WHAT THEY ARE SAYING ABOUT...





  co-workers and friends.  Nate  9/30/07









Thanks!  Betsy K.  6/30/07








Brothers or "Fats" Domino's "Ain't That a Shame" or
"Blueberry Hill."  Thanks, Patrick - 3/30/07



P. Smith - 3/23/07


  since I got home from Arizona.  You did a
  good job. That was a great song last Friday (Wang Dang Doodle)
  - didn't know it but who ever requested it is someone I
      would like to hang with. And then today we had
  The Zombies....that took me back to 8th grade and one of
  my first boy/girl parties. They were always held in
  someone's basement and the lights would go off by 9:00.
  That song always seem to bring on lots of smooching.  I will
  not be naming names....  ;)
  Thanks again,
  Betsy

  site and fabulous music!! WooHoo!! Jen B. - 2/18/07



Jim J. - 2/5/07

  Debbie - 1/26/07

  Thanks Bill S. - 1/19/07




Your friend, Dirk H.

my day!  Betsy K. - 12/8/07

Linda L. - 12/8/07

  T. Turgeon -

Hope you had a good Turkey Day.
  T. Turgeon - 11/27/07

  decided that like me, you have an older brother or sister
  who had you listening to this music as a kid.
    Hope all is well your way.
    Betsy K. - 11/25/06





T. Turgeon - 8/2/06

      every week and have sent it on to so many folks -
      thanks again.  Betsy K.






       Carlas A.









Kim S.






      Friday emails.  Thanks for including me!  Betsy K.







Good selection for this fabulous Friday!!!!!


Add this page to your favorites.
Tell a friend about this page
Click Here
Click Here for What's Happening In Athens!!!
Click Here for What's Happening In Athens!!!Click Here for What's Happening In Athens!!!Click Here for What's Happening In Athens!!!
Click Here for What's Happening In Athens!!!
What's Happening In Athens!!!
(click here)
Click here to visit our website
www.fridayinathens.com
Tell a friend about this page
Site design by BizAthens.com Internet Services
Sponsored by Classic City Bonding
& Classic City Services
SEND US YOUR COMMENTS
Email
PLAY IT LOUD!!!
Humble Pie
 
Thirty Days In The Hole
 
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole

all right all right all right all right, yeah

Chicago Green, talkin' 'bout Black Lebanese
A dirty room and a silver coke spoon
Give me my release, come on
Black napalese, it's got you weak in your knees
Sneeze some dust that you got buzzed on
You know it's hard to believe

30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
That's what they give you
30 days in the hole
I know

Newcastle Brown, I'm tellin' you, it can sure smack you down
Take a greasy whore and a rollin' dance floor
It's got your head spinnin' round
If you live on the road, well
there's a new highway code
You take the urban noise with
some dirt with poison
It's gonna lessen your load

30 days in the hole
That's what they give you now
30 days in the hole
Oh, yeah
30 days in the hole
All right, all right
30 days in the hole

What you doin' boy?
You here for 30 days
Get, get, get your long hair cut
And cut out your ways

Black napalese, it got you weak in your knees
Gonna sneeze some dust that you got busted on
You know it's so hard to please
Newcastle Brown can sure smack you down
You take a greasy whore and a rollin' dance floor
You know you're jailhouse-bound

30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
Oh, yeah
30 days in the hole
30 days, 30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
30 days in the hole
_______________________________

Humble Pie was a British hard rock band and one of the first rock and roll supergroups, featuring Steve Marriott of The Small Faces, Peter Frampton of The Herd, and Greg Ridley of Spooky Tooth. Influenced by American blues and soul, they developed a blues-rock sound that proved influential to legions of subsequent hard rock and heavy metal bands.  They were best known for their hard-rocking recordings and concert performances between 1969 and 1975.

Origins
The band initially consisted of Steve Marriott (formerly of The Small Faces: lead singer, guitarist, keyboardist), Peter Frampton (from Herd: lead guitarist, lead singer), Greg Ridley (from Spooky Tooth: bassist and vocalist) and Jerry Shirley (from Valkyrie: drummer).

In late 1968, Frampton was eager to escape The Herd, as well as his teeny-bopper image. The young guitar prodigy played on a Small Faces recording session in France that year and had become close friends with Marriott, who himself was becoming frustrated with creative restrictions. The Small Faces' frontman suggested a drummer for Frampton — Shirley, whom he'd known for several years, most notably through his work with the mod band Apostolic Intervention.

Nothing really came of the project, though, until New Year's Eve 1968. Marriott walked offstage during a disastrous Small Faces gig, rang Frampton at his home later that night and asked if he and Ridley could join his new band. Humble Pie was born.

"Natural Born Bugie"
Because the members had all previously played in high-profile groups, many viewed Humble Pie as a "supergroup," although the band loathed the term and the expectations that came with it. They started secretly rehearsing at Marriott's home in Moreton, Essex (Beehive Cottage) in early 1969. The objective was to hone the act away from media and public scrutiny. After signing with Andrew Loog Oldham's Immediate Records, the band had planned to launch its first single and album in the spring, but were delayed after an injunction was filed by The Herd's management.

Eventually, Humble Pie released their debut single "Natural Born Bugie" in July 1969. It was a No. 4 hit in the UK Singles Chart, and was quickly followed by the album, As Safe As Yesterday Is which peaked at No. 16 on the UK album charts.

Their second album, Town and Country, was hastily released in the UK in November 1969 while the band was away on its first US tour. A collective effort that featured a more acoustic sound and songs written by all four members, it did not sell as well as As Safe As Yesterday Is, and financially-strapped Immediate sank deeper into debt.

