tudio Albums
Chicago Transit Authority 1969 Chicago 1970 Chicago III 1971 Chicago V 1972 Chicago VI 1973 Chicago 16 1982 Chicago 17 1984 CD 25060 * Chicago 18 1986 Chicago 19 1988 W2 25714 * Chicago XXXII ? Stone of Sisyphus 2008
Compilations
The Ultimate Collection 1984 CDMK 056 534347T * Greatest Hits 1982 ? 1989 1989 W2 26080 * The Very Best Of: Only the Beginning 2002 What’s it Gonna Be, Santa? 2003
Live
Live in Concert (Toronto Rock & Roll Revival) 1969 Live in Japan 1975
* Denotes my rip
A big thanks goes out to Demonoid members ibticktock, analogdemon, Jack Bickel, anconia and knucklebaby for their fine uploads. Also, to the Torrents.ru member who upped Chicago 18 (I had been wanting this album in lossless for years). Thanks to You All!
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From Wiki:
Quote:
Chicago is an American rock band formed in 1967 in Chicago, Illinois. The band began as a politically charged, sometimes experimental, rock band and later moved to a predominantly softer sound, becoming famous for producing a number of hit ballads. They had a steady stream of hits throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Second only to the Beach Boys in terms of singles and albums, Chicago is one of the longest running and most successful U.S. pop/rock and roll groups.[1]
According to Billboard, Chicago was the leading U.S. singles charting group during the 1970s. They have sold over 120 million albums worldwide, scoring 22 Gold, 18 Platinum, and 8 Multi-Platinum albums. Over the course of their career they have charted five No. 1 albums, and have had twenty-one top ten hits. |
STUDIO ALBUMS
Chicago Transit Authority 1969
The Chicago Transit Authority is the eponymous debut album by the Chicago-based rock band The Chicago Transit Authority, who would later be known as Chicago. It was recorded and released in 1969.
Upon the band's 1967 inception, they were initially called "The Missing Links". Then (according to Robert Lamm on an episode of In the Studio with Redbeard devoted to the making of the album) changed its name to "The Big Thing" (occasionally performed in areas outside Chicago and Milwaukee as "The Big Sounds" due to some venues complaining about the double entendre that the name "The Big Thing" also alluded to), before adopting the moniker The Chicago Transit Authority when producer James William Guercio took them on in 1968. Fusing brass and jazz with a soulful rock and roll feel was their trademark and Guercio instinctively felt that their sound would prove successful, lobbying for his label to give them a shot.
The Chicago Transit Authority were signed to Columbia Records late that year and recorded their debut in late January. While Guercio had recently produced Blood, Sweat & Tears' second album (which proved to be a huge smash), he did so to raise capital for his band. By the end of The Chicago Transit Authority's sessions, it was clear that the album would have to be a double. Very skeptical, seeing as the band had no track record, Columbia only agreed to the concept if the group would take a royalty cut.
In their original incarnation, keyboardist Robert Lamm, guitarist Terry Kath and bassist Peter Cetera all shared lead vocals, while James Pankow, Lee Loughnane and Walter Parazaider handled all brass and woodwinds and Danny Seraphine played drums. Lamm, Kath and Pankow were the band's main composers at this juncture. Kath's prowess as a guitarist was so strong that even Jimi Hendrix became a major fan of Kath's playing. According to the album's original liner notes, the solo performance of Kath on "Free Form Guitar" was created without the use of any pedals. In a nod to Hendrix's guitar expressionism (Hendrix most notably used wah and fuzz pedals), Kath instead plugged directly into his studio amplifier and improvised the entire track in one take for the purpose of pure tone. "Free Form Guitar" is also noted as being another influence on the genre of noise music.
Released in April 1969, The Chicago Transit Authority proved to be an immediate hit, reaching #17 in the US and #9 in the UK. While critical reaction was also strong, the album initially failed to produce any hit singles, with the group seen as an album-oriented collective. In 1970 and 1971, "Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?" (#7), "Beginnings" (#7) and "Questions 67 and 68" (#71/#24 re-release) would all prove to be belated hits. Buoyed by the success of their later albums, the album stayed on the charts for a then-record 171 weeks, and was certified gold (and later platinum and double platinum).
While the band toured the album, legal action was threatened by the actual Chicago Transit Authority, forcing the group to reduce their name to, simply, Chicago.
In 2002, The Chicago Transit Authority was remastered and reissued on one CD by Rhino Records. However, Rhino Records trimmed some of the songs, noticeably the fadeouts on "Questions #67 and #68" (six seconds longer on the LP) and "Free Form Guitar" (five seconds longer), and the 10 second gap between "Someday" and "Liberation".
Chicago Transit Authority is the only Chicago album listed in 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.
Tracks:
1. "Introduction" ? 6:35 (Terry Kath) 2. "Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?" ? 4:35 (Robert Lamm) 3. "Beginnings" ? 7:54 (Robert Lamm) 4. "Questions 67 and 68" ? 5:03 (Robert Lamm) 5. "Listen" ? 3:22 (Robert Lamm) 6. "Poem 58" ? 8:35 (Robert Lamm) 7. "Free Form Guitar" ? 6:47 (Terry Kath) 8. "South California Purples" ? 6:11 (Robert Lamm) 9. "I'm A Man" ? 7:43 (Steve Winwood/James Miller) Spencer Davis Group cover. 10. "Prologue (August 29, 196" ? 0:58 (James William Guercio) 11. "Someday (August 29, 196" ? 4:11 (James Pankow/Robert Lamm) 12. "Liberation" ? 14:38 (James Pankow)
Chicago 1970
Chicago II is the second album by Chicago-based rock band Chicago. It was released in 1970 after the band had shortened its name from The Chicago Transit Authority after releasing their same-titled debut album the previous year.
Although the official title of the album is Chicago, it came to be retroactively known as Chicago II, keeping it in line with the succession of roman numeral-titled albums that officially began with Chicago III in 1971.
