Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Humble Pie was a transitional album and a harbinger of the band's new, heavier direction. The material was darker than their previous two efforts, with striking contrasts in volume and style – Peter Frampton's gentle "Earth and Water Song" is buttressed between two of the heaviest tracks on the record, the band-composed "One Eyed Trouser Snake Rumba", and a cover of Willie Dixon's "I'm Ready".
The band performed songs from the Humble Pie catalogue and other songs such as Bad Company's "Can't Get Enough (of your Love)" and Free's "All Right Now". [17] In 2023 Shirley's "Humble Pie Legacy" lineup of Dave Colwell (guitar), Jim Stapley (vocals, guitar, Hammond, harmonica), Ivan Bodley (bass) and Bobby Marks (drums) continued. [18]
Performance Rockin' the Fillmore is the 1971 live double-LP/single-CD by the English blues-rock group Humble Pie, recorded at the Fillmore East in New York City on May 28–29, 1971. It reached No. 21 on the Billboard 200, #32 in Canada, [5] and entered the UK Top 40.
Extended Versions [1] is a live album by Humble Pie, released in 2000, as part of BMG's Encore Collection.It has tracks taken from the King Biscuit Flower Hour Presents - Humble Pie In Concert, [2] which was a 1996 release of a concert recorded on May 6, 1973 at San Francisco's Winterland Theatre.
Humble Pie broke up in 1975 after the release of Street Rats, due to touring fatigue and personal conflicts. [5] Marriott and Shirley reformed Humble Pie in January 1980, [6] adding guitarist Bobby Tench and bassist Anthony "Sooty" Jones. [7] Both new members left in the summer of 1981 after a period of heavy touring. [8]
Steve Marriott (1947–1991) was a successful and versatile English blue-eyed soul, singer-songwriter and guitarist.He is best remembered for his uniquely powerful voice and aggressive guitar [1] in groups Small Faces (1965–1969) and Humble Pie (1969–1975).
The Definitive Collection is a compilation album by Humble Pie, released in 2006. [1] It features tracks from all eight Humble Pie studio albums from the years 1969 to 1975, as well as tracks from the live album Performance Rockin' the Fillmore.
After four studio albums and one live album with Humble Pie, Frampton left the band and went solo in 1971, just in time to see Rockin' the Fillmore rise up the US charts. [8] He remained with Dee Anthony (1926–2009), the same personal manager that Humble Pie had used. [17] [18]