Humble Pie- “I Walk On Gilded Splinters” LIVE 1971 [Reelin' In The Years Archive]
Vložit
- čas přidán 24. 04. 2021
- Reelin’ In The Years Productions has available for licensing over 30,000 hours of music footage spanning 90 years. Additionally, we have more than 8,000 hours of in-depth interviews with the 20th century’s icons of Film and Television, Politics, Comedy, Literature, Art, Science, Fashion, and Sports.
To search for footage please visit our online database at reelinintheyears.com.
Note: these clips are available on CZcams for producers, directors, researchers and clearance companies for potential use in their projects. Our website on the screen is to protect the footage from being used without our consent and so industry professionals can find us to properly license the footage. - Hudba
Steve Marriott was such a Genius! RIP Steve. We're still listening to your music in 2024!
I’m 68 years old and I’m still listening to this unbelievable band! Humble Pie -Rock On!!
Saw them 1972ish keep coming back to them every so often, brilliant!. Not as old as you,I’m just 67😂
Me too. Saw them in '73 (Edmonton Sundown) and '74 (Charlton F.C.)
We were so lucky to have this kind of music and energy!
I need my Humble Pie Fix every day! 75 in 3 weeks. With 8 hrs 💤💤💤, people think I'm late 40's early 50's. My only "maintenance" is listening to great music and being vegetarian. Dog and I take a walk everyday with Humble Pie blasting. 😅🎶💙🎶
@@maryjvanderwerken3192 Is it a "Big Black Dog", ha ha? I've never walked my dog whilst listening to music, I'll give it a go.
I grew up listening to those marvelous bands of the 70’s, specially their live records, as I lived in a country never visited by them… i would put colored light bulbs in my room and listen for hours to the live records of Humble Pie, Uriah Heep, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, Wishbone Ash, and others, imagining being in the concert, looking at their posters hung on my walls under the colored light… After all these years, thanks to CZcams I no longer have to imagine how my favorite bands looked like in concert… I get to relieve those years as if I travelled back in time and finally go to their shows… these videos mean so much to me.
♥ Keep on rocking Pedro!
When i was 7-8 yrs old my uncle moved in with is when he came home from Vietnam. I can remember hearing Humble Pie & Grank funk, led Zep...ect. My mom called it "dope music". I can hear it like it was today coming from the room he stayed in. Today im a 59 year old recovering heroin addict with3 years clean! Aint life kind somedays?
Stay clean man, it ain't worth it.
@@rocketrayray55Thanks rocketrayray I love that name
let's hear it for "dope music"
Good on you, brother. I got sixteen years now after the needle. I believe in you and I don't even know you because I know you can do it
LOL my mom called it the same thing!
I loved what Frampton did With his solo career but artistically, musically his time with Humble Pie was the high point of his career. This lineup was special. These uploads on CZcams are priceless to me
Thank the Lord this was captured on film. WOW!
❤Agree 😮
This generation of musicians came and went in the blink of an eye: you had to be there
God it was fun living in 60’s-70’s didn’t have to go far to hear great music….
Foghat war ....
sad to agree.. some poor stuff around in the bars and concert halls. any more "tribute bands"... i feel suicidal.[2023] i didnt like london area to live but lots of steaming music. not only the big names but a lot of good smokey rock and blues. no entrance fee.
Thank goodness we had FM radio!! So grateful for the memories.
This has got to be some of the best footage of Frampton and Marriott together 💥
Royal Oak music theatre.punk through a bottle.little dude stoped the show.told the guy that threw it to see me now. Love true heart
dont forget jerry shirley on drums!
Absolutely, beats "Black Coffee", Steve/Frampton/Clem wise. No "Berries" though...Don't "Throwaway my coffee" now..."Reelin" to "Whistle."
All Good.
Do I hear beautiful Harmony on these guitars similar to the Beautiful Harmony done in the vein of Do You Feel Like I do?
@@HIWATTSteve - Actually, Frampton got the guitar from a fan in San Francisco, not from his friend Marriott. It sure looks different with those black pick-up trim rings, doesn't it? It's obviously the same guitar as the gate-fold of his best-selling 1976 album, though, and it's sonic properties seemed to draw particularly good playing out of him, almost as if by magic. You can sure see it here.
It's just fantastic that he was able to get it back, too. Thanks for mentioning this. I can remember hearing "Rocking the Fillmore" in high school - "I Don't Need No Doctor" was played - really loud - in the hallways at all our home basketball games. Marriott was a phenomenal talent, and he was taken from us FAR too early; there's no telling what great stuff we missed out on.