While The Chicago Transit Authority was a success, Chicago is considered by many to be Chicago's breakthrough album, yielding a number of Top 40 hits, including "Make Me Smile" (#9), "Colour My World" (#7), and "25 or 6 to 4" (#4). The centerpiece of the album was the thirteen-minute song cycle "Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon". In addition, guitarist Terry Kath also participated in an extended classically styled piece in four separate songs. The politically outspoken Robert Lamm also tackles his qualms with "It Better End Soon", another modular piece. Peter Cetera, later to play a crucial role in the band's music, donated his first song to Chicago and this album, "Where Do We Go From Here". Another hit, "In The Country", had an immediate impact on college students towards the end of the summer before they were going away to school. The song has a sentimental effect, bringing back memories of heading off to school.
Released in January 1970 on Columbia Records, Chicago was an instant hit, reaching #4 in the US and #6 in the UK and has gone on to become - perhaps - the band's most revered album.
Columbia Records was very active in promoting its Quadraphonic 4-channel surround sound format in the mid-1970s, and nine of Chicago's first ten albums were made available in quad. The quad mix features elements not heard in the standard stereo mix, including additional guitar work from Kath in "25 Or 6 To 4" and a different vocal take from Lamm in "Wake Up Sunshine", the latter of which reveals a different lyric in the song's last line.
In 2002, Chicago was remastered and reissued on one CD by Rhino Records with the single versions of "Make Me Smile" and "25 or 6 to 4" as bonus tracks.
Rhino released a DVD-Audio version of the album in 2003, featuring both Advanced Resolution Stereo and 5.1 Surround sound mixes.
Tracks:
1. "Movin' In" (James Pankow) ? 4:06 2. "The Road" (Terry Kath) ? 3:10 3. "Poem for the People" (Robert Lamm) ? 5:31 4. "In the Country" (Kath) ? 6:34 5. "Wake Up Sunshine" (Lamm) ? 2:29 6. "Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon" (Pankow) - 12:55
1. "Make Me Smile" ? 3:16 2. "So Much to Say, So Much to Give" ? 1:12 3. "Anxiety's Moment" ? 1:01 4. "West Virginia Fantasies" ? 1:34 5. "Colour My World" ? 3:01 6. "To Be Free" ? 1:15 7. "Now More Than Ever" ? 1:26 7. "Fancy Colours" (Lamm) ? 5:10 8. "25 or 6 to 4" (Lamm) ? 4:50 9. "Memories of Love" - 9:12
1. "Prelude" (Kath/Peter Matz) ? 1:10 2. "A.M. Mourning" (Kath/Matz) ? 2:05 3. "P.M. Mourning" (Kath/Matz) ? 1:58 4. "Memories of Love" (Kath) ? 3:59
10. "It Better End Soon" - 10:24
1. "1st Movement" (Lamm) ? 2:33 2. "2nd Movement" (Lamm/Walter Parazaider) ? 3:41 3. "3rd Movement" (Lamm/Kath) ? 3:19 4. "4th Movement" (Lamm) ? 0:51 11. "Where Do We Go From Here" (Peter Cetera) ? 2:49
Chicago III 1971
Chicago III is the third album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1971. It is also the band's third consecutive double album of new studio material in less than two years, a feat that has yet to be repeated by any major artist or group.
In the wake of Chicago's enormous worldwide success, Chicago spent almost all of 1970 on the road, an exhaustive undertaking. When the band came to record Chicago III at the end of the year - which producer James William Guercio had already determined would be another double, they were physically drained.
Their long hours on the road gave the principal songwriters, Robert Lamm, Terry Kath and James Pankow, much food for thought, resulting in more serious subject matter, which contrasted with the positivity of their first two sets. Lamm documented his homesickness in the "Travel Suite", while Pankow bemoaned the winning battle of industry over nature in the purely instrumental "Elegy" suite, (an issue Lamm also touches upon in "Mother"). While Kath's multi-part "An Hour In The Shower" provides a reprieve from the sobering explorations elsewhere, Chicago III was undeniably the result of a band who had seen the flip side of the world over the last several months.
Chicago III is also notable for its variety of musical genres, with the band relying slightly less on their trademark horns. Both "Sing A Mean Tune Kid" and "Free" feature the influence of funk, "What Else Can I Say" and "Flight 602" have a country feel, while abstract qualities are found in "Free Country" and "Progress?"
Released in January 1971, initially on Columbia Records, Chicago III - their first album to sport a Roman numeral in its title - sold well upon its release, yet its paucity of big hit singles and its more experimental nature meant that it didn't wear as well with the masses as The Chicago Transit Authority and Chicago did. "Free" was a Top 20 hit, and Peter Cetera's "Lowdown" reached the Top 40. And while Chicago III marked a dwindling in UK fortunes, reaching #9 in a brief chart run, it provided Chicago with their highest charting disc yet in the US, going to #2.
Included with the album was a poster of the band dressed in the uniforms of America's wars, standing in front of a field of crosses, representing those who had died in the still ongoing Vietnam War. It also gave the number of casualties from each war up until the time of the album's release.
In 2002, Chicago III was remastered and reissued on one CD by Rhino Records.
