This is a fantastic album, full of light and shade, showcasing Marriott's excellent voice as well as strong performances from the rest of the band. So it's not a huge surprise that I never listened to Humble Pie.
was never a fan of Peter Frampton and Small Faces were a sub-Who psychedelic mod band so I didn't really pay them much heed either. The record has an undeniable live feel to it, due in part to Glyn Johns' humble yet precise recording, framing the group as if they were a boogie version of the Band." ( Rate Your Music (opens in new tab)) "Rock On proves exactly just how talented those musicians were and why Frampton deserved the superstar status he got years later, and why Marriott is recognised as one of the best amongst other musicians. They are becoming thoroughly Americanized by this time, much more so than their principal concurrents, the Faces: country, blues and bluegrass influences are all over this album, but Steve Marriott adds to everything his impeccable vocal stylizations, really bothering to sing and, okay, maybe 'articulate' instead of just barking and shouting his way through all the songs." ( Only Solitaire (opens in new tab)) "On this album the band really proves why in the early seventies it was considered one of Britain's greatest R'n'B outfits. Although Peter Frampton elevated himself to superstar status in just a few years, this album proves what an excellent lead guitarist he was." ( AllMusic (opens in new tab)) Led by the soulful Steve Marriot, the Pie was a great band in every sense of the word. "On this, their second album for A&M, Humble Pie proved that they were not the 'minor league Rolling Stones' as people often described them. If you wanna know where the Black Crowes learned to fly, look no further. The steak on the plate was funky come-git-some rockers like Sour Grain and the aforementioned Strange Days. Rarely has Marriott sounded as inflamed as on the bluesy Strange Days, while their sulphurous take on Muddy Waters’ Rollin’ Stone made other would-be badasses of the period sound like choirboys. Their final studio album with guitarist Peter Frampton, it contained wonderfully fresh tracks like Shine On and The Light.Ĭo-produced with the Small Faces’ old engineer Glyn Johns, standouts include Stone Cold Fever and Marriott’s tender ode to his first wife, A Song For Jenny, on which the band are joined by soul sirens Doris Troy, PP Arnold and Claudia Lennear.
Problem is I can't see the discs I just got sent the DR info as:-ĭR9 -0.01 dB -11.77 dB 01 Earth and Water Song.aifĭR8 -0.01 dB -10.73 dB 03 Live With Me.aifĭR10 -0.11 dB -11.12 dB 04 Only A Roach.aifĭR9 -0.01 dB -10.67 dB 05 Red Light Mama.aifĭR10 -0.02 dB -12.40 dB 06 See You Later Liquidator.aifĭR9 -0.01 dB -10.41 dB 03 79th and Sunset.aifĭR9 -0.04 dB -9.92 dB 04 Stone Cold Fever.aifĭR10 -0.53 dB -14.25 dB 05 Rollin' Stone.aifĭR10 -0.41 dB -12.74 dB 06 A Song for Jenny.aifĭR9 -1.21 dB -13.09 dB 09 Strange Days.aifĭR10 -0.45 dB -12.94 dB 10 Red Neck Jump.First - and released two months before Humble Pie's historic Fillmore shows (and the runaway success of the live Performance: Rockin’ The Fillmore) - the band's fourth album Rock On established their heavyweight credentials, with Steve Marriott singing R&B over heavy riffs the others came up with. Kevin - I'm considering a copies of HP and Rock On but the DRs don't match either of yours, so I'm wondering if there are others.