Dr. John - who wrote this song - later thanked Peter Frampton for covering this song; he said that he was going through a nasty divorce at the time, and the publishing money he received from Humble Pie enabled him to survive the assault on his finances.
Music as it was supposed to be - just excellent musicians playing excellent music based on feelings. ❤️🔝❤️ How I miss those days..
He Is Now
Steve lived the blues, Peter played the blues very melodically, Greg made you feel the blues and Jerry made sure you rocked to the blues. Humble Pie IMHO was the finest rockin' band ever assembled.
agreed
They were sensational live. PF's jazzy lead playing which made them unusual.
Peter greens fleetwood mac might hold that honor imo
@@11celtics11 Yes, good call. So many excellent bands from then that I saw live, i.e. Sensational Alex Harvey Band, Thin Lizzy, later on Big Country etc.
There were so many great bands back then, don't forget the Faces! One of the tightest bands I ever had the privilege to see live, on their final tour before Rod went solo and Ron Woods joined the Stones.
Humble Pie are quite simply the most overlooked british blues band ever imo .
TOTALLY, This shit is waaaaay ahead of its time, Thought it was from the late 70s when it started, did not know it was pie at first,
I saw Humble Pie many times. They used to be first band along with Cactus to be the opening acts at the Fillmore East.
No monitors or earphone mix. Just raw talent. This is pure gold, right here folks. Before rock-n-roll became a big business.
Trouble is they all got ripped off including the Beatles. They got a measly 1% of the EMI Beatles' revenue. The Small Faces got basically zero under Don Arden whose daughter Sharon married Ozzy Osbourne, but the music shines thru & that is what mattered to these guys. The drummer is doing a lot of John Bonham bits. They are influenced by Led Zep sound no doubt.
@@seltaeb9691led Zeppelin ripped off Marriott... It's the other way around... Whole Lotta Love is a direct copy of Marriott's vocal phrasing on you need love when he was in The Small Faces.
@@NigelHyphenJones The British invasion increased vinyl LP transactions, more LP transactions doesn't mean bigger business. It wasn't until 1973 that record companies implemented the star-making machinery and systematized big LP advance bonuses,, lavish concert tour promotions, expensive album artwork and rock-star image marketing. This big business stance was overt and eventually led to the subsequent punk rock and the reversion back to rock basics.
@@stevecoscia made up, unsubstantiated poppycock…..most big British artists were living in the south of France by the early 1970s to escape 90% UK Tax at that time….. so, if they had nothing to protect (as you claim), why were they living there….. 🤔🤡
@@mikethebloodthirsty Sorry but Willie Dixon was the original
My lord, how are they not mentioned in the same breath as Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple? What an amazing band Humble Pie was.
yeah it is amazing
They never received the attention that they truly deserved. One of the best, if not the best of their era. Skin tight band and stunning arrangements of classic songs. Even when Clem came in, the band remained incredible.
Because Led Zeppelin and deep purple very good Studio bands Humble Pie was an amazing live band no one could sing like Steve Marriott The Artful Dodger rip
They are because zep copied em
That squeeling banshee plant isn't worthy to be mentioned with Steve M.
Does this bring back memories. Awesome band. Steve Marriott, a little white guy with a bluesman's voice. Peter Frampton, before going solo & commercial. The deep bass & voice of Greg Ridley & Jerry Shirley keeping it all together. "Performance at the Fillmore" a great live album, yeah, album. I'm a "boomer" & damn proud of it. Look at what "boomers" have given to the world of music.
Thank God I'm a boomer, too! When I bought my 4 disc Collectors Edition of Rockin the Fillmore, I hard a hard time giving away my original CD. No one had a clue! Who?
They said. How sad for them. Rock on Steve.
let's not forget what boomers also gave us... millions of murdered babies, no fault divorce, destruction of the black family, lbj, carter, clinton, obama, biden... good job boomers
This is right up there with Live Cream Volume II with Crossroads...
Live at the Fillmore, a classic
30 days in the hole
Steve Marriott one of greatest voices of rock.
Definitely the real fkn deal he was...
Terrific guitar player too. Apparently the Stones were considering adding him to the band before deciding on MIck Taylor. Probably a wise decision, as Steve would have outshone them all...
THE greatest
The best. I saw a humble pie back when I was a lad. It's hard to even conceive of how powerful Steve Marriott's voice was. You could literally hear his voice without amplification over his own amplified voice. He sang everything.