Tracks:
1. "Sing a Mean Tune Kid" (Robert Lamm) ? 9:13 2. "Loneliness Is Just a Word" (Robert Lamm) ? 2:36 3. "What Else Can I Say" (Peter Cetera) ? 3:12 4. "I Don't Want Your Money" (Terry Kath/Robert Lamm) ? 4:47
5. "Travel Suite" - 22:30 (Robert Lamm, Danny Seraphine, Terry Kath, Walther Parazaider) 1. "Flight 602" (Robert Lamm) ? 2:45 2. "Motorboat to Mars" (Danny Seraphine) ? 1:30 3. "Free" (Robert Lamm) ? 2:16 4. "Free Country" (Terry Kath/Robert Lamm/Walter Parazaider) ? 5:47 5. "At The Sunrise" (Robert Lamm) ? 2:46 6. "Happy 'Cause I'm Going Home" (Robert Lamm) ? 7:26
6. "Mother" (Robert Lamm) ? 4:30 7. "Lowdown" (Peter Cetera/Danny Seraphine) ? 3:35 8. "An Hour in the Shower" (Terry Kath) - 5:30
1. "A Hard Risin' Morning Without Breakfast" ? 1:52 2. "Off to Work" ? 0:46 3. "Fallin' Out" ? 0:53 4. "Dreamin' Home" ? 0:49 5. "Morning Blues Again" ? 1:10
9."Elegy" - 15:27 1."When All the Laughter Dies in Sorrow" (Kendrew Lascelles) ? 1:03 2."Canon" (James Pankow) ? 1:05 3."Once Upon a Time...." (James Pankow) ? 2:34 4."Progress?" (James William Guercio/James Pankow) ? 2:35 5."The Approaching Storm" (James Pankow) ? 6:26 6."Man vs. Man: The End" (James Pankow) ? 1:34
Chicago V 1972
Chicago V is the fifth album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1972. It is notable for being the group's first single full-length release, after having released three consecutive double albums and a box set of live material.
Following the release of Chicago III in 1971, which almost left Chicago creatively spent, the band decided to curb their penchant for double albums and work on more concise numbers (in contrast to the suites that had typified their previous work) in order to fit all of their new material onto a single album. Chicago V is also notable for Robert Lamm's prolific songwriting; eight out of its ten tunes are composed solely by him.
Recorded just before Chicago at Carnegie Hall was released in the fall of 1971, Chicago V was cut in just over a week and held over for release until the following summer. Preceded by "Saturday In The Park", which reached #3 - the band's biggest hit thus far, the critically-acclaimed Chicago V became the biggest hit album of 1972, not only becoming Chicago's first #1 album but spending nine weeks in the pole position in the US. In the UK, the release managed to reach #24. Follow-up single, "Dialogue (Part I & II)" (#24) also became a Top 30 hit.
In 2002, Chicago V was remastered and reissued by Rhino Records with three bonus tracks: a rehearsal of Lamm's "A Song For Richard And His Friends", which was debuted at Carnegie Hall, an early rehearsal of Kath's "Mississippi Delta City Blues", and a single-edit of "Dialogue".
Tracks:
1. "A Hit by Var?se" ? 4:56 2. "All Is Well" ? 3:52 3. "Now That You've Gone" (James Pankow) ? 5:01 4. "Dialogue (Part I)" - 2:57 5. "Dialogue (Part II)" - 4:13 6. "While the City Sleeps" ? 3:53 7. "Saturday in the Park" ? 3:56 8. "State of the Union" ? 6:12 9. "Goodbye" ? 6:02 10. "Alma Mater" (Terry Kath) ? 3:56
Chicago VI 1973
Chicago VI is the sixth album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1973. Following the streamlined character of Chicago V, this successor would see the group follow more of a pop music approach, relying less on their trademark horns and exploring varied music forms.
After recording all of Chicago's first five albums in New York City, producer James William Guercio had his own Caribou Studios built in Nederland, Colorado during 1972, finished in time for the band to record their sixth album the following February. It would remain their recording base for the next four years.
While Robert Lamm maintains his songwriting prowess on Chicago VI (authoring half of the album's tracks, including his response to some of Chicago's negative reviewers in "Critics' Choice"), it is James Pankow who is responsible for the album's two hits, "Just You 'N' Me" (#4) and "Feelin' Stronger Every Day" (#10), the last of which was co-composed with Peter Cetera, who, himself landed another track on Chicago VI, the country-influenced "In Terms Of Two".
Released in June 1973, Chicago VI was another commercial success, spending five weeks at #1 in the US, while failing to chart in the UK at all, beginning a dry spell there that would last until 1976's Chicago X.
On August 23, 1989, just before 7:00pm local time, "Just You 'N' Me" was the last song played on WLS Chicago before switching to an all-talk format.
In 2002, Chicago VI was remastered and reissued by Rhino Records, with two bonus tracks: a Terry Kath demo called "Beyond All Our Sorrows", and a recording of Al Green's "Tired Of Being Alone", recorded from the 1973 TV special, "Chicago In The Rockies".
Tracks:
1. "Critics' Choice" (Robert Lamm) ? 2:49 2. "Just You 'N' Me" (James Pankow) ? 3:42 3. "Darlin' Dear" (Lamm) ? 2:56 4. "Jenny" (Terry Kath) ? 3:31 5. "What's This World Coming To" (Pankow) ? 4:58 6. "Something in This City Changes People" (Lamm) ? 3:42 7. "Hollywood" (Lamm) ? 3:52 8. "In Terms of Two" (Peter Cetera) ? 3:29 9. "Rediscovery" (Lamm) ? 4:47 10. "Feelin' Stronger Every Day" (Cetera, Pankow) ? 4:15
Chicago 16 1982
Chicago 16 is the sixteenth album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1982. The album marks the beginning of a new era for Chicago. It is the first album in a decade-long association with new label Warner Bros. Records; the band's first project to be produced by David Foster; and their first bona fide hit album since 1978's Hot Streets, giving the group a significant and lengthy "second wind" in commercial fortunes, in some ways eclipsing their considerable 1970s successes.
The band had realized in 1981 that their commercial appeal and image were at an all-time low. So they brought on Bill Champlin as keyboard player and singer, a man who successfully replaced Terry Kath vocally in the band's sound. But it was through the band's manager, Jeff Wald, that producer David Foster would make contact with the band.[1]
Once they agreed to Foster producing their new album (The band had considered him for 1980's Chicago XIV), Foster radically redefined Chicago's sound for the 1980s, with all of the latest technologies and techniques and introducing the significant use of outside songwriters and studio players. (Four members of Toto lent their expertise to the sessions.) Given the use of the new recording technology on this album, it's fitting that the album cover features the famous band logo grafted onto a silicon computer chip.
