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Chicago
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According to Billboard chart statistics,
Chicago
is second only to
the Beach Boys
as the most successful American rock band of all time, in terms of both albums and singles. Judged by album sales, as certified by the R.I.A.A., the band does not rank quite so high, but it is still among the Top Ten best-selling U.S. groups ever. If such statements of fact surprise, that's because
Chicago
has been singularly underrated since the beginning of its long career, both
because of its musical ambitions (to the musicians, rock is only one of several styles of music to be used and blended, along with classical, jazz, R&B, and pop) and because of its refusal to emphasize celebrity over the music. The result has been that fundamentalist rock critics have consistently failed to appreciate its music and that its media profile has always been low. At the same time, however,
Chicago
has succeeded in the ways it intended to. From the beginning of its emergence as a national act, it has been able to fill arenas with satisfied fans. And beyond the impressive sales and chart statistics, its music has endured, played constantly on the radio and instantly familiar to tens of millions. When, in 2002,
Chicago
's biggest hits were assembled together on the two-disc set
The Very Best of Chicago: Only the Beginning
and the album debuted in the Top 50, giving the band the distinction of having had chart albums in five consecutive decades, the music industry and some music journalists may have been startled. But the fans who had been supporting
Chicago
for over 30 years were not.
Chicago
marked the confluence of two distinct, but intermingling musical strains in Chicago, IL, in the mid-'60s: an academic approach and one coming from the streets. Reed player
Walter Parazaider
(born March 14, 1945, in Chicago, IL), trumpeter
Lee Loughnane
(born October 21, 1946, in Chicago, IL), and trombonist
James Pankow
(born August 20, 1947, in St. Louis, MO) were all music students at DePaul University. But they moonlighted in the city's clubs, playing everything from R&B to Irish music, and there they encountered less formally educated but no less talented players like guitarist
Terry Kath
(born January 31, 1946, in Chicago, IL; died January 23, 1978, in Los Angeles, CA) and drummer
Danny Seraphine
(born August 28, 1948, in Chicago, IL). In the mid-'60s, most rock groups followed the instrumentation of
the Beatles
-- two guitars, bass, and drums -- and horn sections were heard only in R&B. But in the summer of 1966,
the Beatles
used horns on
"Got to Get You into My Life"
on their
Revolver
album and, as usual, pop music began to follow their lead. At the end of the year,
the Buckinghams
, a Chicago band guided by a friend of
Parazaider
's,
James William Guercio
, scored a national hit with the horn-filled
"Kind of a Drag,"
which went on to hit number one in February 1967.
That was all the encouragement
Parazaider
and his friends needed.
Parazaider
called a meeting of the band-to-be at his apartment on February 15, 1967, inviting along a talented organist and singer he had run across,
Robert Lamm
(born October 13, 1944, in New York, NY [Brooklyn]).
Lamm
agreed to join and also said he could supply the missing bass sounds to the ensemble using the organ's foot pedals (a skill he had not actually acquired at the time).
Developing a repertoire of
James Brown
and
Wilson Pickett
material, the new band rehearsed in
Parazaider
's parents' basement before beginning to get gigs around town under the name
the Big Thing
. Soon, they were playing around the Midwest. By this time,
Guercio
had become a staff producer at Columbia Records, and he encouraged the band to begin developing original songs.
Kath
, and especially
Lamm
, took up the suggestion. (Soon,
Pankow
also became a major writer for the band.) Meanwhile, the sextet became a septet when
Peter Cetera
(born September 13, 1944, in Chicago, IL), singer and bassist for a rival Midwest band,
the Exceptions
, agreed to defect and join
the Big Thing
. This gave the group the unusual versatility of having three lead singers, the smooth baritone
Lamm
, the gruff baritone
Kath
, and
Cetera
, who was an elastic tenor. When
Guercio
came back to see the group in the late winter of 1968, he deemed them ready for the next step. In June 1968, he financed their move to Los Angeles.
Guercio
exerted a powerful influence on the band as its manager and producer, which would become a problem over time. At first, the bandmembers were willing to live together in a two-bedroom house, practice all the time, and change the group's name to one of
Guercio
's choosing,
Chicago Transit Authority
.
Guercio
's growing power at Columbia Records enabled him to get the band signed there and to set in place the unusual image the band would have. He convinced the label to let this neophyte band release a double album as its debut (that is, when they agreed to a cut in their royalties), and he decided the group would be represented on the cover by a logo instead of a photograph.
