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Chicago V [Bonus Tracks] [Remaster]

Chicago
Release Date: 08/20/2002
Original Release:  1972
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 89787_CD
UPC # 081227617523
Label: Rhino Records (USA)
Buying Info
 
Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Hit by Varèse, A sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. All Is Well sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Now That You've Gone sound samples  real  |  windows media
4. Dialogue, Pt. 1 sound samples  real  |  windows media
5. Dialogue, Pt. 2 sound samples  real  |  windows media
6. While the City Sleeps sound samples  real  |  windows media
7. Saturday in the Park sound samples  real  |  windows media
8. State of the Union sound samples  real  |  windows media
9. Goodbye sound samples  real  |  windows media
10. Alma Mater sound samples  real  |  windows media
11. Song for Richard and His Friends, A (Studio Session Without Vocals) - (previously unreleased, without vocals, bonus track) sound samples  real  |  windows media
12. Mississippi Delta City Blues (First Recorded Version, With Scratch ...) - (first recorded version, bonus track) sound samples  real  |  windows media
13. Dialogue, Pts. 1 & 2 - (single version, bonus track) sound samples  real  |  windows media

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Performer: Chicago
Engineer: Wayne Tarnowski
Producer: James William Guercio
Distributor: WEA (Distributor)

Notes: Chicago: Terry Kath (vocals, guitar); Robert Lamm (vocals, keyboards); Lee Loughnane (vocals, trumpet, percussion); Peter Cetera (vocals, bass); James Pankow (trombone, percussion); Walter Parazaider (woodwinds, percussion); Danny Seraphine (drums, congas, bells). Recorded at Columbia Recording Studios, New York, New York in September 1971. Includes liner notes by Don Heckman. All tracks have been digitally remastered. Personnel: Terry Kath (vocals, guitar); Lee Loughnane (vocals, trumpet, percussion); Robert Lamm (vocals, keyboards); Peter Cetera (vocals); Walter Parazaider (woodwinds, percussion); James Pankow (trombone, percussion); Daniel Seraphine (drums, congas, bells). Audio Mixers: David Donnelly; Jeff Magid. Audio Remasterer: David Donnelly. Liner Note Author: Don Heckman. Recording information: Columbia Recording Studios, New York, NY (09/20/1971-05/10/1972). Photographer: Hugh Brown. Unknown Contributor Role: Nick Fasciano. CHICAGO V (from 1972) was in some ways the end of the "old" Chicago, pointing the way towards a smoother, mellower style they'd adopt in the years to come. V still has jazz and progressive elements ("A Hit By Var�se," "Dialogues"), political commentary ("State of the Union"), and melodious, sunny, horn-laden pop (the huge hit "Saturday In The Park"). The playing was still tight and clean, and the vocals still earnest and heartfelt, but a lighter mood began to replace the urgency of the band's late-'60s recordings. With four gold multi-disc LPs and twice as many hit singles to its credit, Chicago issued its fifth effort, the first to clock in at under an hour. What they lack in quantity, they more than make up for in the wide range of quality of material. The disc quite literally erupts with the progressive free-form "A Hit By Varese" -- which seems to have been inspired as much by Emerson, Lake & Palmer's Tarkus (1971) or Yes circa Close to the Edge (1972) as by the Parisian composer for whom it is named. Fully 80 percent of the material on Chicago V (1972) is also a spotlight for the prolific songwriting of Robert Lamm (keyboards/vocals). In addition to penning the opening rocker, he is also responsible for the easy and airy "All Is Well," which is particularly notable for its lush Beach Boys-esque harmonies. However, Lamm's most memorable contributions are undoubtedly the Top Ten sunshine power pop anthem "Saturday in the Park" and the equally upbeat and buoyant "Dialogue, Pt. 1" and "Dialogue, Pt. 2." Those more accessible tracks are contrasted by James Pankow's (trombone/percussion) aggressive jazz fusion "Now That You've Gone." Although somewhat dark and brooding, it recalls the bittersweet "So Much to Say, So Much to Give" and "Anxiety's Moment" movements of "Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon" found on Chicago II (1970). Terry Kath's (guitar/vocals) heartfelt ballad "Alma Mater" seems to be influenced by a Randy Newman sensibility. Lyrically, it could be interpreted as an open letter to his generation. Lines such as "Looking back a few short years/When we made our plans and played the cards/The way they fell/Clinging to our confidence/We stood on the threshold of the goal/That we knew, dear" affectively recall the monumental world events that had taken place during the late '60s and early '70s. Likewise, there is an undeniable one-on-one intimated in the verse "And though we had our fights/Had our short tempered nights/It couldn't pull our dreams apart/All our needs and all our wants/Drawn together in our heart/We felt it from the very start." This is a fitting way to conclude both the original album, if not the entire troubled era. Due to the time constraints of a single-disc LP, Chicago never issued a studio version of the mini political epic "A Song for Richard and His Friends." It had been worked up and performed live while touring behind Chicago III (1971), and appears as a standout on the much maligned At Carnegie Hall, Vols. 1-4 (Chicago IV) four-disc concert package (1971). The 2002 CD reissue of Chicago V includes among its supplemental materials an eight-plus minute instrumental studio version of the track. Also featured as "bonus selections" are a seminal rendering of Kath's powerhouse "Mississippi Delta City Blues" -- which would be shelved for nearly five years before turning up on Chicago XI (1977) -- and the 45 rpm edit of "Dialogue, Pts. 1-2." ~ Lindsay Planer
Chicago was the longest-running and most commercially successful of the hordes of jazz-rock bands with horn sections that sprang up in the late-1960s wake of Blood, Sweat & Tears. After myriad personnel changes (including the death of founding guitarist Terry Kath due to a self-inflicted gunshot wound), Chicago eventually mutated into a more conventional pop group that was able to score hit after hit well into the '80s, usually with romantic ballads. They remain among the best-selling American bands of all time. In the mid 1990s they briefly returned to their roots with an album of big band-era standards given the Chicago treatment.
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PID # 3745088


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