Peter Frampton wasn’t teasing when he undertook his Finale Tour in 2019. After being diagnosed with a degenerative muscle disease, the veteran British rock star didn’t think he’d remain proficient on guitar. But the notion that “Frampton Won’t Come Alive Again” is greatly exaggerated.
“I’m grateful I’m still able to play,” said the singer/guitarist, who brings his Never Ever Say Never Tour to the State Theatre on Monday. “Music is my life. This is now my 60th year of touring as a professional musician. I first went on the road when I was 14.”
There are some concessions to his inclusion body myositis (IBM). The biggest impact is on Frampton’s legs: He walks with a cane and performs while seated.
His fingers are “weakened” but “know what to do. It’s affected the amount of power I have. So for bending notes and things like that, I’ve adapted so I can still do it,” he said last week from his longtime Nashville home.
He thinks his guitar playing is “in some ways better. There’s less notes but more soul. Every note I play now has much more meaning.”
While he notices a difference, Frampton says audiences don’t. “Then I’m faking it good,” he said with a chuckle.
On tour, the rocker is offering a career retrospective, reaching back to his days with the band Humble Pie, revisiting such solo hits as “Baby, I Love Your Way” as well as offering some instrumentals representative of his recent albums.
Those instrumental records — especially 2006′s “Fingerprints” that gave him his first Grammy — have been integral to fortifying Frampton’s reputation as an estimable guitarist.