Interview: Peter Frampton chats with Renee about his new tour! - podcast episode cover

Interview: Peter Frampton chats with Renee about his new tour!

Feb 20, 202420 min
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Episode description

Interview: Peter Frampton chats with Renee about his new tour, being a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame nominee and being a grandpa!

Transcript

Now my dog is roaming around the studio. Come back, Wolfgang, Come Wolfgang, Wolfy. Peter Ripton is on the phone for your mommy. How amazing is that? Oh my gosh, you were like my dog. My dog is laying on me right now. What kind of dog do you have? I have a black golden doodle. What's his name? Bigs b Bigsby, Well, high Bigsby. Wolfgang is over here right now. He's a big black German shepherd. Oh that's what I had earlier in my life, had a big, big, long haired shepherd. Yeah. They're gorgeous.

Well, dogs are I feel like people who love animals are automatically amazing human beings. Well, if you don't like animals, is something wrong with you? I know, definitely especially dogs, you know, So any anyway, I guess I guess we're here to talk about a little thing called music. I think that's been a big part of your life. Now, we could talk about animals all day long, if you like, sir. But first and foremost, I have had the pleasure of interviewing you quite a few times

in my career. So I feel very lucky and blessed because, you know, just my job puts me in this opportunity, and you have really been a soundtrack for my life, as with others for so many years. To play your music, to talk to you, and to see you still being so passionate and out there is just a joy to listen to and to watch. And you're gonna come to Connecticut on Thursday, March seventh at the Toyto Oakdale Theater. All the tickets and information are online with that Oakdale Theater dot

com too for tickets and such. But Peter, please tell everybody about what this tour means to you. And I think, is this like you? You're not You're a new grandpa too, right, not like brand new? But is this like yes, right, yes, right before right before Christmas, second grandchild was born to Annie and Julian Frampton. And the baby's name is rain So's. She's almost three months old now, I guess, yeah, so yeah, lots of face FaceTime time, even on tour, right,

even on tour. Did you not say, did I hear that you came up with Peter Grampton? No? I came up with Franpa Oh FRMPA Okay, I couldn't remember which one it was. Frandpa Okay, there's I like Peter Frampo, that's great. Yeah, no, no, but unfortunately I'm actually pop up because the fruit is I don't think you can say f R until you're about seventeen. So so anyway, yeah, well, very very happy and blessed to have two beautiful grand grandchildren. So it's wonderful.

That is fantaxics and you can see Peter franpon never ever say never to our Thursday March stuff. Tell us all about it because I know we're gonna have a good time. It'll be so much fun. We're we've got a couple extra different numbers in this set from last year. So yeah. So it's we've been rehearsing already and we're about halfway through and yeah, it's going incredibly well. So the band sounds amazing, so we can't wait to play.

Now. What goes into touring these days that separates from when you were touring, you know, twenty years ago. Are you still out there partying every night? Or do we have a bedtime now? Oh what did you say party? And what is that? No? No, unfortunately it's it's back to the it's either straight on the bus ontil the next show somewhere else, or it's back to the hotel. And but I still can't go to sleep until you at least a couple hours after a show, two or three hours,

because you're pumped up, you know. So it's the adrenaline is going and uh so, but no, when I'm at when I'm at home with with me and Bigsby, you know, we get up, you know, early six thirty seven and see to day. And when you're on the road, you you don't get up quite as early because you didn't get to bed until like two or three in the morning. So yeah, it's it's the same old stuff, you know, except no drinking drugs. Yeah, you

know, your voice, You're very lucky. And I mean, listen, God bless everybody's out there playing and having fun, because that is what it's all about. Music is just such a universally healing it's just so universally healing to have out there, and especially when you've been doing it so long, right and as long as you have, but you have one of those unique voices that has stood the test of time. What do you do to take care of your voice and to keep yourself sounding as you did it it's incredible

to hear how precise and exact you are. Well. I got to the point in I think it was like the late eighties where I or very early nineties when I started touring again and I was losing my voice, you know, because I was over singing and I'd never had vocal exercises or vocal lessons, and so I decided to go to Lovely Lady in New York, Katie Agresta, and she's one of the top teachers, vocal teachers in Manhattan when I was living there, and then I moved to Los Angeles and we've lost