Of all the band's members, Peter Cetera benefitted most from the stylistic changes, having much in common musically with Foster. Their adult contemporary leanings permeated much of Chicago 16, swaying the band further from their ensemble jazz and rock roots and successfully introducing Chicago to a new and younger audience. The Foster/Cetera partnership helped steer Chicago through uncharted waters. The band was moving to a new label after an entire career at Columbia, and was doing so with a new member (Champlin), and without the late Terry Kath. Robert Lamm was also unavailable for the majority of the album's production due to personal issues, and the once-prolific writer only shared a sole partial writing credit on the release. Percussionist Laudir de Oliveira had also left the band between Chicago XIV and 16.
Upon its June 1982 release, Chicago 16 proved a big hit album, especially as "Hard to Say I'm Sorry" became the band's second #1 US single, and the album ultimately went platinum, reaching #9, rescuing Chicago's career in the process. The single would also be included in its lengthier form "Hard to Say I'm Sorry/Get Away" (featuring the hard rocking 'Get Away' tag) on the "Summer Lovers" movie soundtrack. "Love Me Tomorrow" would prove to be another hit single from the album, with the song featuring a lengthy orchestration at the end.
The Rhino remaster does not include the full length versions of "What You're Missing" and "Love Me Tomorrow," instead replacing them with their single edits. However, it does include a Bill Champlin demo called "Daddy's Favorite Fool", as a bonus track.
The original UK LP release contains "Rescue You" prior to "What Can I Say", unlike subsequent releases of this album.
Tracks:
1. "What You're Missing"* (Jay Gruska, Joseph Williams) ? 4:10 2. "Waiting for You to Decide" (David Foster, Steve Lukather, David Paich) ? 4:06 3. "Bad Advice" (Peter Cetera, Foster, James Pankow) ? 2:58 4. "Chains" (Ian Thomas) ? 3:22 5. "Hard to Say I'm Sorry/Get Away" (Cetera, Foster, Robert Lamm) ? 5:06 6. "Follow Me" (Foster, Pankow) ? 4:53 7. "Sonny Think Twice" (Bill Champlin, Danny Seraphine) ? 4:01 8. "What Can I Say" (Foster, Pankow) ? 3:49 9. "Rescue You" (Cetera, Foster) ? 3:57 10. "Love Me Tomorrow"* (Cetera, Foster) ? 5:06 11. "Daddy's Favorite Fool"** (Champlin) - 3:52
Chicago 17 1984
Chicago 17 is the seventeenth album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1984. As the follow-up to 1982's comeback Chicago 16, Chicago 17 consolidated on its predecessor's popularity by delivering their most popular album - currently six times platinum in the US alone and a Grammy winner - and one which would spin off four Top 20 US hit singles, including the spare-sounding synth-rocker "Stay the Night" (#16), ballads "Hard Habit to Break" (#3) and "You're the Inspiration" (#3), and the bouncy dance-inflected "Along Comes a Woman" (#14). The album was the first to really embrace the MTV video age, and the four videos enjoyed widespread airplay, including the "Indiana Jones"-influenced "Along Comes a Woman."
Chicago 17 would once again spell a turning point for the group, as this would be the last studio album with bassist, vocalist, and founding member Peter Cetera.
Produced again by David Foster, the album expanded on the adult contemporary leanings of its predecessor, swelling Chicago's audience as a result. Chicago 17 was a slow burner, finally reaching #4 in the US in early 1985, even seeing significant - and rare - success in the UK, on the strength of its many hits.
Chicago had long promoted itself as a "faceless" band, to let the famous Coca-Cola styled logo (and the music) do the talking. However, with the advent of the music video age, the camera would ultimately focus on the band member who sang most (if not all) of the songs, despite the presence of two other lead singers.
This album was the last Chicago album with vocalist/bass player Peter Cetera. Cetera quit the band in July 1985 due to a combination of factors, including his desire to have a solo career alongside his band career, and a reduction in touring.
On the heels of their biggest album ever, Chicago found themselves in the unenviable position of finding another bass playing tenor. Cetera's replacement for Chicago 18 would be Jason Scheff, who is still with Chicago, and whose tenure in the band eclipses that of Cetera. Ironically, Scheff was discovered after submitting material for Cetera's first post-Chicago solo release, Solitude Solitaire.
In 2006, Rhino Records remastered and reissued the album, using the original analog versions of "Please Hold On" and "Prima Donna" and adding a Robert Lamm demo, "Where We Begin" as a bonus track.
Tracks:
1. "Stay the Night" (Peter Cetera/David Foster) ? 3:49 2. "We Can Stop the Hurtin'" (Robert Lamm/Bill Champlin/Deborah Neal) ? 4:11 3. "Hard Habit to Break" (Steve Kipner/Jon Parker) ? 4:44 4. "Only You" (James Pankow/David Foster) ? 3:53 5. "Remember the Feeling" (Peter Cetera/Bill Champlin) ? 4:28 6. "Along Comes a Woman" (Peter Cetera/Mark Goldenberg) ? 4:14 7. "You're the Inspiration" (Peter Cetera/David Foster) ? 3:49 8. "Please Hold On"* (Bill Champlin/David Foster/Lionel Richie) ? 3:41 9. "Prima Donna"* (Peter Cetera/Mark Goldenberg) ? 4:33 o Featured in the 1983 movie Two of a Kind 10. "Once in a Lifetime" (James Pankow) ? 4:11
Chicago 18 1986
Chicago 18 is the eighteenth album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1986. As the successor to 1984's multiplatinum smash hit Chicago 17, this album marked a new era for Chicago: their post-Peter Cetera years.
