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Humble Pie covered "Black Coffee" for their 1973 album Eat It on A&M Records. Their version features the Blackberries singing backing vocals. Steve Marriott adjusted some of the lyrics. In the original version, Tina Turner sings, "My skin is brown but my mind is black." Marriott sings, "My skin is white but my soul is black."
"Black Coffee" is a song with music by Sonny Burke and words by Paul Francis Webster. The song was published in 1948. Sarah Vaughan charted with this song in 1949 on Columbia; arranged by Joe Lipman, it is considered one of the most notable versions. [1] Peggy Lee recorded the song on May 4, 1953, [2] and it was included on her first LP record ...
"Black Coffee" (1948 song), written by Sonny Burke, the lyrics by Paul Francis Webster "Black Coffee" (All Saints song), 2000 "Black Coffee" (Heavy D & the Boyz song), 1994 "Black Coffee" (Lacy J. Dalton song), 1990 "Black Coffee" (Ike & Tina Turner song), a 1972 song covered by Humble Pie and Rival Sons "Black Coffee", a 1984 song by Black ...
Eat It is the sixth album by English rock band Humble Pie, released in April 1973 through A&M Records. Released as a double album , it peaked at number 13 on the US Billboard 200 , number 34 in the UK Albums Chart , [ 2 ] [ 3 ] and number 9 in Australia.
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]
"Hot 'n' Nasty" is the sixth single by English rock outfit Humble Pie, one of the first supergroups of the 1960s-'70s. Released in 1972, the song peaked at #52 on the US Billboard Hot 100 singles chart and #35 in Canada. [2] The B-side is "You're So Good for Me". The song appears on their fifth studio album, Smokin', also released in 1972.
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]
The album was conceived at band member Steve Marriott's 16th-century rural cottage "Arkesden" in Moreton, Essex, England. Most, if not all, of the material dated back to recordings in the spring and early summer of 1969, when the band recorded as much as three albums' worth of material (the remaining recordings were eventually compiled and released in 1999 on the bands' The Immediate Years ...