@@chicklets4ever51 Marriott wasn't chosen because he blew Jagger away at the audition.
Mick didn't want Steve taking the plaudits.
THIS is EXACTLY what they sounded like live when I saw them in concert. This is what bands of this level sounded like BEFORE SUBWOOFERS!
Listen carefully, EVERY instrument is loud clear and AUDIBLE, The kick drum, sounds like a DRUM, not some low frequency weapon at 20 hz. A GREAT live mix, and trust me- Ten Years After, Jethro Tull, Rhinoceros, Mountain, Queen, and a lot of other bands- sounded as great as this, before subs. REALLY. Listen to what DYNAMICS are - like the way real musicians use to use in concert.
Before sub-woofers, I am curious?
@@brettvroman9610 Modern subs were not used in the sixties.. there were bi-amped, and tri-amped PA systems, but now, we have dedicated subs, that produce tremendous standing bass waves- that carry long distances. I have been to far too many concerts, where all you can hear and feel, is the kick drum. I saw Three Dog Night- and the VOCALS were drowned out by the kick. I'm sure the sound guys loved it.. but if those guys heard what I heard, they'd be pissed. To me, the abuse and over mixing of kick drums in subs has literally ruined live music for me. All I can say is- I used to go to see all the great bands back in the day- in New York City- no subs, and the sound was amazing. Many at The Fillmore East, Capitol Theater, The Pavillion in Flushing Queens, Town Hall, The Beacon theater- all great concerts.
Yes I agree it is completely overdone now (sub woofer freqs), started with reggae! But look at how carefully each guitarist is adjusting his volume pot through the track. Glorious.@@bigbass421
@@bigbass421 Yes, totally agree. I saw Steve Hackett last year and the sound was so fat it might has well have been nine inch nails. Same when I saw Steve Vai at the same venue - a theater. The bass drum was so thumping and so unnecessary for that kind of music. Why do you think the sound guys would be loving that? Surely they aren't so ignorant that they can't tell how it doesn't suit?
Saw Trooper a while back and the sound wave concussion from the bass and kick drum both being mic'd in a small room was painful.@@bigbass421
I had the privilege of opening for humble pie in the mid 80's at Art Stocks play pen in Fort Lauderdale Florida. Amazing night!!!
I got to see them live just wow. 71 was a great time to be 21! Yeehaw.
So did I, Detroit ! Greatness……. ⚡️
I’m super jealous, lucky for you two(!) Born too late, here, sadly.
My very very 1st!!
concert in NYC....
What a way to start a lifetime of memories to last a lifetime...Tens years later while I was walking along the streets of Manhattan with my girlfriend a yellow Taxi stops in front of us and Mr. Steve Marriott pops out!! Shook hands and we spoke about everything and anything.
I knew this was that once in a lifetime opportunity...I took full advange of it!!!RIP
1st concert ever. 12/9/73. International Amphitheater, Chicago, IL. Final US performance before a two month break. Absolutely mind-numbing. Marriott owned the stage from start to finish. He was simply the coolest cat in the building and had the audience rockin’ from the first chords of Up Our Sleeve. The smell. The heat (yes, it was December…no matter, it was hot). The sound. It was so damn loud. And the music. Classic Pie. Can recall many other memorable concerts from then until now, yet this one will always rank #1.
I was at that same concert my
Oops I was at that same concert my friend..
I saw that same tour, in Cincinnati. Still memorable.
I am old enough to remember watching these shows on TV. They aired one time and we didn't see them again, but they left a mark on us. Now, decades later you dig them out for a new generation. We old boomers get to relive those memories. Thank you for this.
It's almost like having a time machine in your pocket isn't it?
Bravo - long live the internet and uploaders like this.
The best years of my life! 70's! 2021 sucks ,death is now watching me.Grown old.Have a good life!
Robert, death is watching us all. It's a naturall development. In like 20 years there will be no one more who can remember how it really was before the world went crazzy. .
C'mon, man, things aren't that bad for us oldies (apart from the woke stuff going on). Take a listen to The Dead Daises' Holy Ground album, featuring now Glenn Hughes. Hope you like it. A blast from the past. Be good.
No youre watching the wise advisor"death". Revisit Don Juan..
Listen to ghost and kks preist!
Frampton had such a clean clear tone on that ebony Les Paul!
UNREAL FOOTAGE
I think what we see..in mainstream music is what the big companies want us to see..but what is hidden is this supreme talent..thank God for you tube.
you betya.