After Cetera quit the band for a solo career in 1985, Chicago eventually hired Jason Scheff, son of Jerry Scheff (who had backed up Elvis Presley for years), to replace Cetera's high register vocals and bass duties. In a twist of fate, Scheff was discovered after submitting a song demo for consideration on Cetera's second solo album. With Scheff's uncanny ability to replicate his predecessor, Chicago was able to continue. Although founding member Robert Lamm still took an active part in the band, the most used voices in Chicago now belonged to their two newest recruits: Scheff and Bill Champlin, who had joined the band in 1981.
Because their sound was now so rooted in mid-1980s soft rock (ironically, mostly due to Cetera), Chicago again sanctioned the production duties of David Foster to create a familiar follow-up to Chicago 17. After his third consecutive album with them, Chicago would attempt to broaden their sound with new producers on their next project. On Chicago 19, radio would once again embrace ballads, this time from the pen of Diane Warren.
The band decided on recording an updated high-tech remake of "25 or 6 to 4" (#4 but it failed to scale the charts. Trombonist James Pankow is listed as a co-writer on the classic Lamm tune. Chicago then retreated safely back into ballad-mode, and the follow-ups "Will You Still Love Me?" (#3) and "If She Would Have Been Faithful..." (#17) became major hits. Newcomer Scheff was the singer on all three releases. The album also featured a brief, acapella horn riff, Pankow's "Free Flight." Chicago 18, while still going gold, saw a noticeable drop-off in album sales following Cetera's departure (17 went platinum six times). The album did not fare well on the charts either, peaking at #35. Thus, Chicago emerged as a singles band having major hits, but with merely competent album sales from this point on.
Tracks:
1. "Niagara Falls" (Steve Kipner/Bobby Caldwell) ? 3:43 2. "Forever" (Robert Lamm/Bill Gable) ? 5:17 3. "If She Would Have Been Faithful..." (Steve Kipner/Randy Goodrum) ? 3:51 4. "25 or 6 to 4" (Robert Lamm/James Pankow) ? 4:20 o A new recording of the 1970 hit that originally appeared on Chicago 5. "Will You Still Love Me?" (David Foster/Tom Keane/Richard Baskin) ? 5:43 6. "Over and Over" (Robert Lamm/James Newton Howard/Steve Lukather) ? 4:20 7. "It's Alright" (Bill Champlin/David Foster) ? 4:29 8. "Free Flight" (James Pankow) ? 0:25 o An uncredited track 9. "Nothin's Gonna Stop Us Now" (Jason Scheff/Buzz Feiten) ? 4:25 10. "I Believe" (Bill Champlin) ? 4:20 11. "One More Day" (James Pankow/Carmen Grillo) ? 4:14
Chicago 19 1988
Chicago 19 is the nineteenth album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1988. After recording Chicago 18 with David Foster, the band decided to expand their sound with other producers and worked primarily with Ron Nevison and Chas Sandford for this album. There was also a slight shifting in labels, with their Full Moon Records imprint now being carried by Reprise Records.
Similar to the reaction to its predecessor, Chicago 19 became a moderate success on the album chart (although it went platinum) yet had major hit singles, including the #1 hit "Look Away", as well as "I Don't Wanna Live Without Your Love" (#3), and "You're Not Alone" (#10). A slightly remixed version of Jason Scheff's "What Kind Of Man Would I Be?" (#5) would also prove to be a big success in late 1989, as part of the follow-up Greatest Hits 1982-1989 release. This album was the first Chicago effort to spotlight keyboardist/singer Bill Champlin on lead vocals, who sung all three of the album's hit singles. The fact that the group was highlighting a different voice on singles that had no signature horn sound may have hindered 19's sales. The album also relied heavily on outside writers, continuing a trend from the previous album. The first two singles were written by Diane Warren (who was virtually ruling the charts at that time) with the third penned by Jim Scott.
However, following its release, there would be another line-up casualty with the surprising 1990 firing of founding drummer Danny Seraphine, making Chicago 19 his last project with Chicago, just over twenty years after they originally formed. He was replaced on the next studio album by ace session drummer Tris Imboden, who remains to this day.
Tracks:
1. "Heart in Pieces" (Tim Feehan, Brian MacLeod) ? 5:04 2. "I Don't Wanna Live Without Your Love" (Diane Warren, Albert Hammond) ? 3:55 3. "I Stand Up" (Robert Lamm, Gerard McMahon) ? 4:06 4. "We Can Last Forever" (Jason Scheff, John Dexter) ? 3:45 5. "Come in From the Night" (Bill Champlin, Bruce Gaitsch) ? 4:43 6. "Look Away" (Warren) (CantoneseatrickTam)? 4:02 7. "What Kind Of Man Would I Be?" (Scheff, Chas Sandford, Bobby Caldwell) ? 4:21 8. "Runaround" (Champlin, Scheff) ? 4:10 9. "You're Not Alone" (Jim Scott) ? 3:56 10. "Victorious" (Marc Jordan, John Capek) ? 6:03
Chicago XXXII (Stone of Sisyphus) 2008
Stone of Sisyphus is a studio album by American rock band Chicago, released on June 17, 2008, after a nearly fifteen year delay.
The album was set to be released as Chicago XXII in the United States on March 22, 1994. However, Warner Bros. Records, Chicago's record company at the time, was displeased with the album, and dismissed Stone of Sisyphus as being "unreleasable."[2] This led to an acrimonious split with the band.[3] The band's failure to issue an official press release regarding the album's mothballing and subsequent departure of guitarist Dawayne Bailey left fans to years of rampant debate and conjecture about the events surrounding Stone of Sisyphus.
