Released on 15 January 1976, Frampton Comes Alive! debuted on the charts at No. 191. It reached number one on the Billboard 200 the week ending 10 April 1976, spending a total of 10 non-consecutive weeks in the top spot through October. It was the best-selling album of 1976 and has sold over 8 million copies in the United States.[5]
Frampton Comes Alive! was voted "Album of the Year" in a 1976 Rolling Stone readers' poll. It stayed on the chart for 97 weeks and was still No. 14 on Billboard's 1977 year-end album chart. It was ranked No. 41 on Rolling Stone's "50 Greatest Live Albums of All Time" list.[6] Readers of Rolling Stone ranked it No. 3 in a 2012 poll of all-time favourite live albums.[7]
The live album had been intended to be a single LP disc, but at the suggestion of A&M Records additional shows were recorded and the album expanded to two LPs for release. On the special features for the Live in Detroit concert DVD, Frampton commented that some difficulty was encountered in the mixing after the microphone cable to the bass drum microphone was inadvertently pulled, accidentally causing the microphone to face at a 90-degree angle from the drumhead. During the concerts, Frampton principally used a distinctive modified black 1954 Gibson Les Paul Custom electric guitar (with three Humbucker pick-ups as opposed to the usual P90 and AlNiCo Staple pickups).[10] On In the Studio with Redbeard, Frampton said, "The album is mostly live except for the first verse of 'Something's Happening', the electric rhythm guitar on 'Show Me the Way' (the talk-box came out but the engineer forgot to move the mic) and the intro piano on 'I Wanna Go to the Sun' were fixed in the studio but the rest was all live (all the guitar solos, acoustic guitars, electric keyboards, drums, bass guitar and rest of vocals)".[11]
Release
The double album was released in the U.S. at a reduced list price of $7.98, only $1.00 more than the standard $6.98 of most single-disc albums in 1976. It was pressed in "automatic sequence," with sides one and four on one record and sides two and three on the other. This arrangement facilitated sequential listening on automatic record changers.
The album produced three hit singles: "Baby, I Love Your Way," "Do You Feel Like We Do," and "Show Me the Way." The talk box guitar effect became closely associated with Frampton due to its use in the latter two singles. The single version of "Do You Feel Like We Do" was edited to 7:19 from the original 14:15 album version, making it one of the longest singles to reach the top 40, surpassing The Beatles' "Hey Jude" at 7:11. The B-side of "Do You Feel Like We Do," the acoustic instrumental "Penny for Your Thoughts," was the shortest track on Frampton Comes Alive, at 1:23.
In January 2001, a 25th Anniversary Deluxe Edition of the album was released, featuring four additional tracks not present in the original version, one of which was recorded in a radio studio and is not part of the main concert program. The track sequence was revised to more accurately reflect the original concert set list. Frampton produced the remixed and extended album and performed live with the original band at Tower Records in Los Angeles to promote the release.
Track listing
All songs written by Peter Frampton except as noted. Durations are sourced from original LP release.
^"Top 50 Albums of 1976"(PDF). Music Week. 25 December 1976. p. 14. Archived(PDF) from the original on 9 March 2021. Retrieved 30 November 2021 – via worldradiohistory.com.
^"1977 Talent in Action"(PDF). Billboard. Vol. 89, no. 51. 24 December 1977. p. 66. Archived(PDF) from the original on 28 June 2021. Retrieved 19 August 2021.
^"CashBox Magazine"(PDF). Cash Box. December 16, 1978. p. 56. Retrieved November 13, 2021 – via World Radio History.