Chicago Transit Authority
, released in April 1969, debuted on the charts in May as the band began touring nationally. By July, the album had reached the Top 20, without benefit of a hit single. It had been taken up by the free-form FM rock stations and become an underground hit. It was certified gold by the end of the year and eventually went on to sell more than two million copies. (In September 1969, the band played the Toronto Rock 'n' Roll Festival, and somehow the promoter obtained the right to tape the show. That same low-fidelity tape has turned up in an endless series of albums ever since. Examples include:
Anthology
,
Beat the Bootleggers: Live 1967
,
Beginnings
,
Beginnings Live
,
Chicago [Classic World]
,
Chicago Live
,
Chicago Transit Authority: Live in Concert [Magnum]
,
Chicago Transit Authority: Live in Concert [Onyx]
,
Great Chicago in Concert
,
I'm a Man
,
In Concert [Digmode]
,
In Concert [Pilz]
,
Live! [Columbia River]
,
Live [LaserLight]
,
Live Chicago
,
Live in Concert
,
Live in Toronto
,
Live '69
,
Live 25 or 6 to 4
,
The Masters
,
Rock in Toronto
, and
Toronto Rock 'n' Roll Revival
.) To
Guercio
's surprise, he was contacted by the real Chicago Transit Authority, which objected to the band's use of the name; he responded by shortening the name to simply "
Chicago
." When he and the group finished the second album (another double) for release at the start of 1970, it was called
Chicago
, though it has since become known as
Chicago II
.
Chicago II
vaulted into the Top Ten in its second week on the Billboard chart, even before its first single,
"Make Me Smile,"
hit the Hot 100. The single was an excerpt from a musical suite, and the band at first objected to the editing considered necessary to prepare it for AM radio play. But it went on to reach the Top Ten, as did its successor,
"25 or 6 to 4."
The album quickly went gold and eventually platinum. In the fall of 1970, Columbia Records released
"Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?,"
drawn from the group's first album, as its next single; it gave them their third consecutive Top Ten hit.
Chicago III
, another double album, was ready for release at the start of 1971, and it just missed hitting number one while giving the band a third gold (and later platinum) LP. Its singles did not reach the Top Ten, however, and Columbia again reached back, releasing
"Beginnings"
(from the first album) backed with
"Colour My World"
(from the second) to give
Chicago
its fourth Top Ten single. Next up was a live album, the four-disc box set
Chicago at Carnegie Hall
, which, despite its size, crested in the Top Five and sold over a million copies. (The band itself preferred
Live in Japan
, an album recorded in February 1972 and initially released only in Japan.)
Chicago V
, a one-LP set, released in July 1972, spent nine weeks at number one on its way to selling over two million copies, spurred by its gold-selling Top Ten hit
"Saturday in the Park."
Chicago VI
followed a year later and repeated the same success, launching the Top Ten singles
"Feelin' Stronger Every Day"
and
"Just You 'n' Me."
The next Top Ten hit,
"(I've Been) Searchin' So Long,"
was released in advance of
Chicago VII
in the late winter of 1974. The album was the band's third consecutive chart-topper and another million-seller.
"Call on Me"
became its second Top Ten single.
Chicago VIII
, which marked the promotion of sideman percussionist
Laudir de Oliveira
as a full-fledged bandmember, appeared in the spring of 1975, spawned the Top Ten hit
"Old Days,"
and became the band's fourth consecutive number one LP. After the profit-taking
Chicago IX: Chicago's Greatest Hits
in the fall of 1975 came
Chicago X
, which missed hitting number one but eventually sold over two million copies, in part because of the inclusion of the Grammy-winning number one single
"If You Leave Me Now."
Chicago XI
, released in the late summer of 1977, continued the seemingly endless string of success, reaching the Top Ten, selling a million copies, and generating the Top Five hit
"Baby, What a Big Surprise."
But there was trouble beneath the surface. The band's big hits were starting to be solely ballads sung by
Cetera
, which frustrated the musicians' musical ambitions. They had failed to attract critical notice, and what press attention they were given often alluded to
Guercio
's Svengali-like control as manager and producer.
Chicago
determined to fire
Guercio
and demonstrate that they could succeed without him. Shortly afterward, they were struck by a crushing blow.
Kath
, a gun enthusiast, accidentally shot and killed himself on January 23, 1978. Though he, like most of the other members of the band, was not readily recognizable outside the group, he had actually had a large say in its direction, and his loss was incalculable. Nevertheless, the band closed ranks and went on.
Guitarist
Donnie Dacus
was chosen from auditions and joined the band in time for its 12th LP release, which was given a non-numerical title,
Hot Streets
, and which put prominent pictures of the bandmembers on the cover for the first time. The sound, as indicated by the first single, the Top 20 hit
"Alive Again,"
was harder rock, and the band's core following responded, but
Hot Streets
was
Chicago
's first album since 1969 to miss the Top Ten.
