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HUMBLE
PIE (ARTIEST BIOGRAPHY)
Humble Pie
was a British rock music band from 1969-82, best known for its
hard-rocking recordings and concert performances during their peak
period on A&M records from 1970-1975.
The band initially consisted in 1969 of Steve Marriott (formerly of
The Small Faces; lead vocals, guitar, keyboards), Peter Frampton (from
The Herd; lead guitar), Greg Ridley (from Spooky Tooth; bass) and
Jerry Shirley (from Valkyrie; drums).
The joining of all these fairly known players resulted in Humble Pie
being considered a bit of a “supergroup”. Worried about great
expectations, the group began working together in secret at
Marriott’s cottage in Moreton, Essex. Signed to Andrew Loog Oldham’s
Immediate Records, their debut single “Natural Born Boogie” was
rushed out in 1969 and was a UK number five hit; it was quickly
followed by the album As Safe As Yesterday Is, praised as a
progressive album in the vein of The Small Faces. Their second album
Town and Country was also released in 1969 and featured a more
acoustic sound. Humble Pie concerts at this time featured an
acoustic set followed by an electric set, an approach that would
become popular decades later.
1970 saw the financial collapse of Immediate, a switch to A&M
Records, and a change in band management. The albums Humble Pie and
Rock On, both released that year, alternated between progressive
rock and boogie rock excess. A concert at the Fillmore East in NYC
was captured on Perfomance Rockin’ The Fillmore (1971); it is
considered one of the best live rock albums of its era, with
Marriott, Frampton, and the rest of the group in fine form. The
loud-quiet-loud epic “I Don’t Need No Doctor” was an FM radio hit in
the United States, propelling the album to the group’s biggest
commercial success yet.
However, Frampton had already left the band by the time of the
album’s release, to pursue a solo career that would become extremely
successful later in the 1970s. With Dave “Clem” Clempson replacing
Frampton, Humble Pie moved towards an even harder sound at the
urging of manager Dee Anthony, emphasizing Marriott’s blues and soul
roots.
Smokin’ (1972) had a minor hit in “Thirty Days in the Hole” and was
reasonably successful commercially based on the group’s constant
touring. As a premiere US concert attraction, they traveled in a
customized private jet, and partook in all forms of the rock n roll
excess available to formerly working class musicians that rose to
fame and riches in this era, even hiring The Blackberries, a trio of
black backup singers including Vanetta Fields formerly of The
Ikettes. Nevertheless the band’s extended, long form concert boogie
jam rock style was unable to break them into the mainstream radio.
Eat It (1974) was three sides of mostly R&B covers and one side
live, and while appreciated by their core fans, did nothing to
expand the group’s audience. The group staged the Goodbye Pie Tour
in 1975 and essentially broke up.
In 1980 Marriott, divorced, and with financial problems in the UK,
relocated to Atlanta Georgia and revived Humble Pie with Shirley,
adding Bob Tench (from Jeff Beck Group) on guitar and Anthony
“Sooty” Jones on bass. Two albums with a more modern heavy metal
sound were released but the effort soon fell apart. In 1991 Marriott
and Frampton began collaborating again, with another Humble Pie
rebirth possibly in the offing, but an unfortunate house fire took
Marriott’s life before anything tangible could materialise. |