Peter Frampton - Frampton Comes Alive! (Live) (2024) Hi-Res

  • 29 Mar, 00:44
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Artist:
Title: Frampton Comes Alive! (Live)
Year Of Release: 1976 / 2024
Label: A&M / UMG Recordings, Inc
Genre: Rock, Pop Rock, Soft Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24bit-192kHz
Total Time: 1:18:14
Total Size: 3.00 Gb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Something's Happening (Live) (5:52)
02. Doobie Wah (Live) (5:24)
03. Show Me The Way (Live) (4:46)
04. It's A Plain Shame (Live) (4:23)
05. All I Want To Be (Is By Your Side) (Live) (3:28)
06. Wind Of Change (Live) (2:44)
07. Baby, I Love Your Way (Live) (4:35)
08. I Wanna Go To The Sun (Live) (7:16)
09. Penny For Your Thoughts (Live) (1:22)
10. (I'll Give You) Money (Live) (5:45)
11. Shine On (Live) (3:26)
12. Jumping Jack Flash (Live) (7:52)
13. Lines On My Face (Live) (7:05)
14. Do You Feel Like We Do (Live) (14:16)

At the time of its release, Frampton Comes Alive! was an anomaly, a multi-million-selling (mid-priced) double LP by an artist who had previously never burned up the charts with his long-players in any spectacular way. The biggest-selling live album of all time, it made Peter Frampton a household word and generated a monster hit single in "Show Me the Way." And the reason why is easy to hear: the Herd/Humble Pie graduate packed one hell of a punch on-stage -- where he was obviously the most comfortable -- and, in fact, the live versions of "Show Me the Way," "Do You Feel Like I Do," "Something's Happening," "Shine On," and other album rock staples are much more inspired, confident, and hard-hitting than the studio versions. [The 1999 reissue in A&M's "Remastered Classics" (31454-0930-2) series is a considerable improvement over the original double CD or double LP in terms of sound -- the highs are significantly more lustrous, the guitars crunch and soar, and the bottom end really thunders, and so you get a genuine sense of the power of Frampton's live set, at least the heavier parts of his set, rather than the compressed and flat sonic profile of the old double-disc version. Frampton and the band sound significantly closer as well, even on the softer songs such as "Wind of Change," and the disc is impressive listening even a quarter century later. Of course, one must take this all with a grain of salt as a concert document -- as was later revealed, there was considerable studio doctoring of the raw live tapes, a phenomenon that set the stage for such unofficial hybrid works as Bruce Springsteen's Live/1975-85 and countless others.]




  • Guest BluePT
  •  19:21
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Completely fu€ked up remastered sound. No dynamics, no live sensation! Why destroying a masterpiece???? Don't lose your time downloading this, unless you have an high-end vacuum tube amplifier and a big taste for british "not too much treble" sound presentation. The best remaster of this album is still Japanese SACD or SHM-CD!