First Time Hearing THE GENIUS PETER FRAMPTON! 🎵 'DO YOU FEEL LIKE WE DO' Reaction

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Thanks for checking out our Peter Frampton reaction. Do You Feel Like We Do is an interesting song with an even more interesting performance.

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This had nothing to do with autotune. The talkbox was controlled by the way he moved his mouth. It combined the guitar with words or just the shape of his mouth. He was in fact playing the guitar and playing an electronic device to make his guitar talk. Musicians back then had something we called talent.
Autotune enables dancers to be passed off as singers.

armadillotoe
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Frampton's a freaking legend. It's a talk box. Nobody is climaxing, and there's no freaking auto tune.

MaddyN
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Back in 1976, you can't believe how big this song and ALBUM was!!! They burned up the radio waves with it. It really was great time to be alive with this music.

jimshoe
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Frampton was one of the happiest players always such a huge smile and great attitude. He was a excellent musician and was the pioneer of many techniques later used by many.

shelbys
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Back in the days of 60s, 70s early 80s possibly, there was no autotune. You heard what you heard. It was the real stuff! Peter Frampton rocks that talk box!

LadyGator
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It is remarkably difficult to explain the “Frampton Effect” in the 70s to a younger generation. You can evaluate the songs, the lyrics, the instrumentation… and that’s okay. That’s valid… at one level. But you’d do yourself a disservice if you failed to understand Frampton caught lightning in a bottle especially in respects to our generation. We weren’t boomers. Woodstock was mostly a memory. Frampton represented a change in OUR generation. Boomers loved him, no doubt: but he was different. The time was different. The music was different. The songs from this album marked a sea change and I mean EVERYONE knew it. Lightning in a bottle, baby.

iambecomepaul
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I know you are listening to a live version but the one from Frampton Comes Alive is the version you want. It's the one they play on the radio. It has so much energy with the crowd yelling when he's using the talk box. Worth doing another video for? I think so.

jacobseymour
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"A bit of musical genius." Lex is very perceptive. This was one of the really big hits of the second half of the '70s.

mikejacobson
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This is a good version but if you do the live version from "Frampton comes alive Concert, it much better. He kills it.

bikerbud
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His facial expressions when he plays, is called "feeling the music". Some artists simply play the notes, others feel the notes.

jonstiner
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Frampton alive was like a comet that struck earth and exploded! The reaction to this album was similar to a year long standing ovation! You had to be there when it first happen!

charlesmclaughlin
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Pure talent - no auto tune - talk box.

senseandsensibility
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That's called a talk box, and it's not "auto-tuning" anything. He's creating every sound. Other famous guitarist have used the talk box throughout rock history, including Joe Walsh, and Joe Perry. I'm pretty sure you guys reacted to Man in the Box by Alice in Chains, the guitarist uses a talk box effect in that song.

gregvergara
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If you lived in the suburbs in the seventies the "Frampton Comes Alive" album was summarily issued to residents by the government

benshafer
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Frampton, in an era of great guitarists, was one of the best. Given his ability to both sing and play, he was a real bundle of talent. Definitely a virtuoso in my book, and a fine composer, too. He had a lot of real fine tunes.

sophicfire
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"become one with his instrument'. Lex, you nailed that. Frampton played as efficient as he would talk in a conversation - which makes playing through the Talk Box particularly appropriate.

controlledburst
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The talk box acts as a small guitar amp inside of a box (usually at the guitarist's feet. It has a speaker inside that takes his guitar signal, plays it through the "amp in a box". The box is sealed except for a tube that extends up the mic stand and near the microphone. This allows the guitarist to play notes/chords where the sound comes up through through the tube near the mic. The guitarist uses his mouth as a sound chamber where he can play notes with vowel like sounds or even in this case, like the guitar is talking.

RCullis
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Peter Frampton is an incredible guitarist, and was in one of the greatest rock bands ever - Humble Pie (with Steve Marriott, another rock legend). Frampton left and started a solo career. His live album "Frampton Comes Alive" was a monster album and catapulted him to superstar status. In the mid 70's, that album was played everywhere and everyone had it. And as others have said here, no autotune (it was a talkbox, which is "a device that allows a musician to create words through the sound of an instrument. It drives an instrument's sound through a tube into a person's mouth. Movements of the mouth can then manipulate the sound to come out as decipherable words." ). Back then it was raw talent with no electronics to hide mistakes or make you sound better

mvellis
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The tube is actually connected to a speaker in a effect pedal called a TalkBox. The guitar plays through the little speaker, into the tube, into his mouth where can form syllables, and into the mic. Very cool sound and it's hard to get that good at using one.

renniegrant
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Peter Frampton is one of the best singers from the 70's. He is amazing he's one of my favorite singers, musicians ever. And it's sad he had to retire but he will forever be a legend.

MsSherri