Peter Frampton - Gold (2005)
Artist: Peter Frampton
Title: Gold
Year Of Release: 2005
Label: A&M Records
Genre: Classic Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 02:37:07
Total Size: 472 Mb / 1,2 Gb (scans+booklet)
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Gold
Year Of Release: 2005
Label: A&M Records
Genre: Classic Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 02:37:07
Total Size: 472 Mb / 1,2 Gb (scans+booklet)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
CD 1:
01. It's A Plain Shame
02. Jumpin' Jack Flash
03. All I Want To Be (Is By Your Side)
04. I Got My Eyes On You
05. All Night Long
06. Lines On My Face
07. Baby (Somethin's Happening)
08. Doobie Wah
09. Nowhere's Too Far (For My Baby)
10. Nassau-Baby - I Love Your Way
11. The Crying Clown
12. Penny For Your Thoughts
13. (I'll Give You) Money
14. Show Me The Way (Live)
15. Shine On (Live)
16. Do You Feel Like We Do (Live)
CD 2:
01. I'm In You
02. (Putting My) Heart On The Line
03. Signed, Sealed, Delivered (I'm Yours)
04. I Can't Stand It No More
05. Breaking All The Rules
06. Theme From Nivram
07. Lying
08. More Ways Than One
09. Holding On To You
10. The Bigger They Come
11. I Won't Let You Down
12. Day In The Sun
13. You
14. Waiting For Your Love (Live)
15. Greens
16. While My Guitar Gently Weeps
Listening to Peter Frampton is like sitting in the back of an old station wagon on a hot summer's day with all of the windows rolled down; it's unremarkably comforting. The former British press-appointed "Face of 1968" went from the Preachers to the Herd to Humble Pie before unleashing the record that would haunt garage sales for the next 30 years (Frampton Comes Alive!) and secure him a place in the pop culture totem pole. A&M's surprisingly thorough and creative Gold series has been producing some wonderful two-disc compilations of classic rock artists that include both the bread and butter as well as the meat, a system that works wonders for the career of one Peter Frampton. Hearing "Doobie Wah," "Show Me the Way," "Do You Feel Like We Do," and "I'm in You" -- the latter still featuring one of the best snare sounds ever -- alongside immediate post-Humble Pie offerings like "It's a Plain Shame" and "All I Want to Be (Is By Your Side)" as well as late-career oddities like "Theme from Nivram," a way-cool, surf-heavy instrumental B-side from 1982's Art of Control, paints the artist as more than just the guy who made the talk-box a necessary tool for aspiring guitar players everywhere. Frampton never meant to sell a million copies of a 1975 live concert in San Francisco; he just wanted to perform, and hearing him smile through covers both new ("While My Guitar Gently Weeps") and old ("Jumping Jack Flash") reveals a man and a boy who never fell out of love with the simple joy of playing rock & roll.