One of the best renditions of this song ever recorded.Great Band.
I'd say ,,, They're Performance of this jam on H/P live at the Fillmore Stole it ( ALTHOUGH !!! ) This version is DEFINITELY A TREAT !!!! BEEN DIGGIN ON THEM SINCE DAY ONE ( 1 ) !!! 😆👍🥴☮️🥂
Humble Pie is my absolute favorite Blues Rock band. Marriott's savage warble and Peter's subtle and precise picking are simply mesmerizing. Of course the power down low in the basement, drum and bass, driving the whole experience, Wow! These guys are better than Cream in my opinion! Thanks for the video🙌🍀
Great Footage Thx.❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😂😂
I LOVE them too 😍
Steve Marriott, forever in our hearts 😢❤🎸🇬🇧
HE WAS MAGNIFICENT gelu batir, romania
@@gelubatir9794 Totalmente de acuerdo... y sabes una cosa, cuando escucho a the Black crowes siempre me recuerda la voz de Steve Marriott. Saludos desde Chile.
A great Band, a great Time in the Rock-Music. I love this Time and all the Bands , Cream, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Humple Pie and more.......
Taste, amb Rory Gallagher.
@@ferranximen Ten Years AFTER. RIP ALVIN.
Young Peety Frampton rocking out with Steve. It's fun to look back at these days.
Steve Marriott, the most underated musician of all time!! Thank-you for putting this up!!
Shut up with that stuff please. He's legend, hardly underrated
I reckon Andy Fairweather-Low is probably the most underrated......
He really was.
a bit unknown by many, but nobody who knows his music and voice underrates him. No one I know.
There are many that have been underestimated, ignored by the media and limited music critics. Marriott is one of those, without a doubt. But they were never underestimated by those who knew them.
Love the work Frampton did in Humble Pie He is one of the best guitarists I believe
He was much more melodic than many Rock guitarists !!!###
@@JohnnyNation Would Frampton have been a good replacement for Mick Taylor in the Stones?
@@geoffpoole483 Probably not as Frampton left Humble Pie because he desired more creative control/Townsend actually approached Frampton to be his replacement in the Who- but had a change of heart !!!###
@@JohnnyNation I just listened to Frampton 's bio and he stated that he was on a short list of potential replacements for Mick Taylor..He heard it on the radio and then talked to Mick Jagger and he confirmed it..
@@melrose795 I'm sure you're correct in that/ but leaving a band like Humble Pie at the peak of their fame-his main motivation had to be for a solo career.
My goodness Frampton and Marriott together! Every bit as good as the best acts out at the time. What a great video!
Every bit as better than a number of 'em, and I'm speaking of those whom I as well respect, so that's saying somethin'...
Agree. Many bands emulated their swag. Plant, Jagger and the rest knew that Steve Marriott's vocals were on another level.
Ofc they are together because they formed Humble Pie
And soon thereafter added Leslie West.
A shame Frampton sold out to pop music.
History will see itself never seeing this in their history. REAL MUSIC!
Frampton never gets the credit for his playing but he is insane and unlike Green, Clapton and other legends he incorporates jazzier runs - there is even a lick here he pulled out again for “Do You Feel Like We Do,” which has one of the greatest solos in rock.
Totally agree. Peter was such an inventive guitar soloist.
yes, he only created a live album that everyone bought back in the day with great gait work
Yeah, I hear it..
I get that. Frampton has an interesting playing style that is really yard to copy.
Really you don't think his BIGGEST SELLING LIVE ALBUM OF ALL TIME. Isn't credit? Wow.
This is what you call a proper English rock in roll band. Steve Marriot and Peter Frampton. Classic
Humble Pie is good for my old soul. And younger souls alike.
Humble Pie always turned it up to 11. No wonder I've got tinnitus 😂
They never received the recognition that they deserved, why? They were just as good as any of their contemporaries if not better! My God, listening to this I realize how much I miss them and excellent music in general. R.I.P. dear Steve!
they were too sophisticated and cerebral for the general public.
Not everyone can wrap their head around this kind of pure genius.
@@daisywrabbit I whole heartedly agree. I find most people my age either had never heard of them or didn't think much of them. Forget anyone younger...I just get a blank look when I mention their brilliance. I tell them to go find them on CZcams and that's music worth listening.
They had plenty of recognition when they came to San Francisco I can tell you that . Every show was packed with adoring fans and they received great ovations . Maybe if they had more airplay it would have been better for them .
