Followers

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Peter Frampton reissues due this summer

After an incredible run through the 1970s on A&M Records, Peter Frampton reemerged in 1986 on a new label, with a new album and single that found him back on the Billboard charts and radios across the world.
 
Frampton's Premonition and When All The Pieces Fit will be re-released on Omnivore Recordings on August 28. Now will follow on September 4.

Premonition became Peter’s first release to make the Billboard Top 100 Albums in five years. Anchored by the mainstream rock hit “Lying,” he shared album production duties and was joined by Steve Ferrone (Average White Band, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers), Tony Levin (King Crimson) and Omar Hakim (Sting, David Bowie). After Premonition’s release, Frampton joined his friend David Bowie on the latter’s 1987 album Never Let Me Down and its ensuing Glass Spider Tour, another step in his reintroduction to the masses.

Frampton capped off a successful mid-’80s with his tenth studio release, 1989’s When All The Pieces Fit. The album hit the Billboard Top 200, following in the wake of 1986’s Premonition.

Co-helming the project with Chris Lord-Alge (Tina Turner, Joe Cocker, Stevie Nicks), Frampton also brought in some new song collaborators, notably the Rembrandts’ Danny Wilde and John Regan. Regan, who’d worked with Frampton since 1979, was also a member of Frehley’s Comet and played on records by Billy Idol, Bonnie Tyler and others. 
 
The album’s first single, “Holding On to You,” was co-written by Peter with award winner Will Jennings (“Up Where We Belong,” “My Heart Will Go On,” “Tears in Heaven”). Other musicians on When All The Pieces Fit include Fourplay’s Nathan East, Steve Ferrone, and percussionist Lenny Castro.

Now, originally released in 2003, was Peter’s 12th studio release. Proclaiming “I’m Back,” he addressed his longest gap between releases, and offered up a seriously strong collection of material. From riff-filled rockers to shimmering ballads and instrumentals, Now was not only a culmination of what made Frampton a superstar, but showed he was far from done creating.
 
Frampton reached back into his history with Bob Mayo (who played in his Frampton Comes Alive! band) on keyboards, and found a new songwriting collaborator in George Kennedy. 
 
In addition to Now’s 10 originals, Peter pays tribute to his then recently departed friend George Harrison with a cover of the Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” 
 
All three reissues, which include liner notes from writer Scott Schinder based on new interviews with Peter, are timed to coincide with Frampton’s first acoustic tour this fall.

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