Eat It (Remastered) Humble Pie

Album info

Album-Release:
1973

HRA-Release:
21.09.2021

Label: A&M

Genre: Blues

Subgenre: Bluesy Rock

Artist: Humble Pie

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Get Down To It 03:26
  • 2 Good Booze And Bad Women 03:16
  • 3 Is It For Love? 04:37
  • 4 Drugstore Cowboy 05:39
  • 5 Black Coffee 03:09
  • 6 I Believe To My Soul 04:04
  • 7 Shut Up And Don't Interrupt Me 03:06
  • 8 That's How Strong My Love Is 03:46
  • 9 Say No More 01:59
  • 10 Oh, Bella (All That's Hers) 03:26
  • 11 Summer Song 02:45
  • 12 Beckton Dumps 03:14
  • 13 Up Our Sleeve 05:02
  • 14 Honky Tonk Women 03:56
  • 15 Road Runner 13:30
  • Total Runtime 01:04:55

Info for Eat It (Remastered)



This 1973 album from the British Blues/Boogie band led by former Small Faces main man Steve Marriott. Each side of the original double album was different: Side One features Steve Marriott- penned Rock 'n' Roll; Side Two has classic R&B covers; Side Three is a collection of acoustic Steve Marriott songs; finally, Side Four features Humble Pie live in concert. This album showcases the dynamic diversity and talent of Steve Marriott's gritty bluesy vocals with some funky Soul mixed in throughout along with straight ahead blistering rockers. This reissue comes with new artwork and sleeve notes by Malcolm Dome who has interviewed members of the band to get the complete story. Lemon.

This album showcases the dynamic diversity and talent of Steve Marriott's gritty bluesy vocals with some funky soul mixed in throughout along with straight ahead blistering rockers. The band is right on and they deliver an extremely energetic powerhouse combination on this double album that overall ranks with their best.

Steve Marriott, guitars, harmonica, keyboards, vocals
Dave Clem Clempson, guitars, backing vocals
Greg Ridley, bass, backing vocals
Jerry Shirley, drums
B.J. Cole, Pedal Steel guitar
Sidney George, saxophone

Digitally remastered



Humble Pie
A showcase for former Small Faces' frontman Steve Marriott and one-time Herd guitar virtuoso Peter Frampton, the hard rock outfit Humble Pie formed in Essex, England in 1969. Also featuring ex-Spooky Tooth bassist Greg Ridley along with drummer Jerry Shirley, the fledgling group spent the first several months of its existence locked away in Marriott's Essex cottage, maintaining a relentless practice schedule. Signed to the Immediate label, Humble Pie soon issued their debut single "Natural Born Boogie," which hit the British Top Ten and paved the way for the group's premiere LP, As Safe as Yesterday Is.

Town and CountryAfter touring the U.S. in support of 1969's Town and Country, Humble Pie returned home only to discover that Immediate had declared bankruptcy. The band recruited a new manager, Dee Anthony, who helped land them a new deal with A&M; behind closed doors, Anthony encouraged Marriott to direct the group towards a harder-edged, grittier sound far removed from the acoustic melodies favored by Frampton. As Marriott's raw blues shouting began to dominate subsequent LPs like 1970's eponymous effort and 1971's Rock On, Frampton's role in the band he co-founded gradually diminished; finally, after a highly charged U.S. tour which yielded 1971's commercial breakthrough Performance: Rockin' the Fillmore, Frampton exited Humble Pie to embark on a solo career.

Smokin'After enlisting former Colosseum guitarist Dave "Clem" Clempson to fill the void, Humble Pie grew even heavier for 1972's Smokin', their most successful album to date. However, while 1973's ambitious double studio/live set Eat It fell just shy of the Top Ten, its 1974 follow-up Thunderbox failed to crack the Top 40. After 1975's Street Rats reached only number 100 before disappearing from the charts, Humble Pie disbanded; while Shirley formed Natural Gas with Badfinger alum Joey Molland, and Clempson and Ridley teamed with Cozy Powell in Strange Brew, Marriott led Steve Marriott's All-Stars before joining a reunited Small Faces in 1977.

On to VictoryIn 1980, Marriott and Shirley re-formed Humble Pie with ex-Jeff Beck Group vocalist Bobby Tench and bassist Anthony Jones. After a pair of LPs, 1980's On to Victory and the following year's Go for the Throat, the group mounted a troubled tour of America: after one injury-related interruption brought on when Marriott mangled his hand in a hotel door, the schedule was again derailed when the frontman fell victim to an ulcer. Soon, Humble Pie again dissolved; while Shirley joined Fastway, Marriott went into seclusion. At the dawn of the 1990s, he and Frampton made tentative plans to begin working together once more, but on April 20, 1991, Marriott died in the fire which destroyed his 16th century Arkesden cottage. He was 44 years old. (Jason Ankeny, AMG)

This album contains no booklet.

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