Through its official website, as well as public discussion forums of past and present band members, the band actively worked to quell discussion and debate about Stone of Sisyphus, while sporadically releasing thematic albums. Recent information came to light regarding the actual reason for the album's shelving. The band's management was negotiating with the label regarding a licensing of the extensive Chicago back catalog and when those talks stalled, the label apparently retaliated by scrapping the project.[citation needed]
Like The Beach Boys' Smile, ELO's Secret Messages and Guns n' Roses' Chinese Democracy, Stone of Sisyphus built a legend of its own. Tracks from the unreleased album surfaced on bootleg recordings, including on the internet, while many of the songs appeared on legitimate compilation releases.
On July 9, 1993, the band included "The Pull" in a concert at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles to give the audience a taste of the upcoming album. The title song and "Bigger Than Elvis" were first released in Canada on the 1995 double CD compilation Overtime (Astral Music). A single edit-version of "Let's Take A Lifetime" debuted in Europe on the 1996 Arcade Records compilation called The Very Best Of Chicago (a title which would be reused in North America in 2002).
Five of the 12 tracks were released in Japan between 1997-1998 on the very rare green and gold editions of The Heart of Chicago compilations: "All The Years" (debut), "Bigger Than Elvis", and "Sleeping in the Middle of the Bed Again" (debut) all appear on the green-clad The Heart of Chicago 1967-1981, Volume II (Teichiku, 1997), with "The Pull" and "Here with Me (A Candle for the Dark)" appearing on the gold-clad The Heart of Chicago 1982-1998, Volume II (WEA Japan, 199.
In 2003, the group finally allowed three tracks from Stone of Sisyphus -- "All the Years", the title song and "Bigger Than Elvis" -- to be officially released in the United States on The Box by Rhino Records.
Keyboard player Robert Lamm previously recorded a solo version of "All the Years" in the early 1990s for his 1993 solo album Life Is Good in My Neighborhood (initially released in Japan by Reprise Records in 1993, it was released in 1995 in the USA by Chicago's then label Chicago Records), and a version of "Sleeping in the Middle of the Bed (Again)" for his 1999 album In My Head.
Keyboard player and guitarist Bill Champlin recorded "Proud of Our Blindness," which was a slightly different lyrical version of "Cry for the Lost," for his 1995 solo album Through It All, whose liner notes included his stinging criticism of the major record labels inspired by the row Chicago had with Warner Bros. over Stone of Sisyphus.
Bass player Jason Scheff recorded a solo version of "Mah-Jong" for his 1997 solo album Chauncy.
In May 2008, Rhino Records announced that Stone of Sisyphus would be released with four bonus songs. Officially, number "XXXII" in the band's album count (following Chicago XXX and The Best of Chicago: 40th Anniversary Edition). One of the original songs for the 1994 release of the album, entitled "Get on This" (written by Dawayne Bailey, Walter Parazaider's daughter Felicia, and James Pankow), did not make it on the 2008 release.[1] An official reason for this omission from Chicago or Rhino Records was not given. Frequently bootlegged, the Chicago Sun-Times notes that "Get on This" is "commonly the most-praised track in online fan discussions."
Tracks:
1. "Stone of Sisyphus" (Dawayne Bailey, Lee Loughnane) ? 4:11 2. "Bigger Than Elvis" (Jason Scheff, Peter Wolf, Ina Wolf) ? 4:31 3. "All the Years" (Robert Lamm, Bruce Gaitsch) ? 4:16 4. "Mah-Jong" (Scheff, Brock Walsh, Aaron Zigman) ? 4:42 5. "Sleeping in the Middle of the Bed" (Lamm, John McCurry) ? 4:45 6. "Let's Take a Lifetime" (Scheff, Walsh, Zigman) ? 4:56 7. "The Pull" (Lamm, Scheff, P. Wolf) ? 4:17 8. "Here with Me (Candle for the Dark)" (James Pankow, Lamm, Greg O'Connor) ? 4:11 9. "Plaid" (Bill Champlin, Lamm, Greg Mathieson) ? 4:59 10. "Cry for the Lost" (Champlin, Dennis Matkowsky) ? 5:18 11. "The Show Must Go On" (Champlin, Gaitsch) ? 5:25
Bonus Tracks:
12. "Love Is Forever" (Demo) (Pankow, Lamm) ? 4:14 13. "Mah-Jong" (Demo) (Scheff, Walsh, Zigman) ? 4:59 14. "Let's Take a Lifetime" (Demo) (Scheff, Walsh, Zigman) ? 4:15 15. "Stone of Sisyphus" (No Rhythm Loop) (Bailey,Loughnane ) ? 4:35
COMPILATIONS
The Ultimate Collection 1984
Tracks:
Colour My World Questions 67 & 68 No Tell Lover Old Days If You Leave Me Now 25 Or 6 To 4 Another Rainy Day in New York City (I’ve Been) Searchin’ So Long Make Me Smile I’m a Man Baby What a Big Surprise Call On Me Feelin’ Stronger Everyday Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is Saturday In The Park Just You ‘N’ Me Wishing You Were Here
Greatest Hits 1982 ? 1989 1989
Greatest Hits 1982-1989 is the third greatest hits album by American rock band Chicago and released in 1989. Covering the era that stretched from 1982's Chicago 16 to Chicago 19 in 1988, the set is also balanced by the appearances of both Peter Cetera and his replacement Jason Scheff.
Greatest Hits 1982-1989 - the band's twentieth release overall - is also notable for being Chicago's last release before the departure of founding drummer Danny Seraphine and the home to a (slightly) remixed hit, "What Kind Of Man Would I Be?" originally released on Chicago 19.
Although it only reached #37 in the US, Greatest Hits 1982-1989 would go on to sell over six million units in the US alone.
