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Tuesday, 9 June 2020

"Chicago III" by CHICAGO – January 1971 Third Double-Album on Columbia Records (USA) and March 1971 (UK) on CBS Records - featuring Robert Lamm, Terry Kath, Peter Cetera, Daniel Seraphine, Lee Loughnane, James Pankow and Walter Parazaider (July 2002 UK Warner Strategic Marketing/Rhino Reissue - 2LP Set Onto 1CD – David Donnelly Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...







"...Motorboat To Mars..."

Apart from maybe Zappa and The Mothers - I can't think of any other American band that could have managed THREE double-albums of original studio material in a row during an twenty-month period - but CHICAGO did.

Their Columbia Records debut as "Chicago Transit Authority" hit the shops in late April 1969, the second simply called "Chicago" though more commonly known as "Chicago II" came in January 1970 whilst the ingeniously named "Chicago III" came out in January 1971 - all 2LP studio sets. And then, they whacked out a further four-LP live box recorded at Carnegie Hall later than same year (November 1971 as "Chicago IV") resplendent with posters and other cool inserts. Pour it on boys why don't you...

And their 2LP platters weren't jacked-up with 16-minutes songs – 12-minutes of which consisted of a filler guitar solo. No. Columbia went with the band's artistic bint and let them stretch. If the songs were long, they were long and needed to be released into the wild as such. These were full-on musical compositions that certainly contained Prog Rock and often had Classical leanings too. "Chicago III" was no different to the two before. With three large pieces (Travel Suite, An Hour in The Shower and Elegy) and a total of 23-tracks – it was not for the faint-hearted or those pressed for time. And it looked the part of a 'big release' too. The front sleeve sported the now familiar CHICAGO logo (which they've used ever since) while both the inner gatefold and two inner sleeves came with custom script lettering for the recording details and lyrics. "III" also sported a giant foldout poster of our heroes amidst a sea of soldier's gravestones (alluding to the mentions of Vietnam in some of the songs). Pour it on why don't you...indeed.

I've always liked early Chicago before the big soppy ballads showed them where the real money lay. But I'd have to admit that much of those endless brass improvs will test the patience of today's 2020 audience, But I say let's take a few minutes for the boys who used to once dream of bus terminals only to end up in early 1971 on a motorboat to Mars (yeah baby)...

UK released 27 July 2002 - "Chicago III" by CHICAGO on Warner Strategic Marketing/Rhino 8122-76173-2 (Barcode 081227617325) offers the 1971 Double-Album Remastered onto 1CD in total and plays out as follows (71:29 minutes):

1. Sing A Mean Tune Kid [Side 1]
2. Loneliness Is Just A Word
3. What Else Can I Say
4. I Don't Want Your Money
TRAVEL SUITE (Tracks 5 to 10)
5. Flight [Side 2]
6. Motorboat To Mars
7. Free
8. Free Country
9. At The Sunrise
10. Happy 'Cause I'm Going Home
11. Mother [Side 3]
12. Lowdown
AN HOUR IN THE SHOWER (Tracks 13 to 17)
13. A Hard Risin' Morning Without Breakfast
14. Off To Work
15. Fallin' Out
16. Dreamin' Home
17. Morning Blues Again
ELEGY (Tracks 18 to 23)
18. When All The Laughter Dies in Sorrow [Side 4]
19. Canon
20. Once Upon A Time...
21. Progress?
22. The Approaching Storm
23. Man vs. Man: The End
Tracks 1 to 23 are the double-album "Chicago III" – released January 1971 in the USA on Columbia Records C2 30110 and March 1971 in the UK on CBS Records 66260 (both in Stereo). Produced by JAMES WILLIAM GUERICO – it peaked at No. 2 in the USA and No. 31 in the UK

CHICAGO was:
ROBERT LAMM - Vocals and Keyboards
TERRY KATH - Vocals and Guitar
PETER CETERA - Vocals and Bass
JAMES PANKOW - Trombone
LEE LOUGHNANE - Trumpet and Vocals
WALTER PARAZAIDER - Vocals and Woodwinds
DANIEL SERAPHINE - Drums

Rhino's CD reissues for the first three twofers all initially came with outer card wraps and gatefold card digipak inners - aping the original vinyl artwork to a degree (they've been subsequently reissued as jewel case versions) and that's what you get here. While the inner digipak mimics the inner gatefold of the original double-album right down to the script text (a see-through plastic CD tray allows you to see what’s beneath), for some reason the 12-page booklet leaves out the two inners with the lyrics and the foldout poster - a bit of a boob really (perhaps they weren't able to secure them).

