Ringo Starr - Live in Michigan - 20.5. Do You Feel Like We Do (Peter Frampton) - PART 2 OF 2

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • Pine Knob Theatre, May 30th 1997.
    "Do You Feel Like We Do" is a song by Peter Frampton originally on the Frampton's Camel album released in 1973. The song became one of the highlights of his live performance in following years. It was one of the three hit singles released from his Frampton Comes Alive! album, released in 1976, which reached number one on the album charts and became the best-selling live album of all time until Garth Brooks' Double Live album was released in 1998. The Frampton Comes Alive! version of the song was recorded at the State University of New York's Plattsburgh Field House. The version from Frampton Comes Alive! is also featured in the popular rhythm game, Guitar Hero 5.
    The song was written in the early seventies with members of Frampton's band, then called Frampton's Camel. The song was originally about waking up with a hangover with the opening lyrics being "Well, woke up this morning with a wine glass in my hand".[citation needed]
    It was released on the 1973 Frampton's Camel album which reached a peak of 110 on the US charts. The album version of the track was relatively short at 6:44 minutes and was not then released as a single. The two singles that were released "All Night Long" and "Which Way the Wind Blows" neither of which made the charts.
    After the lack of success of the Frampton's Camel album, Frampton performed under his own name as he felt that the band was being confused with the band Camel. He began touring the United States extensively for the next two years supporting acts such as the J. Geils Band and ZZ Top as well as performing his own shows at smaller venues. As a result, he developed a strong live following while his albums sold moderately and his singles failed to chart.
    "Do You Feel Like We Do" became the closing number of his set and one of the highlights of his show. It was considerably longer-over fourteen minutes on Frampton Comes Alive!-and featured a number of instrumental solos. Most famously, Frampton used the talk box, an effects pedal which redirects a guitar's sound through a tube into the performer's mouth, allowing the guitar to mimic human speech.

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