The two words that we most associate with Peter Frampton are ‘comes alive’. And he really is one of those artists who is at their best playing in front of an audience. Among his diverse, decades-spanning discography, it’s two double live albums – one with Humble Pie, one solo – that truly capture his artistry. “I’ve always gone on stage at the top of my game,” he says. “Or tried to.”
Born in 1950, Frampton was something of a child prodigy, soaking up everything from Buddy Holly to Chet Atkins to Kenny Burrell. He taught himself to play guitar when he was eight, and played his first professional gigs when he was just 13. By the time he was 16 he was writing his own songs and performing as frontman with The Herd on Top Of The Pops. He never looked back. “For me it was always a learning curve. And I’m still on it,” Frampton says.
Over the years aheadthat iconic emblem of 70s rock and still one of the biggest-selling records of all-time. Frampton modestly admits that he thought of the studio records leading up to it as a kind of apprenticeship. “I was learning how to sing properly,” he says. “I was becoming more relaxed and creative as a songwriter.”