@@gordonlandreth9550 I saw them in 1972 at the HIC arena in Honolulu. I was 14 at the time. It was my 1st big concert I ever went to. Needless to say it influenced my taste in music for years to come.
@@brucefranklin6765 That must have been on hell of a show Bruce , when I saw them in San Francisco the ' Eat It ' album had just came out and they played some of that . I do remember Greg Ridley 's bass shaking the building , and of course Steve Marriott , joking with the crowd , and playing rock and roll like a champion . I do think that they made a CD of this concert , and it must have been almost identical to the show you saw . Steely Dan opened , then Slade kicked in quite well , then Humble Pie . Always surprises me when real rock fans have never heard of them .
We need some more bands like Humble Pie . Gran Funk . Wishbone Ash ! Grinder rock . They all had badass bass/drums .
woooooah!!!! someone with sense!!!! A funkster!!! love me some Markie Farner!!!!
Check out Brant Bjork.
Blackberry smoke
...YES...the rhythm section is the foundation that the house is built on...and they all had EXCELLENT RHYTHM SECTIONS........
Music then was a flamethrower.
Music today is a wet match.
Vocals, Guitar, Harp - Steve Marriott.
Guitar, Vocals - Peter Frampton.
Bass, Vocals - Greg Ridley.
Drums - Jerry Shirley.
i use to see jerry shirley all the time when he lived by me in cleveland he did a big dummy move and stole some money needless to say he aint in cleveland any more
MENS MUSIC ...
unlike today
Steve Marriott was definitely "Mr. Dyna-Mite". Explosively dynamic in a small package.
Yes and great to watch!
Playing that double cut-away Les Paul Jr.
@@garyrasberryjr.552It’s not an LP jr! It’s an epiphone coronet. Same deal basically, just a different shaped body, but still a double cut P90 guitar. Marriott obviously liked his as I’ve seen him use it a lot. Always wanted one.
@@mooglancashire424I owned a Coronet because of Steve. Man, what a resonant guitar, the body just resonated throughout. Awesome tone and sustain.
I was born the year this was recorded. Brings back great memories from the 80’s though. When my dad decided there was a record/band I needed to hear he’d turn the lights out, put on the album of that band and crank it up for and hour or two. Humble Pie and Traffic were two of my favorites that he’d often play. I can see his face glowing in the blue lights of his Fisher stereo system. Thanks, Reelin’ in the years.
…and toking on the weed at 8.
yer Dad tho✌😁👍
I seen in the late eighties bands covering stuff like that with dual drummers in one - raw real Rock n Roll
So after watching this amazing Jam, just think Frampton is 20 yrs old here, The drummer Jerry shirley is only 18, Marriot is 23, Greg Ridley the bassist is an "old" 28, amazing talent at such young ages.
@Robert Zemko Then (presumably), he must've been around 12 when he was in Small Faces... Yikes!
@@Jah_Rastafari_ORIG Marriot was the only one who came from the Small Faces, he was about 18 or 19 when he joined.
is frampton with the black LP?
@@larsemiliozapata7804 Frampton left in 71 before the "black lp" (Smokin) That lp released in 72 featured new guitarist Clem Clempson. Frampton's last contribution was Rockin The Fillmore.
@@robertzemko6590 "Black Les Paul" (LP)
Pee'a n steve......all smoked up!!
how cool to still see and hear this after all these years! thanks for the upload!
One of the finest live acts of the era!!! Best thing Frampton ever did; even after leaving and making tons of money and mega fame, he never equaled this level of excellence. RIP Steve & Greg
Humble Pie
Live at the Fillmore was a huge part of my youth! 🎵🎶🎸❤️🇨🇦
Mine too. I joined Ebay to get the CD of it after my vinyl wore out. Could only get it in the US. Saw them in concert in Bristol England after that tour (minus Frampton). Clem Clemson replaced Frampton
Its so sad how Steve died. A great guy, one of the stars i looked up to. He was brilliant and I saw him play with the pack of 3 in Putney years ago in a pub. What a great gig. I saw Roy Harper and his talented son Nick play there a few times and the Groundhogs with the great Tony mc Phee. Great memories.
La mejor banda de rock pesado q jamás he podido oír hoy a mis 68 años y Steve en el momento justo de la época del rock pesado (70s)... Fué mi primer álbum en vivo, todavía me los vaciló. Toda una joya este video, la reunión cuando se murió hubiese sido espectacular, muchos la estábamos esperando y yo ya estaba siguiente las noticia. QEPD SM... Otro extraterrestre🤟👍
Oh my God, to see them play this live in colour for the first time since buying Performance almost 50 years ago is breathtaking. Just incredible, thank you so, so much for posting this up.