him, unfortunately, the great Ron Anderson. I did quite a few lessons with him and I still use his one of my You would tape every lesson, you know, put it on a CD or something, and so before every show, I don't I don't think about singing before I do those exercises. And it's about forty five to fifty minutes. So everything is planned, you know, when I'm on the road, my day is built around the

end result. So I will get up, you know, have breakfast or whatever, but everything is an ex workout, do all that and then but you know, two or three hours before the show, I do my vocal exercises, and it made the world a difference, And I don't know how I did it without before, but now it just gives you confidence. You know you're going to be your voice is going to be in tiptop or as good as you can make it by having by having these doing these vocal exercises,

which it's like, it's amazing how well they help. You know. I've been playing your music and I've been singing along to you, and I'm going to read something that I need to fact check if you don't mind, Are you yes, truly celebrating you're sick ste a year of touring? Could that possibly be a mistake? No, it's not. I mean, can you just lie for me? Because that makes me have to recognize my age? So can we just call you this your fortieth year? Could we do

that? Can we go back all right? Yes? Okay, So tell me about your forty years of touring? No, because I started touring professionally where it was semi professional because I was still at school. But when I was fourteen. So now i'll be seventy four April twenty seconds, so it's

my sixtieth year. That is unbelievable and what a cool deal to be able to do this for a living, right I you know, I've been talking to other artists and how lucky we are to well I am, and others that I know that are still doing really well, like we get to do this for our entire lives. And like I always say, and even though during his work, but I always say, I never I never worked today in my life, you know, because I'm so passionate about the music that

it's like it's the best best thing to play live. It's just I can't really describe put it into words, but there's something for me. I'm of the I'm of the moment kind of person musically and and personally. I leave things to the last minute. But but I've never played the same solo twice and I don't plan it, plan on it, you know, So it's everything is like a blank canvas when I walk on the stage. And as far as what I'm going to play, obviously we have we know the form

of the song. Where when when I get to play a solo, it's always a different one. Well, that also keeps it fresh and probably what connects you, you know, with your audience, and do you reach back into your career like for this, for this particular tree, do you reach back into Humble Pie or do you reach back into some of the covers maybe that you've done with Ringo Star and is All Star Band, Like do you pull some fun stuff out out of that to to kind of mix it up?

And obviously the classics that we we've known to come and love us as well, But how do you like plan out your playlist? Well, I think that there's certain numbers obviously that have to be there, and we mix it up the order and everything. But I think we the last last summer we did in four weeks the summer and we pulled out two numbers that we'd never done I'd never played live before, Crying Clown and I Got My Eyes on You, one from the Frampton Camel record and one from the Frampton record.

And this this year, I'm pulling one from the Something's Happening album, which is Golden Goose, and it's something I've never played live. We tried it at rehearsals the first day and it blew us away, just because it's one of those things I don't know why I've never done it live, but it's so much fun for us to do, so yeah, we keep on

trying to make it a little different each year. Do you have a memory of someone that you worked with that you had always wanted to that kind of brought you back to your fan daze like that made you get a little excited or giddy er, you know, when you're working with someone that you've looked up to or wanted to work with? Say, can do you have any

special stories behind that? Yeah? Quite a few actually, but I would I would have to say that my school chum I went to school with him, to mister Bowie, David Bowie, that was wonderful when he he asked me to play on the Glass Spider tour and also and has never let me down record, so yes it was. It was very special. And David and I had played on the same stage the same night, but never at the same time before, so him asking me to be one of the guitar

players featured guitar players was that definitely brought me back. We toured stadiums and then in the summer and in eighty seven and then and then arenas in the winter. It was a long tour and he brought me back in front of so many people as the guitar player, not the pop star, and for that I've never stopped thanking him and I still do. So. Yeah, that was very very special. I know it's hard. There are some artists that I have a hard time with not being here even though I've never,

you know, had dinner with them or anything. But like David Bowie and Tom Petty, for me, I still I'm like, man, that stinks right now. I'm still not over those two as of quite yet. But David Bowie, so I got a chance to see the Glass Spider tour, which was incredible, and I saw it in Canada, I believe. But in any event, I digress. Also, I probably should have opened with this and congratulate you on being one of the fifteen artists who are nominated for

induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for twenty twenty four. Is that exciting to you? Do awards make you excited in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame? I mean that's got to be pretty cool. I would think, well, I'm nominated, which is incredible. I don't expect anything in my life. I always wait for things to happen. I'm not as upset as I think a lot of my fans are that I'm not in there

yet. So but it's one of those things that you know, if you don't expect something and then it comes out of the blue, it's it's it's very rewarding, you know. So yeah, I'm honored that I've been told off to be nominated. Now we've just got to see how it goes. I've got to get the votes. You got to get the vote to vote

for I did the promise. I promise to vote for you. I promise, and I have it up online and so I know in April those that stuff goes down, so we will be we will definitely be voting for you here in Connecticut and on my program. I also want to before we wrap up, talk to you a little bit about a little bit more about your

personal life. I know, obviously Grandpa, Franpa whatever we whichever, we would like to say that, and you obviously love your dogs, but you also are you sed to I read somewhere that you were a vegetarian, and I wasn't sure if that is something that you still practice. But obviously do you have a special connection with animals or is there any because you you have come to the right woman here. I'm like the dog Lady of Connecticut. So yeah, I love all animals. I think we still have a lot

to learn from them. Well I know we do, but we're too wrapped up in ourselves. But but you know, I mean I would like to I I have fostered an element, an elephant, and I follow all the reality I think is the is the place where they saved U where the elephants go when they've they've been cut off from the herd and stuff like that, babies and stuff. So yeah, I'm very much into all all animals and

uh you know you name it, dogs, especially of course. And I think I'm going to be in the future near future getting much more involved in working with shelters, foster foster dog owners. And also if it's possible, I'd like to, you know, raise money so that we could we could get some we could get some doctors vets that would donate their time and do spay and neuter. But for that you need a truck that goes into the different areas where where, and then the doctors offer it for we offer it

for free. That's my goal, because that's the problem with homeless dogs is is that people don't get them spayed and newted because they're worried that, you know, the their dogs are going to end up in a shelter and and not live. You know, So there's there's ways around this. I mean, it's a big job, but we can do it one dog at a time, you know. You know, I agree with you and even our cats. And in Connecticut here there's a rescue that I work with that I'm

a part of, and I won't keep you. I know you've got a schedule, but like we I'm hosting an event this weekend four Protectors of Animals and then one for Kenway's cause, and then it's going to be Marty Pause. So that's going to be fun. But they have a vehicle that goes around and does just that. But because it takes a lot of money, it's not as act as we would like it. But it's called It's Hip to Snip and it's a mobile neuter spade truck. It's called It's Hip to

Snip, which is that's what I want to do. I want to make I'd like to be able to make more of those available so that that would be my that's my goal, and I well, I think it's admirable. I'm a huge fan of yours. Congratulations on an incredible career, an incredibly just nice human being. I never hear, you know, horrible stories about you and the media, so I love that. So I love that. I love that that you're just like one of the great rock and roll artists

of all time. Thank you for being that. Yeah, well, so far you haven't heard any really bad stuff about me. Well it's not too late, but I'm just hoping it's more of like maybe maybe, maybe if it's more rock and roll, Like I don't care if you throw a chair out a window, Peter, I don't care if you do that. But like, nothing too nothing too crazy though, No, no, no, I think I think in the in the seventies, I was, you know,

just like every other traveling musician. So we abused, uh we were abused than we abused, but it was all in fun, you know, we we nothing was ever really that bad. You know, we might have trashed a hotel room or something, but no one ever got heard or anything. So that's the main thing. Yeah, and I think it was a prerequisite to trash a hotel room I mean you had. I think it was like illegal if you didn't. If you were a rock star at a certain point in time, I think you had to do it. Yeah, yeah,

absolutely, But I just did one really well. Peter Frampton Never Ever Say Never Tour is Thursday, March seventh, the Toyota Oakdale Theater. You give your little fluffer over there, you give a big treat from Renee in Connecticut, from Renee and Wolfe here in Connecticut, and we appreciate you very much. Talk to my fluffer and my dog. Oh my god, Peter, and that's how we'll end. And that is how we will end. Thank you. Version Yes, absolutely all right, goodbye, by bye.

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