Tracks:
1. "Hard to Say I'm Sorry/Get Away" (Peter Cetera/David Foster/Robert Lamm) ? 5:06 2. "Look Away" (Diane Warren) ? 4:01 3. "Stay the Night" (Peter Cetera/David Foster) ? 3:47 4. "Will You Still Love Me?" (David Foster/Tom Keane/Richard Baskin) ? 5:42 5. "Love Me Tomorrow" (Peter Cetera/David Foster) ? 5:06 6. "What Kind Of Man Would I Be? (Remix)" (Jason Scheff/Chas Sandford/Bobby Caldwell) ? 4:18 7. "You're the Inspiration" (Peter Cetera/David Foster) ? 3:47 8. "I Don't Wanna Live Without Your Love" (Diane Warren/Albert Hammond) ? 3:52 9. "Hard Habit to Break" (Steve Kipner/Jon Parker) ? 4:42 10. "Along Comes a Woman" (Peter Cetera/Mark Goldenberg) ? 4:14 11. "If She Would Have Been Faithful..." (Steve Kipner/Randy Goodrum) ? 3:52 12. "We Can Last Forever" (Jason Scheff/John Dexter) ? 3:44
The Very Best Of; Only The Beginning 2002
The Very Best of: Only the Beginning is a two-CD greatest hits album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 2002. This collection marked the beginning of a long-term partnership with Rhino Records, who would go on to remaster and re-release Chicago's 1969 - 1980 Columbia Records catalogue throughout 2002 to 2005.
The Very Best of: Only the Beginning is notable for combining almost all of Chicago's greatest successes from their entire recording career up to that point, excerpting material from all of their regular studio albums bar 1979's Chicago 13 and Chicago XIV from 1980. Generally considered the definitive Chicago retrospective, The Very Best of: Only the Beginning has proven a lucrative seller, reaching #38 in the US - where it went double platinum, and providing Chicago with their highest UK position since 1970, peaking at #11. Several songs appear in an edited form, presumably to allow the band to include more songs on the CD. Most notable are "I'm A Man", which is missing the Danny Seraphine drum solo, and "Dialogue (Part I & II)", which is presented in its shortened single version.
Tracks:
Disc 1
1. "Make Me Smile" (James Pankow) ? 4:26 o New Edit 2. "25 or 6 to 4" (Robert Lamm) ? 4:50 o Tracks 1-2 originally issued on 1970's Chicago II 3. "Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?" (Robert Lamm) ? 3:20 4. "Beginnings" (Robert Lamm) ? 6:26 5. "Questions 67 and 68" (Robert Lamm) ? 4:52 6. "I'm A Man" (Jimmy Miller/Steve Winwood) ? 5:44 o New Edit o Tracks 3-6 originally issued on 1969's The Chicago Transit Authority 7. "Colour My World" (James Pankow) ? 3:00 o Originally issued on 1970's Chicago II 8. "Free" (Robert Lamm) ? 2:17 9. "Lowdown" (Peter Cetera/Danny Seraphine) ? 3:34 o Tracks 8-9 originally issued on 1971's Chicago III 10. "Saturday in the Park" (Robert Lamm) ? 3:56 11. "Dialogue (Part I & II)" (Robert Lamm) ? 5:00 o Single Version o Tracks 10-11 originally issued on 1972's Chicago V 12. "Just You 'N' Me" (James Pankow) ? 3:42 13. "Feelin' Stronger Every Day" (Peter Cetera/James Pankow) ? 4:14 o Tracks 12-13 originally issued on 1973's Chicago VI 14. "(I've Been) Searchin' So Long" (James Pankow) ? 4:29 15. "Wishing You Were Here" (Peter Cetera) ? 4:36 16. "Call on Me" (Lee Loughnane) ? 4:02 17. "Happy Man" (Peter Cetera) ? 3:15 o Edit from 1981's Greatest Hits, Volume II o Tracks 14-17 originally issued on 1974's Chicago VII 18. "Another Rainy Day in New York City" (Robert Lamm) ? 3:00 19. "If You Leave Me Now" (Peter Cetera) ? 3:57 o Tracks 18-19 originally issued on 1976's Chicago X
Disc 2
1. "Old Days" (James Pankow) ? 3:31 o Originally issued on 1975's Chicago VIII 2. "Baby, What a Big Surprise" (Peter Cetera) ? 3:06 3. "Take Me Back to Chicago" (Danny Seraphine/David Wolinski) ? 2:57 o Single Version o Tracks 2-3 originally issued on 1977's Chicago XI 4. "Alive Again" (James Pankow) ? 4:04 5. "No Tell Lover" (Peter Cetera/Lee Loughnane/Danny Seraphine) ? 4:13 o Tracks 4-5 originally issued on 1978's Hot Streets 6. "Love Me Tomorrow" (Peter Cetera/David Foster) ? 3:58 o Single Version 7. "Hard to Say I'm Sorry/Get Away" (Peter Cetera/David Foster/Robert Lamm) ? 5:05 o Tracks 6-7 originally issued on 1982's Chicago 16 8. "Stay the Night" (Peter Cetera/David Foster) ? 3:50 9. "Hard Habit to Break" (Steve Kipner/John Parker) ? 4:45 10. "You're the Inspiration" (Peter Cetera/David Foster) ? 3:49 11. "Along Comes a Woman" (Peter Cetera/Mark Goldenberg) ? 3:47 o Single Version o Tracks 8-11 originally issued on 1984's Chicago 17 12. "Will You Still Love Me?" (David Foster/Tom Keane/Richard Baskin) ? 4:12 o Single Version 13. "If She Would Have Been Faithful..." (Randy Goodrum/Steve Kipner) ? 3:51 o Tracks 12-13 originally issued on 1986's Chicago 18 14. "Look Away" (Diane Warren) ? 4:00 o Single Version 15. "What Kind Of Man Would I Be?" (Jason Scheff/Bobby Caldwell/Chas Sandford) ? 4:14 o Single Version 16. "I Don't Wanna Live Without Your Love" (Diane Warren/Albert Hammond) ? 3:57 17. "We Can Last Forever" (Jason Scheff/John Dexter) ? 3:44 o Single Version 18. "You're Not Alone" (Jim Scott) ? 4:00 o Single Version o Tracks 14-18 originally issued on 1988's Chicago 19 19. "Chasin' The Wind" (Diane Warren) ? 4:18 o Originally issued on 1991's Twenty 1 20. "Sing, Sing, Sing" - with the Gipsy Kings (Louis Prima) ? 3:20 o Originally issued on 1995's Night and Day: Big Band
Whats It Gonna Be, Santa 2003
Chicago XXV: The Christmas Album is an album of Christmas songs by American rock band Chicago and was initially released in 1998 on the band's Chicago Records imprint.