Recent tape archives show the band recorded around 30 songs in its first nine months of existence, many of which remained unreleased for decades — including a cover of Ray Charles' classic "Drown In My Own Tears." Humble Pie concerts at this time featured an acoustic set — with a radical re-working of Graham Gouldman's "For Your Love" as its centerpiece — followed by an electric set, an approach that would become popular decades later.

A&M Records
The winter of 1970 saw the collapse of Immediate, a switch to A&M Records, and a change in band management. Humble Pie now focused on the United States market. American Dee Anthony, the Pie's new manager, had the band scrap its 'unplugged' set and crank the volume up. He also pushed Marriott to take more of the on-stage spotlight, something Marriott had, up to then, been sharing with Frampton and Ridley.

While these moves would improve the band's commercial standing in the States, they were blows to Frampton, who had been building up confidence and material as a songwriter.

The group's first album for A&M, Humble Pie, released later that year, was heavier than the previous two, alternating between progressive rock and boogie rock excess. An attendant single, the funky, Stax-flavored "Big Black Dog," failed to chart, but Anthony's strategy was starting to work. The Pie became known for putting on one of the tightest, and most popular, live rock shows in the U.S.

Performance Rockin' The Fillmore
A newly confident group released its most confident record to date, Rock On, in early 1971. A concert supporting that record at the Fillmore East was captured on Perfomance Rockin' The Fillmore in 1971; it is considered one of the best live 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 (peaking at No. 73 on the US Billboard Chart), propelling the album to the group's biggest commercial success yet.

Frampton, whose influence as co-leader of the group had been co-opted by Anthony's makeover, would leave the band by the time the album was released. He would go on to enjoy massive popularity as a solo artist.

Clem Clempson
With Dave "Clem" Clempson replacing Frampton, Humble Pie moved towards an even harder sound emphasizing Marriott's blues and soul roots. Their first record with Clempson was Smokin' (1972), which featured a minor hit in "Hot 'N' Nasty" (No. 52 Billboard) and the classic song "Thirty Days in the Hole." It was the band's most successful record commercially and reached No. 6 on the US charts thanks in part to almost constant touring.

The Blackberries
Looking for a more authentic R&B sound, and as part of his own vision for the group, Marriott orchestrated the hiring of three of the music industries most distinguished female backing singers, The Blackberries. The trio consisted of Venetta Fields, Clydie King and Sherlie Matthews (who was later replaced by Billie Barnum). Former well known artists they had each performed with included Tina Turner as the The Ikettes and Ray Charles' as the Raelettes.[1] While the direction confused some of the Pie's hard-rock audience, it was a gambit that, like their 1969 acoustic sets, would prove popular with other rock bands many years down the road.

Eat It is a double album released in 1973. Side 1 is Steve Marriott penned rock and roll; Side 2 is classic R&B covers; Side 3 is a collection of acoustic Steve Marriott songs; Side 4 is Humble Pie live in concert at Glasgow. While it just missed charting in the U.S. top 10 (it peaked at No. 13), the record did little to expand the group's audience. Instead of showcasing the band's range, it signaled the beginning of the end.

Final Albums & Goodbye Tour
After the leaner, more focused Thunderbox 1974 and Street Rats 1975, a patchwork of studio recordings that were, by and large, intended for a Marriott solo album, the group found themselves running out of steam creatively and bickering internally. The Pie staged the 'Goodbye Pie Tour' in 1975 and broke up.

Other Humble Pie Lineups
In 1980 Marriott revived Humble Pie with Shirley, adding Bob Tench (from Jeff Beck Group) on guitar and Anthony "Sooty" Jones on bass. Two albums 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 on 21 April a house fire took Marriott's life before anything could materialise.[2] Two recorded songs from this collaboration, "The Bigger They Come", and "I Won't Let You Down", with Steve Marriott on vocals, appear on Peter Frampton's album Shine On.

Before the collaboration between Frampton and Marriott, drummer Jerry Shirley reformed the group with a different assortment of musicians. This project was called Humble Pie Featuring Jerry Shirley, as he was now the groups' leader and the only original performing member. He had contacted his former bandmates about reuniting but Marriott had been disappointed with earlier reunions and refused to be a part of any such attempt. The band began performing live in 1989 and were featured at the Woodstock Festival 20th Anniversary Celebration, which was broadcast live on television in the U.S. and several other countries. The group was based in the United States and aside from Shirley also included Charlie Huhn on lead vocals and guitar.

A myriad of other musicians were in and out of the band for the next ten years, and the group was able to develop a loyal following as a live act. Huhn's vocal style was quite similar to Steve Marriott, which allowed for a certain level of authenticity, but Humble Pie Featuring Jerry Shirley was never able to come close to Humble Pie's previous state of musicianship or popularity overall.

Shirley agreed to disband his version of the group in 1991 when it appeared that a reunion featuring Frampton and Marriott would happen, but since Marriott's untimely death, he carried on with his performances. Jerry Shirley moved back to England toward the end of the '90's, disbanding his version of "The Pie", and now owns all legal rights to the name.

Reunions and The Marriott Tribute Concert
Shirley has participated in a few reunions with original Humble Pie members in the last few years, including an appearance at the Steve Marriott Tribute Concert in London in 2001 — comemmorating the 10th anniversary of Marriott's death — which featured a lineup of Frampton, Clempson, Ridley and Shirley. This performance was later released on DVD.

Also
In October 2004, the song "Get Down To It," the opening track from Eat It, appeared on the popular videogame Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, playing on fictional classic rock station K-DST.


Info courtesy of Wikipedia.org
Thirty Days In The Hole
1972
Join Our List
Join Our List