| Computers | Cameras | Electronics | Movies | More.. | Merchant Ratings | Your Account | |||
Frampton Comes Alive II (CD - 1995)UPC: 00602517212671As low as $13.99 from DeepDiscount.com Artist: Peter Frampton Label: Hip-O Records Genre: Rock & Pop Album Description: Personnel: Peter Frampton (guitar, vocals); Bob Mayo (keyboards, guitar, vocals); John Regan (bass guitar, vocals); John "JR" Robinson, Jamie Oldaker (drums).Engineers: Guy Charboneau (tracks 1-11, 13-14); Biff Dawes (track 12).Recorded live at The Fillmore, San Franci... read more Personnel: Peter Frampton (guitar, vocals); Bob Mayo (keyboards, guitar, vocals); John Regan (bass guitar, vocals); John "JR" Robinson, Jamie Oldaker (drums). Engineers: Guy Charboneau (tracks 1-11, 13-14); Biff Dawes (track 12). Recorded live at The Fillmore, San Francisco, California on June 15-16, 1995 and at The Ventura Theatre, Ventura, California in August 1992. All songs written or co-written by Peter Frampton except "Hang On To A Dream" (Tim Hardin). Personnel: Peter Frampton (vocals, guitar); Bob Mayo (vocals, guitar, keyboards); John Regan (vocals, bass guitar); John 'JR' Robinson (drums). Recorded roughly 20 years after the hit concert album FRAMPTON COMES ALIVE!, this 1995 sequel finds British singer/guitarist Peter Frampton offering up another energetic live set. Rather than revisiting the songs from the aforementioned '70s record-collection staple, however, Frampton primarily draws from his latter-day catalogue, including '94s self-titled outing, for tunes such as "Day in the Sun," a mid-tempo number with a potent guitar solo, and "Off the Hook," a propulsive hard-rock track. (Note: The 2007 special-edition reissue of FRAMPTON COMES ALIVE II features a bonus disc with Frampton classics such as "Do You Feel Like We Do?" and "Show Me the Way.") Nearly twenty years after the original Frampton Comes Alive! -- and two years after Meat Loaf proved that explicit sequels to '70s blockbusters were commercially viable -- Peter Frampton released Frampton Comes Alive II. Twenty years is a long time, and the Frampton showcased on this album -- originally released as a 13-track album in 1976 and expanded into a double-disc deluxe edition in 2007 (an expansion that doesn't change the character of the album since it only offers more of the same) is quite different than the one on the first Frampton Comes Alive!. He, of course, is an older musician, which is something that he doesn't try to disguise: always an enormously accomplished guitarist, his playing has only grown tighter over the years, resulting in a clean (maybe too clean) professional set that gives a good name to rock & roll veterans. But just because he's older doesn't mean that he doesn't have anything to prove: Frampton Comes Alive! was a career-making blockbuster but it was a bit of an albatross around his neck, turning him into a one-hit wonder or a '70s relic in some quarters. He's out to shake loose this perception here, refusing to rely on the big '70s hits (at least in the album's original incarnation; they're the bonus tracks on the 2007 special edition) and playing with spirit here. The spirit may be more evident in his guitar than his vocals -- he occasionally sounds a little thin as he sings -- but it helps make Frampton Comes Alive II a respectable sequel. It may not be as exciting or entertaining as the original, but it's no embarrassment and it proves that the journeyman musician who had a fluke mega-hit in 1976 retained the basic skills that he built his career upon: namely, his muscular, melodic guitar playing -- skills that are as evident twenty years later as they were at the peak of his success. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine minimize
©2009 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company. All rights reserved. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||