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Chicago VII

Chicago

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Album Review

Although commercially successful, Chicago's previous long-player, Chicago VI (1973), had not been received as warmly from both the critics as well as from some bandmembers. Both parties expressed their dissatisfaction with the lighter fare and significantly shorter material. In response, the combo briefly returned to their previously tried and true methodology on their follow-up album. As such, Chicago VII (1974) was not only a double LP, but much of the effort likewise returned them to their former jazz/rock glory while continuing the middle-of-the-road (MOR) ethos that was concurrently impacting the pop charts. Nowhere is this more evident than the trio of sides extracted as singles — including the Top Ten hits "(I've Been) Searching So Long," "Call on Me," and "Wishing You Were Here." The latter of which features some stunning backing vocals from Beach Boys Dennis Wilson, Carl Wilson, and Alan Jardine. The group were continuing in their incorporation of additional musicians, most notably Laudir DeOliveira (percussion) and David J. Wolinski (ARP synthesizer) — both of whom are prominently featured throughout the sides. The opening instrumentals, including "Prelude to Aire," "Aire," and "Devil's Sweet," reflect Daniel Seraphine's (drums) tremendously underrated skills as a writer as well as the combo's recently underutilized talents as ensemble musicians. All three tracks provide a brilliant showcase for the brass/woodwind section(s) to flex their respective muscles, drawing heavily upon the styles of Weather Report and to some extent Miles Davis and Santana. The nature of their seemingly experimental fusion is stretched out even further on "Italian From New York." The cut includes some interesting ARP interjections from Robert Lamm, whose decidedly free-form contributions weave alongside some rubbery and liquefied fretwork courtesy of Terry Kath (guitar/vocals). His lead bobs around Lamm's synthesizer and an equally prominent cool-toned Fender Rhodes keyboard bed. The second half of Chicago VII directly contrasts the less structured instrumentals with more inclusive sides such as the previously mentioned hits "Call On Me" and "Wishing You Were Here." Other highlights include Lamm's funky mid-tempo "Life Saver," Peter Cetera's (bass/vocals) laid-back and unencumbered "Happy Man," and a double shot from Kath in the form of two serene ballads, "Song of the Evergreens" and "Byblos" — which features some stellar acoustic strumming. This collection would be Chicago's final two-disc set by the original lineup and offers the best of the band as improvisational instrumentalists as well as concise, emotive vocalists and song crafters. [The 2002 CD reissue not only includes the brilliantly remastered contents of the original double LP set, but also a previously unissued rehearsal of "Byblos" as a supplementary side, as well as 12 pages of appropriate memorabilia, photos, and newly penned text.]

Customer Reviews

Wonderful Chicago album

I highly agree with the other reviewer. This is probobly Chicago's best album ever. Byblos, Song of the Evergreens, Mongonucleosis, Call on Me, and (I've Been) Searchin' So Long are must have tracks. Explore this album! Don't just head straight to their greatest hits album; you'd be missing out.

Back to form/Last great effort

This was truly a return to form for the band. After retreating to MOR styles, and more commercially accessible single lp's Chicago returned to some great jazz, and pop/rock moments. After the 1st two albums, this is my next favorite, and last lp of their's that I like. The sound is fantastic, and Mongonucleosis is killer. Worth every penny.

Masterpiece

Thought this was a lite pop band? You must be young. Those of us old enough listened to I-VII (and pretty much stopped there) and heard a progressive band that defied description. VII is their masterpiece. An entire side without lyrics and and without parallel opened this double album. This is what so-called progressive rock was in the early 70's. A little jazz, a little classical, a little acid, a little protest and a lot of ideas.

Biography

Formed: February 15, 1967 in Chicago, IL

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

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...
Full Bio

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