making his name largely on
the double-LP concert set
Frampton Comes Alive! Frampton
was one of several '70s rock
artists (Kiss, Cheap Trick,
etc.) to break through to a wide
audience with a live album; much
like the others, he'd recorded
several previous albums and
built a following through
extensive touring, in the
process honing an exciting
concert presence. That helped
Frampton Comes Alive! become the
best-selling live album of all
time (up to that point), with
eventual sales of over six
million units in the U.S. and
over 16 million copies
worldwide. Frampton had paid
nearly a decade's worth of dues
before reaching superstardom,
and unfortunately for him, it
proved to be short-lived — bad
luck and a failure to duplicate
the phenomenon of Frampton Comes
Alive! conspired to halt his
career momentum.
Peter Frampton was born April
22, 1950, in the town of
Beckenham in Kent. He started
playing guitar at age eight, and
took several years of classical
lessons. In his early teens, he
played with rock & roll combos
like the Little Ravens, the
Trubeats, and the Preachers, the
latter of which were managed by
the Rolling Stones' Bill Wyman
and appeared on the TV show
Ready, Steady, Go. In 1966,
Frampton dropped out of school
to join the mod-pop group the
Herd, where he got his first
taste of success. The Herd
scored several British hits over
1967-1968, and Frampton's
youthful good looks made him a
teen idol, earning him the tag
the "Face of 1968" from the
music press. In 1969, Frampton
left the Herd to form the
harder-rocking Humble Pie with
erstwhile Small Faces frontman
Steve Marriott. Although Humble
Pie was poised for a
breakthrough after two years of
touring, Frampton departed in
1971 over differences in musical
direction, and decided to start
a solo career.
Having already performed on
George Harrison's landmark All
Things Must Pass, Frampton
contributed guitar work to
Nilsson's Son of Schmilsson, and
released his debut solo album,
Wind of Change, in 1972. Despite
help from the likes of Ringo
Starr and Billy Preston, it
failed to make much of an
impact. Frampton next formed an
official backing band dubbed
Frampton's Camel, which included
keyboardist Mickey Gallagher
(Cochise), bassist Rick Wills
(Bell & Arc), and drummer Mike
Kellie (Spooky Tooth). Their
1973 album, Frampton's Camel,
also sold disappointingly, but
Frampton began to build a
following through near-constant
touring over the next few years.
He broke up Frampton's Camel
prior to the release of his next
album, 1974's Somethin's
Happening. The title would prove
prophetic: The follow-up,
Frampton, became his first hit
LP in America, climbing into the
Top 40 in 1975 and going gold.
By this point, Frampton had
amassed a considerable catalog
of underexposed songs, the best
of which were tightly
constructed and laden with
hooks. He'd also developed into
a top concert draw, since he was
able to inject those songs with
an energy that was sometimes
missing from his studio outings.
Plus, in concert, he often
expanded the songs into vehicles
for his economical, tasteful
guitar playing, and his
pioneering use of the talk-box
guitar effect became a trademark
part of his performances. All
those elements came together on
Frampton Comes Alive!, a
double-LP set recorded at San
Francisco's Winterland in 1975.
The album was a surprise smash,
rocketing to the top of the
charts (where it stayed for ten
weeks) and selling over 16
million copies worldwide to
become the most popular live
album yet released. It stayed on
the charts for nearly two years,
and spawned Frampton's first
three hit singles: "Baby, I Love
Your Way" and the Top Tens "Do
You Feel Like We Do" and "Show
Me the Way." Naturally, his
supporting tour was a
multimillion-dollar blockbuster
as well. When the dust settled,
Frampton was a star, and Rolling
Stone named him its Artist of
the Year. Frampton Comes Alive!
is no longer the top-selling
live album of all time; that
honor goes to Garth Brooks'
16-times platinum Double Live
set. The category of
best-selling live rock album is
more debatable. Bruce
Springsteen's five-LP/triple-CD
box set Live/1975-85 has been
certified for sales of 13
million units, as opposed to six
million for Frampton Comes
Alive! However, since the RIAA
counts "units" rather than the
number of actual copies sold
(i.e., one double-disc set
equals two units), it's harder
to determine who holds the edge
in raw sales over time.
Under pressure from A&M to
deliver a quick follow-up,
Frampton fought his better
judgment and went back to the
studio, instead of taking a
break to rest and let his
success sink in. The result was
I'm in You, which rose to the
number two spot on the album
charts soon after its release in
1977. Its title track did the
same on the singles charts,
giving Frampton the biggest hit
of his career. In the wake of
the Frampton Comes Alive!
phenomenon, it was perhaps
inevitable that many fans would
regard I'm in You as a
disappointment; even if it sold
over three million copies, its
hasty writing process showed
through in spots. Unfortunately,
1978 was a disastrous year for
Frampton. He made a high-profile
acting debut playing Billy
Shears in the big-budget film
version of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band, a tremendous
critical and commercial flop. In
June, he was involved in a
near-fatal car accident in the
Bahamas, sustaining a
concussion, multiple broken
bones, and muscle damage; to
make matters worse, he and his
longtime girlfriend also ended
their relationship. Frampton
recovered fully from his
accident, only to endure a brief
slide into drug abuse. His 1979
album Where I Should Be only
went gold, and its biggest hit
was the Top 20 "I Can't Stand It
No More" — respectable, but
nonetheless a startling drop-off
from the success Frampton had
just recently enjoyed.
Frampton seemed increasingly
directionless as the '80s
dawned. He cut his hair prior to
the release of 1981's Breaking
All the Rules, but the new image
failed to send it higher than
the lower reaches of the Top 50.
The following year's The Art of
Control was an unequivocal flop,
and Frampton retreated from the
music business for several
years. He returned on Virgin in
1986 with Premonition, and
though it wasn't a smash hit, he
did get substantial rock radio
airplay for the cut "Lying." The
following year, Frampton played
on onetime schoolmate David
Bowie's Never Let Me Down album
and accompanying tour. He
recorded another new album, When
All the Pieces Fit, for Atlantic
in 1989, and had been planning a
reunion with Steve Marriott not
long before Marriott's tragic
death in a 1991 house fire.
Frampton subsequently started
touring again, and cut an
eponymous album for Relativity
in 1994 that was later reissued
by Sony Legacy. The following
year, he issued the newly
recorded live album Frampton
Comes Alive II on IRS. During
the late '90s, he recorded and
toured with Bill Wyman & the
Rhythm Kings and Ringo Starr's
All-Starr Band. Frampton's first
DVD, Live in Detroit, a newly
recorded concert that was also
issued on CD by CMC
International, was released in
2000. Now, his first studio
album in nine years, arrived in
2004. It was followed in 2006 by
the all-instrumental
Fingerprints.


Steve
Miller
Spooky Tooth
Free
Fleetwood Mac
David Bowie
Meat Loaf
REO Speedwagon
Johnny Winter
Eddie Money
Led Zeppelin
Journey
J. Geils Band
Deep Purple
Canned Heat

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have any contribution to make to
this band or something to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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