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Peter Frampton Documentary Premieres at Tribeca Film Festival Tonight

Peter Frampton performs in concert at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Hollywood, Florida.
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Directed by longtime bandleader Rob Arthur, the film traces Frampton’s career from The Herd to his battle with Inclusion-Body Myositis.

A new documentary simply titled Frampton premieres tonight, June 4, at 8pm at the OKX Theater at the BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center in Lower Manhattan, marking the 50th anniversary of Peter Frampton’s landmark live album Frampton Comes Alive. Directed by Rob Arthur, Frampton’s bandleader for more than two decades, the film charts the guitarist’s full arc from his earliest days to his ongoing battle with the muscle-wasting disease Inclusion-Body Myositis.

A Career in Full, From The Herd to IBM

The documentary covers Frampton’s career from his teenage years with The Herd through his tenure in Humble Pie, his stratospheric solo rise, and the near-fatal 1978 car crash that derailed him at the peak of his fame. It also addresses his recent diagnosis with Inclusion-Body Myositis, the progressive muscle-wasting disease that has significantly affected his ability to play guitar.

Frampton himself reflects candidly on the turbulent period that followed the massive commercial success of Frampton Comes Alive. “Drinking too much, too many drugs… and then a car accident!” he says in the film’s trailer. Nancy Wilson, one of the documentary’s many contributors, offers her own assessment of what that kind of sudden, overwhelming fame does to a person: “He was the golden god. They don’t give you the handbook for that.”

An All-Star Roster of Contributors

The film draws on an extensive list of interview subjects spanning rock, blues, and country, reflecting the breadth of Frampton’s influence and the genuine affection his peers hold for him. Director Arthur noted that the response from potential contributors was essentially unanimous.

“One of the blessings for me was that everybody we wanted to interview said yes,” Arthur told GoSeeTalk. “It says something about him [Frampton] right there, you know?” He also acknowledged the absence of figures who have since passed, including Jerry Moss and Steve Marriott, while expressing particular excitement about landing Herb Alpert: “We got Herb Alpert instead of Jerry Moss, and that’s pretty damn good.”

  • Ringo Starr
  • Bill Wyman
  • Tom Morello
  • Joe Bonamassa
  • Mike McCready
  • Vince Gill
  • Sheryl Crow
  • Alice Cooper
  • Herb Alpert
  • Kate Hudson
  • Cameron Crowe
  • Roger Daltrey
  • Chris Lord-Alge
  • Tommy Shaw
  • Nancy Wilson

The Director Behind the Camera

Rob Arthur is not a detached outside observer brought in to profile a rock legend. He has served as Frampton’s bandleader for more than two decades, giving the film an intimacy that a conventional music documentary might struggle to achieve. Arthur has also previously directed videos for the Doobie Brothers, Dave Mason, Damon Johnson, and Orleans.

That insider proximity mirrors a broader trend in rock documentary filmmaking, where directors with genuine personal connections to their subjects tend to produce more textured, less hagiographic results. The trailer’s release ahead of tonight’s premiere has already generated significant attention in classic rock circles.

Tribeca Premiere Details

The world premiere screens tonight at 8pm at the OKX Theater at the BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center. Additional screening information is available through the film’s official website.

What we know

  • The documentary Frampton premieres on June 4 at 8pm at the OKX Theater at the BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center in Lower Manhattan.
  • The film is directed by Rob Arthur, who has been Frampton’s bandleader for more than two decades.
  • The documentary is made to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Frampton Comes Alive.
  • The film covers Frampton’s career from his early days with The Herd to his recent battles with Inclusion-Body Myositis.
  • Contributors include Ringo Starr, Bill Wyman, Tom Morello, Joe Bonamassa, Mike McCready, Vince Gill, Sheryl Crow, Alice Cooper, Herb Alpert, Kate Hudson, Cameron Crowe, Roger Daltrey, Chris Lord-Alge, Tommy Shaw, and Nancy Wilson.
  • Arthur has previously directed videos for the Doobie Brothers, Dave Mason, Damon Johnson, and Orleans.

The take

Frampton Comes Alive remains one of the best-selling live albums in rock history, and its 50th anniversary is a genuine cultural milestone worth marking seriously. What makes this documentary project particularly compelling is the timing: Frampton’s diagnosis with Inclusion-Body Myositis has given his story a poignant final-chapter quality that transforms what might otherwise be a straightforward career retrospective into something more urgent. IBM is a degenerative condition with no cure, and Frampton has been public about its impact on his guitar playing, which lends the film an emotional weight beyond nostalgia.

Rob Arthur’s dual role as longtime bandleader and director is worth noting. Rock documentaries directed by genuine insiders, rather than hired filmmakers, tend to capture a different register of candor. The same dynamic was visible in recent projects where close collaborators stepped behind the camera. The contributor list here is also telling: the range from Ringo Starr and Roger Daltrey to Tom Morello and Joe Bonamassa suggests the film is making a deliberate case for Frampton’s influence across generations and genres, not just among his Seventies contemporaries. Tribeca has become an increasingly important launchpad for music documentaries of this caliber, as the festival’s proximity to the music industry infrastructure of New York gives these films immediate visibility.

Why it matters

For classic rock fans, Frampton Comes Alive is foundational listening, and a serious documentary treatment of the man behind it is long overdue. Beyond the nostalgia, the film’s focus on Frampton’s health battle gives it relevance for a generation of rock musicians and fans confronting the realities of aging. The all-star contributor list signals that the broader music community views Frampton as a figure deserving of this kind of sustained, respectful attention, and a Tribeca premiere puts the film in front of exactly the audience that can carry it forward.

What’s next

Frampton screens tonight at 8pm at the OKX Theater at the BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center. Additional screenings and further information about the film are available through its official website.

Frequently asked questions

When and where does the Frampton documentary premiere?

The documentary premieres on June 4 at 8pm at the OKX Theater at the BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center in Lower Manhattan.

Who directed the Peter Frampton documentary?

The film is directed by Rob Arthur, who has served as Frampton’s bandleader for more than two decades and has previously worked on videos for the Doobie Brothers, Dave Mason, Damon Johnson, and Orleans.

What is the Frampton documentary about?

The film follows Frampton’s career from his early days with The Herd through his solo stardom and his recent battles with the muscle-wasting disease Inclusion-Body Myositis, and is made to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Frampton Comes Alive.

Who appears in the Frampton documentary?

Contributors include Ringo Starr, Bill Wyman, Tom Morello, Joe Bonamassa, Mike McCready, Vince Gill, Sheryl Crow, Alice Cooper, Herb Alpert, Kate Hudson, Cameron Crowe, Roger Daltrey, Chris Lord-Alge, Tommy Shaw, and Nancy Wilson, along with Frampton and his family.

What disease does Peter Frampton have?

Frampton has been battling Inclusion-Body Myositis, a muscle-wasting disease, which is addressed in the documentary.

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