Making up for that are a period publicity photo of the seven-piece band and a US magazine cover (cheap at 60c), along with new interviews by liner-notes writer DAVID WILD with original band members - Trombonist Pankow and Trumpeter Loughnane. It's a potted history and interesting read where the boys praise Columbia for allowing the band to pursue big songs and not just hit singles - Pankow fondly remembering (35 years later) what made it all so special then and still resonates now - the band and the people around them were all in it for the 'music' and not the suits/cash-men who would later take over. DAVID DONNELLY has done the Remaster at DNA Studios in California and the power is fantastic. I've had the British vinyl originals for years and these Rhino transfers rock. To the music...

Columbia issued the brass-funky vocal-growling radio-friendly 2:14 minutes of "Free" as the album's starter 45 in February 1971 (Columbia 4-45331) - a Robert Lamm song that could easily have been passed off as the next Blood, Sweat & Tears or Sly & The Family Stone single (label mates also on Columbia). Chicago was awarded with a No. 20 chart peak - the quirky instrumental  "Free Country" being its flipside). In fact as you play the opening "Sing A Mean Tune Kid" on Side 1 - you could be mistaking its nine-minutes for Rare Earth or even After The Fire or shades of yes, Blood, Sweat & Tears - another Robert Lamm brass-driven funkster. The sexy half-spoken/half-sung "Loneliness Is Just A Word" would end up as the B-side of the album's second US 45 "Lowdown" in April 1971 on Columbia 4-45370. Managing a peak of No. 35 - I'd argue that the better B-side should have been the Plug Side. Future principal vocalist Peter Cetera gets his first tune on the album with the decidedly Eagles-country-ish "What Else Can I Say". The boys goof off at the beginning of "I Don't Want Your Money" - the album's Helter Skelter guitar moment where Chicago suddenly sound like John Mayall discovering Rock. 

The first of three multiple-song couplings comes in the shape of "Travel Suite" where Chicago wrong-foot the listener once again by sounding like they've been listening to too much America on "Flight 602". Next up is a short drum solo called "Motorboat To Mars" which is followed by the infinitely better "Free" - the boys discovering their inner Sly Stone. The full 5:02 minutes of "Free Country" is piano and flute Prog that is pretty for its first half and then improv discordant for the remainder. Lamm asks how can he be happy if he can't see his girl "At The Sunrise" - soon joined on duet vocals with Cetera - a catchy tune that could easily have been single number three. The Travel Suite continues with seven minutes of la-di-dah in "Happy 'Cause I'm Coming Home" - an upbeat almost Latin beat shuffler - followed by Lamm's "Mother" where Trumpet and Trombone do battle to a backbeat.

An Hour In The Shower encompasses five songs - all by Terry Kath - blues slipping down the drain as the morning water cascade pours. As he takes "Off To Work" he lays into Rock guitar backed up by those brass jabs. The problem is that the next three parts hog the same acoustic strum as they segue into each other without being interesting. "Elegy" opens with a poem "When All The Laughter Dies In Sorrow" printed on the inner gatefold (terribly dated unfortunately) followed by a doomy brass preamble called "Canon". This in turn leads into the flute-meandering "Once Upon A Time..." that later goes funky-workout with the superb toe-thumper "The Approaching Storm" – probably one the better numbers on record no. 2. But by "Man vs. Man: The End" it already feels like they're running out of ideas and improvs have replaced actual tunes.

The packaging is cool, the Audio rocks and even if the music on "Chicago III" is seriously dated in places - those cool moments and funky passages make it worth your while investigating door number three...

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