UPC: 081227941499
Format: CD
Release Date: Jan 27, 2017
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![Chicago II [Steven Wilson Remix] cover art](http://www.moviemars.com/cdn/shop/files/0437a87efffea3ce65d1461b41486d37_3423abf0-e5c9-4cfc-806c-cb6d4f19695a.jpg?v=1778940940&width=1445)
Chicago: Terry Kath (vocals, guitar); Robert Lamm (vocals, keyboards);
Peter Cetera (vocals, bass); Walter Parazaider (winds, background vocals); Lee Loughnane (trumpet, background vocals); James Pankow (trombone); Daniel Seraphine (drums).
Recorded at Columbia Studios, New York, New York; Columbia Studios, Hollywood, California in August 1969. Originally released on Columbia (KGP-24). Includes liner notes by David Wild.
All tracks have been digitally remastered.
CHICAGO II remains a classic album, encapsulating its time (1969) in all its tumult and glory. The Vietnam War (and the civil unrest it inspired) was still raging, the counterculture dream had not yet crashed and burned, and rock music could be taken seriously as an "art form" while still generating radio hits. Chicago, with their then-new fusion of jazz, rock, and pop, rose high on the charts, while taken seriously both in and beyond the rock-critic establishment. (Some jazz listeners respected and enjoyed Chicago as well.) Their approach had a freshness and vibrancy--"25 Or 6 To 4" was surging, dramatic, and slightly ominous; "Fancy Colours" and "Make Me Smile" were full of soulful optimism; a four-movement suite showed the band had ambition beyond the three- or four-minute pop song. To paraphrase one of Chicago's song titles, it was only the beginning.
Peter Cetera (vocals, bass); Walter Parazaider (winds, background vocals); Lee Loughnane (trumpet, background vocals); James Pankow (trombone); Daniel Seraphine (drums).
Recorded at Columbia Studios, New York, New York; Columbia Studios, Hollywood, California in August 1969. Originally released on Columbia (KGP-24). Includes liner notes by David Wild.
All tracks have been digitally remastered.
CHICAGO II remains a classic album, encapsulating its time (1969) in all its tumult and glory. The Vietnam War (and the civil unrest it inspired) was still raging, the counterculture dream had not yet crashed and burned, and rock music could be taken seriously as an "art form" while still generating radio hits. Chicago, with their then-new fusion of jazz, rock, and pop, rose high on the charts, while taken seriously both in and beyond the rock-critic establishment. (Some jazz listeners respected and enjoyed Chicago as well.) Their approach had a freshness and vibrancy--"25 Or 6 To 4" was surging, dramatic, and slightly ominous; "Fancy Colours" and "Make Me Smile" were full of soulful optimism; a four-movement suite showed the band had ambition beyond the three- or four-minute pop song. To paraphrase one of Chicago's song titles, it was only the beginning.
Tracks:
1 - Movin' In
2 - Road
3 - Poem for the People
4 - In the Country
5 - Wake Up Sunshine
6 - Make Me Smile
7 - So Much to Say, So Much to Give
8 - Anxiety's Moment
9 - West Virginia Fantasies
10 - Colour My World
11 - To Be Free
12 - Now More Than Ever
13 - Fancy Colours
14 - 25 or 6 to 4
15 - Prelude
16 - A.M. Mourning
17 - P.M. Mourning
18 - Memories of Love
19 - It Better End Soon (1st Movement)
20 - It Better End Soon (2nd Movement)
21 - It Better End Soon (3rd Movement)
22 - It Better End Soon (4th Movement)
23 - Where Do We Go From Here
2 - Road
3 - Poem for the People
4 - In the Country
5 - Wake Up Sunshine
6 - Make Me Smile
7 - So Much to Say, So Much to Give
8 - Anxiety's Moment
9 - West Virginia Fantasies
10 - Colour My World
11 - To Be Free
12 - Now More Than Ever
13 - Fancy Colours
14 - 25 or 6 to 4
15 - Prelude
16 - A.M. Mourning
17 - P.M. Mourning
18 - Memories of Love
19 - It Better End Soon (1st Movement)
20 - It Better End Soon (2nd Movement)
21 - It Better End Soon (3rd Movement)
22 - It Better End Soon (4th Movement)
23 - Where Do We Go From Here