You feel the same way about it as I do,
Was it really FIFTY years ago! I remember buying the album in 1971 and then seeing them at the Rainbow the same year.. What a great time to be 17
My sentiments exactly. This is IT!
One of the greatest live albums ever released !!!###
I love talking to all you old timers about music like this I discovered rockin the filmore about 4 years ago and have listened to it so many times since it’s unbelievable… to have to wait fifty years to actually SEE them play it is unbelievable.
And this is my absolute favorite cut on the album
Frampton’s jazz-inflected, highly melodic lead guitar is unmistakable already at this early stage, even in this heavy blues-rock material. How the HELL is he not in the Rock HOF ?
I don't hear the "modal" approach that Rick Beato highlights yet. But I'm pretty dumb. Still sounds mostly bluesy, but he must have been developing it already.
@Tony Guy Damn straight! There are MORE "artists" who are NOT Rock & Roll AT ALL in the HOF than there are REAL Rock bands/musicians. Goddamn disgrace.
Rock- n- roll hall of shame.🖕to them. NOW the assclown is allowing rap.🤯💩heads. I will never visit. They haven't a clue about great music
Lifeson's acceptance speech when Rush was finally inducted said it all, "Blah... blah, blahblah, blah..."
Who cares about rock halls of fame if your good your good Frampton was all right couldn't hold a candle to marri i o t .In my HUMBLE opinion
Why can’t we have bands like this anymore,watch this so many times,can not believe how good they are
Too many audiences don’t have the attention span, they need glitz, dancing, ‘shows’ to keep Ed p them focused.
I never ever realized this band was so good until today. March 23 2023
WELCOME TO THE ARMY OF HUMBLE PIE
FANS
GREETINGS FROM HOLLAND
THE BEST BLUES ROCK BAND FROM THAT TIME!! I WAS AN BIG FAN FROM ALL!!! REALY, THIS IS NOT NORMAL!! ITS TIMELESS❤😊
Great to see this rendition of Humble Pie (with Frampton). "Performance Rockin' the Fillmore" is still one of the great live albums of the era, IMO.
Oh absolutely ! Played the shit out of that back in this early 70s
Saw them live in 1972 in Honolulu Hawaii. Rare Earth was the opening act.
CORRECT.
True. It gets no respect.
Possibly best live LP of all time. Also Live At Leeds
I have loved Humble Pie for 52 years ever since I saw them live in Boston in 1972. It really blew my mind! Raw Energy! Life!
What was the venue?
@@georgeosborne3585 I forget the name but it was a theater for stage plays and literally every seat in the house was a good seat. Thinking about it I believe it held about fifteen hundred, maybe more, maybe less. The acoustics were fantastic. I remember being really impressed by the "other" guitarist playing with Steve Marriott. Turned out it was Peter Frampton. One of the top five concerts I've ever seen. Song selections from the double album Rockin the Filmore and Smokin. Wow!
Excellent musicianship, vocals… saw them twice, they never played this TIGHT‼️
GREAT STUFF‼️
I grew up in this time. I had a couple of their albums. They are in the top 5 groups of all time.
Hands Down, the Best, Tightest, most versatile, best dueling guitarists whether lead or rhythm or Voices of All Time! It’s Easy $!
Its cool to see Frampton with that same Led Paul for all those years!! Also the most underrated bands of all time.IMO
Humble Pie...a kick ass quartet of sound and power. Great stuff!! May I have some more please.
So nice to see so many views (and mostly positive comments on this) when we decide what to post our goal is to show a wide variety of our archive of artists of all genres of music both the million selling artists and more cult like artists. I had no idea this would garner so many views and I’m glad people are enjoying it. We do not monetize our Chanel but post items so that directors & producers of documentaries can find us to properly license the footage. I know some people make nasty comments that we put our website across the screen but that is there to protect the footage from being used without our consent. Honestly, if we didn’t have the option of putting that on the screen we’d never post it in the first place.
This is killer. Thank you very much for posting. 👍
@@MK-gv7qr you’re welcome!
Classic lineup was the best. Although Clem Clemson and the ladies were tight also.
Thank you so much for this rare footage of Humble Pie. I thoroughly enjoyed seeing them live and in their glory. Thanks also to CZcams for enabling us to enjoy this 50 years later.