Produced by Roy Bittan, the album - featuring Chicago's interpretations of well-known Christmas classics plus one original tune (co-penned by Lee Loughnane) - was very well received upon its original August 1998 release, charting at #47 in the US and going gold.
However, once Chicago entered into their long-term partnership with Rhino Records in 2002, that label re-issued Chicago XXV: The Christmas Album later that year. In addition, it was decided to record six further songs - with Hot Streets and Chicago 13 producer Phil Ramone - and re-issue the whole package under a new design, title and sequencing, entitled What's It Gonna Be, Santa? in 2003, deleting its predecessor in the process. It has been reported that the band had initially considered recording an entirely new holiday effort, but didn't due to cost factors.
Guitarist Keith Howland sang his first lead vocal on the title track. This later release managed to reach #102 in the US.
Tracks:
1. "Winter Wonderland" (Felix Bernard/Dick Smith) ? 4:19 2. "Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!" (Sammy Cahn/Julie Styne) ? 3:29 3. "Jolly Old St. Nicholas" (Traditional) ? 3:35 4. "The Little Drummer Boy" (Katherine Davis/Henry Onorati/Harry Simeone) ? 4:05 5. "This Christmas" (Donny Hathaway/Nadine McKinnor) ? 4:03 6. "Feliz Navidad" (Jose Feliciano) ? 4:17 7. "Bethlehem" (Bill Champlin/Tamara Champlin) ? 4:07 8. "The Christmas Song" (Mel Torm?/Robert Wells) ? 3:39 9. "O Come All Ye Faithful" (Traditional) ? 4:46 10. "Rudolph, The Red-Nosed Reindeer" (Johnny Marks) ? 3:44 11. "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" (Hugh Martin/Ralph Blane) ? 4:02 12. "Sleigh Ride" (Leroy Anderson/Mitchell Parish) ? 3:55 13. "Silent Night" (Traditional) ? 3:18 14. "What Child Is This?" (Traditional) ? 4:41 15. "Christmas Time Is Here" (Lee Mendelson/Vince Guaraldi) ? 3:49 16. "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" (Traditional) ? 3:23 17. "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town" (Haven Gillespie/Fred Coots) ? 3:56 18. "Child's Prayer" (Lee Loughnane/John Durrill) ? 3:24 19. "One Little Candle" (Larry Mysels, Joseph Maloy Roach) ? 1:24 20. "White Christmas" (Irving Berlin) ? 2:28
LIVE
Live in Concert (Toronto Rock & Roll Revival) 1969
The Toronto Rock and Roll Revival was a one day, twelve hour music festival held in Toronto on September 13, 1969, featuring a number of popular musical acts from the 1950s and 1960s.[1] The festival is particularly notable as featuring an appearance by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, as the Plastic Ono Band, which resulted in the release of their Live Peace in Toronto 1969 album. The festival was also the subject of the D.A. Pennebaker film, Sweet Toronto.
Tracks:
Intro Song Purple Song 25 or 6 to 4 Questions Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? Liberation I’m A Man Beginnings (Finale)
Live in Japan 1975
Live in Japan is a 1975 live album by American rock band Chicago. It was recorded over the course of 3 days at the Osaka Festival Hall on the band's tour in support of Chicago V in 1972.
Originally, the album was released as a two-LP set (CBS/Sony SOPJ 31-32XR), and only in Japan. The album was finally released in the U.S. in 1996 as a two-CD set (CRD-3030) on Chicago's own label, Chicago Records.
Many fans and band members alike think the sound quality of this recording is better than 1971's Chicago at Carnegie Hall. Chicago founding member James Pankow was always particularly critical of the Carnegie Hall album saying:
“ I hate it. The acoustics of Carnegie Hall were never meant for amplified music, and the sound of the brass after being miked came out sounding like kazoos.[1] ”
Walter Parazaider noted about the sound quality of Live in Japan:
“ The Japanese hooked up two eight-track machines together to make 16 tracks. The quality of the sound was excellent
The album is currently out of print and tends to fetch high prices (generally upwards of $80 USD) on auction Web sites and in the collector's market. There are rumors circulating on fan forums of Rhino Records (Chicago's current record label) reissuing the album. In 2005, it was released on the iTunes Store as a digital download.
Tracks:
Side one
1. "Dialogue (Part I & II)" ? 6:55 2. "A Hit by Var?se" ? 4:43 3. "Lowdown" ? 4:14 4. "State of the Union" ? 8:14 5. "Saturday in the Park" ? 4:19
Side two
1. "Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon" - 14:05 1. "Make Me Smile" ? 3:17 2. "So Much to Say, So Much to Give" ? 0:59 3. "Anxiety's Moment" ? 1:02 4. "West Virginia Fantasies" ? 1:32 5. "Colour My World" ? 3:22 6. "To Be Free" ? 2:17 7. "Now More Than Ever" ? 1:36 2. "Beginnings" ? 6:36 3. "Mississippi Delta City Blues" ? 5:50
Side three
1. "A Song for Richard and His Friends" ? 7:54 2. "Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? [Free Form Intro]" ? 6:15 3. "Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?" ? 3:53 4. "Questions 67 & 68" ? 4:51
Side four
1. "25 or 6 to 4" ? 9:14 2. "I'm a Man" ? 10:43 3. "Free" ? 6:29
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