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Before '70s superstardom, even before
Humble Pie,
Peter Frampton got his first taste of celebrity as a singer and guitarist in
the Herd, who chalked up several hits in Britain in 1967 and 1968.
Frampton was only 17 when the single "From the Underworld" went into the British Top Ten in late 1967; "Paradise Lost" and "I Don't Want Our Loving to Die" were hits for the group in the first half of 1968. The Herd's brand of mod was extremely commercial and good-timey- and pop-oriented, a bit like a muted and mainstream
Small Faces. Much of their material (including all of the hits) was written by their management team of
Ken Howard and
Alan Blaikley, who had supplied songs for
the Honeycombs (of "Have I the Right" fame).
Frampton and keyboardist
Andy Bown wrote most of the band's original tunes, and one can presume that the limitations of
the Herd's overtly pop approach (which sometimes encompassed MOR ballads and orchestrated arrangements) were a factor in his decision to leave for
Humble Pie after
the Herd had issued just one album and a few singles. After a few
Frampton-less singles,
the Herd scattered;
Andy Bown released a few solo albums and has done session work with
Frampton and
Pink Floyd. AMG.
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