Thank you! ❤️
Never seen this before, one of the best performance videos on CZcams.
Words cannot describe on how good this is.
This brings back memories when humble pie used to be playing on the radio station and set a standard for quality music-from crescendo's and decrescendos to legato's and staccattos piano to forte and who would have thought that a rock band could play technically classical -incredible musicianship- and every single one of them is phenomenal- a lead singer that inspired Robert Plant!
1971 seemed to be a magical year for "Live" albums.
Three of the Best "All Time" Live albums were released that year.
1. Humble Pie - Performance: Rockin The Fillmore
2. Johnny Winter And - Live
3. Allman Brothers Band - At Fillmore East
This was a time when musicians could "actually" play and knew how to expand on a song and jam on it and see where it takes them.
It's one of the main reasons that so many legendary artists came out of the 60s and 70s.
You don't hear much of that interplay today when the average rock band concentrates on a 3½ minute single.
Since most of the current bands today copy each other and have no real music knowledge of what came before them, they know very little about how to get together, take a song and just cut loose and let it flow.
And until they quit copying everything that is out there on the radio right now and go back and learn from the masters . . . Rock group will continue to be a dime a dozen . . . all looking the same, all sounding the same and all sounding like they are singing the same song.
My one piece of advice to younger musicians is this . . . learn from the past.
How cany you know where music is going if you have no clue where it's been.
All desert island records for sure!
Absolutely! I'm actually hearing quite a lot of similarity between Frampton's playing here and Duane on Whipping Post.
Please don't forget James Gang - Live In Concert (Carnegie Hall)
You betcha. And I've had all three since they came out. Early 70's rock at it's best!! And, you're right: They just don't make 'em like they used to.
Even though it was released in 70, Live at Leeds is another monster.
Wow!.... I sure do miss Rock ‘n Roll.
Simply and well said! Me too!
It's still around. Just need to dig a bit.
Yes. Sigh.
@@jamesbarber7846 That's true, but I think the reference is to the crazy, deep pool of bands that could really deliver dried up as times changed, much to my (and like-minded folks) dismay. Oh yeah, Jay-Z, among other rock icons, is a new member of the beyond laughable 'rock n roll hall of fame', lol.
@@carlsaganlives5112 it hasn't dried up at all. you just want it spoon-fed to you by a business that doesn't care about anything but empty nostalgia anymore. They won't, you gotta find it yourself now; but the bands are definitely out there. For how long depends on you.
It's a Long Way to the Top If you want to rock and roll getting stoned secondhand broken bones underpaid getting old hotel motel make you want to cry look out it's harder than it looks God bless you all thanks Humble Pie peace everyone
They are one of the real live bands with two guitars. Steve, RIP
Indeed. Btw - HUGE GSP FAN!
Well, the Johnny Winter Band was blisteringly hot when Floyd Radford joined them on the road as second guitarist, ca. 1974-75.
RIP Greg Ridley
thin lizzy with brian robertson
Television
I believe the guitar that Peter is playing is the Les Paul which would later become known as the Phoenix
I saw them play this song live, the week they recorded Performance - Rockin’ the Fillmore, which to me is a top 3 live rock performances of all time. This clearly an early version working it out, but it was always partly improvised. These guys LISTEN to each other. And what a rhythm section - Greg and Jerry. My drummer and I learned so much from listening to them in the early 1970’s. Seeing Humble Pie then changed our musical lives. The late Steve Marriott has stayed in my heart since that night.
I was also fortunate to see Frampton in May, 1975, the week his new band recorded Frampton Comes Alive. I have a lot for which to be grateful!! ❤
We didn't have smart phones, the internet or cable TV but we had Beatles, Stones, Zeppelin, Cooper, Sabbath, Santana, Tull, Heep, Purple and friggin Humble Pie, not to mention a hundred other great bands. So glad I was there.
They were the pure real deal. Just raw and honest talent and with no dependence on effects pedals.
Seen him live in LA in 1972 with the BlackBerries. He played till the power on stage was cut off. We said MORE; he played MORE. The next day was shipping out overseas for my last deployment, NMCB 10.
Saw HP this same year warming up for Grand Funk in Cleveland at Public Hall.. great live band experience… a time in music we will never see again..
My God they are so awesome rock and roll should never be missing without mentioning humble pie they are there with the best I can't get enough humble pie I can't get enough of Steve Marriott he was bad to her bone
Still listening, rock on!