Chicago 13
then missed the Top 20. (At this point,
Dacus
left the band, and
Chicago
hired guitarist
Chris Pinnick
as a sideman, eventually upping him to full-fledged group-member status.) Released in 1980,
Chicago XIV
, the last album to feature
de Oliveira
, didn't go gold. By 1981, with the release of the 15th album, the poor-selling
Greatest Hits, Vol. 2
, the band parted ways with Columbia Records and began looking for a new approach.
They found it in writer/producer
David Foster
, who returned to an emphasis on the band's talent for power ballads as sung by
Cetera
. They also brought in one of
Foster
's favorite session musicians,
Bill Champlin
(born May 21, 1947, in Oakland, CA), as a full-fledged bandmember.
Champlin
, formerly the leader of
the Sons of Champlin
, was a multi-instrumentalist with a gruff voice that allowed him to sing the parts previously taken by
Kath
. With these additions, the band signed with Full Moon Records, an imprint of Warner Bros., and released
Chicago 16
in the spring of 1982, prefaced by the single
"Hard to Say I'm Sorry,"
which topped the charts, leading to a major comeback. The album returned
Chicago
to million-selling, Top Ten status.
Chicago 17
, released in the spring of 1984, was even more successful -- in fact, the biggest-selling album of the band's career, with platinum certifications for six million copies as of 1997. It spawned two Top Five hits,
"Hard Habit to Break"
and
"You're the Inspiration."
The renewed success, however, changed the long-established group dynamics, thrusting
Cetera
out as a star. He left the band for a solo career in 1985. (
Pinnick
also left at about this time, and the band did not immediately bring in a new guitarist.) As
Cetera
's replacement,
Chicago
found
Jason Scheff
, the 23-year-old bass-playing son of famed bassist
Jerry Scheff
, a longtime sideman with
Elvis Presley
.
Scheff
boasted a tenor voice that allowed him to re-create
Cetera
's singing on many
Chicago
hits. The split with
Cetera
had a negative commercial impact, however. Despite boasting a Top Five hit single in
"Will You Still Love Me?,"
1986's
Chicago 18
only went gold. The band recovered, however, with
Chicago 19
, released in the spring of 1988. Among its singles,
"I Don't Want to Live Without Your Love"
made the Top Five,
"Look Away"
topped the charts, and
"You're Not Alone"
made the Top Ten as the album went platinum. Another single,
"What Kind of Man Would I Be?,"
originally found on the album, was included as part of the 1989 compilation
Greatest Hits 1982-1989
(which counted as the 20th album) and became a Top Five hit, while the album sold five million copies by 1997.
At the turn of the decade,
Chicago
underwent two more personnel changes, with guitarist
DaWayne Bailey
joining and original drummer
Danny Seraphine
departing, to be replaced by
Tris Imboden
.
Chicago Twenty 1
, released at the start of 1991, sold disappointingly, and Warner rejected the band's next offering (though tracks from it did turn up on compilations).
Chicago
, however, maintained a loyal following that enabled them to tour successfully every summer. In 1995,
Keith Howland
replaced
Bailey
as
Chicago
's guitarist. The same year, the band regained rights to its Columbia Records catalog and established its own Chicago Records label to reissue the albums. They also signed to Giant Records, another Warner imprint, to release their 22nd album,
Night & Day
, a collection of big-band standards that made the Top 100. They were now able to combine hits from their Columbia and Warner years, resulting in the release of the gold-selling
The Heart of Chicago 1967-1997
and its follow-up,
The Heart of Chicago, Vol. 2 1967-1998
(their 23rd and 24th albums, respectively). In 1998, they released
Chicago 25: The Christmas Album
on Chicago Records, and they followed it in 1999 with
Chicago XXVI: The Live Album
. In 2002,
Chicago
began leasing its early albums to Rhino Records for deluxe repackagings, often with bonus tracks. And the success of
The Very Best of Chicago: Only the Beginning
demonstrated that their music continued to appeal to fans. Feeding off the renewed interest, the band reappeared in 2006 with the new album
Chicago XXX
on Rhino. The rejected Warner album from 1993 was finally released by Rhino in 2008 as
Stone of Sisyphus: XXXII
. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
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awesome music
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Excelent concert in M�xico!!!! Thank�s for the great moment !!!!
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LONG LIVE CHICAGO!!!
MUCH LOVE,
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Albums (68)
Chicago IX - Chicago's Greatest Hits
(11 songs)
Night & Day
(12 songs)
Chicago XI
(13 songs)
At Carnegie Hall
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