Humble Pie is so under rated. This band was the best band ever.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Having a positive opinion that is not being shared by majority doesn't necessarily mean the subject is underrated.
@@stefangoeres3256 Yessir. 'Underrated' as a comment needs to go away.
@@carlsaganlives5112 totally agree
i don't know why you believe they were "underrated" ...maybe you don't know too much about humble pie : anyway, i send you me best thoughts
@@gelubatir9794 yes Humble Pie is absolutely adored by their fans but the reality is that they are underrated because they are rarely mentioned in the same breath as Led Zeppelin when people talk about the great blues and hard rock acts of the 70s when they were every bit as good as Zep, if not better. Jimmy Page may have written some of the most memorable licks in rock history, but he was a notoriously sloppy live player who rarely ventured outside of the pentatonic scale. Frampton could play circles around Jimmy with his sense of melody(this coming from a guy who has the Led Zep Icarus tattooed on his shoulder)
Rocking the Fillmore album I wore out 3 times when I was in high school in 1972. Walk on Splinters was my favorite. R.I.P. Steve Marriott. Met Peter twice; love Greg Ridley and Jerry Shirley. Thank you for all.
I'm on my 4th vinyl copy, still got my first one from 1971 - that wouldn't have seemed possible to me when I was a teenager.
This shows what a bad-ass band the classic lineup was!
Oh HELL yes. Man, HP was absolutely one of the best guitar/blues-jazzy-hard-rock bands ever. Frampton was never better. Marriot was boundless energy, Greg Ridley was so solid on bass, Jerry Shirley held it down and drove it forward on drums...and their eerie pinnacle was "Rockin' the Fillmore". SO great. Thanks 4 posting.
I love it so much all the changes in this awesome song brilliant musicians R.I.P steve marriott.
Too awesome for words! Love em!
We all thought that music could change the way the world was turning! It didn`t work out that way, but we had our moments of glory and infinity, like this. Thanks a lot for posting.
Gives me chills.
Das ich das noch sehen und hören darf - mein Leben ist erfüllt..!
Humble Pie create their RnR Opus .. Steve Marriott powerful voice tears at the heart and the deep recesses of the mind
Exactly. I deeply love his voice.
Silence and space for the music to breathe, 4 virtuoso players all playing for each other, volume up to eleventy eleven, no ego and pure magic.
Makes me proud to be British!! what a voice! what a band!!
✌️❤️N'Rock&Roll,,,ReallyDigsMySoul😎
Totally gripped by this from start to finish. The dynamics are incredible. What a band! Saw Marriott twice with the Small Faces, in 1968 and 1976. A genius, but everyone here gives 100%.
Saw every rock group in the 70’s but missed this one they are unreal
That’s a bummer because they were incredible live. I was lucky enough to see them twice. Even got to hang out with them.
Greg Ridley is a fantastic bassist & singer.
I'm only 7 minutes into this performance and I need to take a seat. Whoo. Kicking my ass. 🔥
I can't even begin to count how many times I have returned to see/hear this! Thanks for this Realin in the Years.
I'm 66 years old I will never stop listening ya also don't forget about ten years after
Reelintheyears you know how lucky you are to have this clip. And how lucky we are to see and hear it. As for producers and documentarians letting us see this whole video no way. Dual guitars and even the small part with Mr. Marriott and Peter working the harmonica and guitar is priceless. I could watch this everyday it is so great. The idea that You and CZcams lets us see great musical history makes my life worth living. Letting us see your videos is like having letting a butterfly out of a closed fist. Thank you very much and hoping there is more before I leave this world.
Glad you enjoyed it
Well said!
@@ReelinInTheYears66 Where was this recorded?
Yes. It is also like relieving a squashed uniped out of a drain. Excues me for my English how it is spoke.
Humble Pie is truly fantastic, and not to take away from the immense talent of all the members, but the drumming is very distinct and really stands out.
Rocking the Filmore was one of the best live albums for me anyway.
Listen to it a lot of times. "I don't need no doctor" the last track on the R T F album. Saw them live 3 times. Never disappointing. Always a great night. Peter Frampton is a great guitarist still
underrated I think.
Wasn't much into the Frampton comes alive album myself. But it made him a big star. So good for him. Stevie Marriott wow what a voice. From his times with the Small Faces. Listen to "Tin soldier" amazing performance.
Throughout H P.
To his time playing the blues with his band in small venues in England.
Where I saw him again. Always was the best voice to come out of the U K.for me. Tragic ending though.