Chicago III

Album Description
Remastered and repackaged edition of their 1971 album. Featuring the hit singles ‘Free’ and ‘Lowdown’ and lots more pop, rock, and psychedelic soul. Digipack in a slipcase with a 16 page booklet featuring complete lyrics and detailed liner notes by Rolling Stone contributing editor David Wild. 2002…. More >>

Chicago III

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Comments

  1. CHICAGO III was originally released in January 1971 as (appropriately) Chicago’s third double album inside two years. The first two, THE CHICAGO TRANSIT AUTHORITY (April 1969) and CHICAGO (January 1970) were big smashes and blessed with (unintentional) hits – part of the reason they’re still big favorites. CHICAGO III was created in the same album-oriented manner as the first two and, this time around, there wasn’t a goldmine of singles to be found; no “25 Or 6 To 4″ and no “Beginnings”. And this is part of the reason CHICAGO III hasn’t worn as well as its predecessors, but that is also part of its charm. Both “Free” and “Lowdown” were hits, albeit on a lesser scale. Another reason for the album’s overlooked nature is perhaps the fact that it was another double album in a succession of three. Never mind – CHICAGO III is every bit as inventive and meaningful as the previous two albums and a concentrated listening will bear this out. The band’s musical palette was far more versatile on this album utilizing funk (“Sing A Mean Tune Kid”, “Free”) and even the avant-garde (“Free Country”, “Progress?”). There were, in addition, three suites to be found on the album, “Travel Suite”, Terry Kath’s “An Hour In The Shower” and James Pankow’s “Elegy”. Some of the passages in these extended pieces are brilliant and some of them drag a bit, which could also be a cause for the lower regard the third album. All in all, CHICAGO III is a great and very essential Chicago release. It may take a few listens to unlock its charms but it is a most rewarding album and stands as a great, if slightly flawed creation WITHOUT having any classic singles to boost it. This album originally peaked at # 2 in early 1971 and remained in Billboard for well over a year – a definite hit. This new Rhino-remastered edition is the best quality you can get; soundwise and packagewise. There is a (slightly short) essay to go with it and comments from various band members. CHICAGO III encapsulates a time when artistic freedom and experimation were greatly encouraged, while today it is largely shunned.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. Rik22 says:

    Chicago III was the band’s third double album released in as many years. The result of their recording efforts is their most eclectic offering in their immense catalogue. The styles on the 23 tracks range from classical to jazz to Chicago in their hardest rock medium.
    The disc starts out in that vein with “Sing a Mean Tune Kid” featuring Peter Cetera belting out a dissonant melody over funkish rhythm tracks. Great horn scoring by Jimmy Pankow again, as Chicago III finds the legendary section at their fattest-sounding, blowing hard and free. But hold onto your hats as the tune kicks into one of guitarist Terry Kath’s finest moments on any Chicago recording. He blazes through an extended solo over the changes as drummer Danny Seraphine and Peter Cetera on bass lay down a tight and adventurous foundation.
    The band does a “180″ into the next track, “Loneliness is Just a Word”, featuring Terry on a smooth vocal in a swing mode. This tune spotlights a rare organ solo by Robert Lamm and he does a fine job, highlighted by Danny’s killer drum part, Peter’s round walking basslines and Terry’s great rhythm guitar track.
    Peter Cetera has, over the years with Chicago and as a solo artist, exhibited a flair for a bit of country music style in his writing , and “What Else Can I Say” was his first composition in this mode. Another solid Cetera melody and silky-smooth vocal is highlighted by Terry Kath exploring country guitar textures. Very nice.
    “I Don’t Want Your Money” finds Chicago letting out all of the hard rock stops with the Chicago horns propelling a great growling Robert Lamm vocal. Terry Kath shines again with gut-wrenching soloing throughout the track. The finished product stands as one of Terry’s definitive guitar performances.
    The adventurous “Travel Suite” dips into three part harmony, in a folk-country style (“Flight 602), hard funk-rock (the classic,
    “Free”), and the classical style “Free Country” featuring only piano and Walt Parazaider’s flute. The Suite concludes with “Happy ‘Cause I’m Goin’ Home”, with Robert and Peter’s two- part harmony blending perfectly, Terry Kath breezing through some smooth acoustic jazz guitar stylings and Walt Parazaider really shining on an extended flute solo. Danny Seraphine, as always, shows why he is considered one of the greatest drummers ever to record as he effortlessly improvises is his truly unique style.
    Jimmy Pankow creates a showcase for his own great improvisational abilities on trombone with “Mother”. He double tracks two trombones soloing on each side of the mix and the result is one of the most interesting tracks that Chicago ever cut.
    “The Approaching Storm” is an instrumental designed to feature all band members’ soloing ability with the horns crisply playing through a dissonant head melody leading into each solo.
    Just terrific.
    While Chicago III does not exhibit the same production polish of it’s predecessor, “Chicago”, the group’s musical ideas continued to flow very freely and expand with this recording.
    Since this disc never spawned a true “hit single” (although the album was a big success in it’s initial release), it may be overlooked by those delving into the Chicago catalogue now. This CD is not to be missed as it is one of the band’s finest moments and unquestionably, Chicago’s most diverse release.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. pomororro says:

    Chicago is considered one of the greatest acts in rock music ever. Commemorating the group’s 35 years of existence, the first three Chicago albums were remastered, plus a better package and liner notes. That’s a bonus for fans and a good preamble for new listeners.

    Chicago III is a compendium of varied sounds and genres going from rock to R&B and jazz. They created an excellent album achieved by experimentation and group cooperation. Terry Kath proved that he was one of the best guitar players in the world (we all know the anecdote with Hendrix when CTA was the opening act for his band). In the other hand, Robert Lamm is the brain of the band and he sets the example for the hole thematic on the album. Finally, James Pankow stands as a great composer, clearly shown at the end of this Chicago album.

    I bought this reissue in order to see if there was an improvement in the sound quality of the original recording. The sound of this newly remastered edition of the classic “Chicago III” is great and pure, the channel division is excellent and, well, this album sounds superb if we consider that it was done in 1971.

    Some persons may consider it subjective in comparison with Chicago Transit Authority and Chicago II, but I recommend everyone to listen and analyze the album and then give their personal point of view.

    This record is for connoisseurs; people who really appreciate music. Chicago III is a statement of excellent music and represents Chicago at their best form.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  4. “Chicago III” was a more experimental outing by Chicago than their previous two albums. The styles range wider, with barely a nod to mainstream music of the late 60s and early 70s. It is likely that the ability to have such a large variety was made possible by the success of their previous two albums.

    As originally released, this CD was a double album set. The CD clocks in at about 71 minutes. An amazing 71 minutes it is. There are three suites on the album that include 17 of the 23 tracks. The suites are organized as follows: the “Travel Suite” includes tracks 5 through 10; “An Hour in the Shower” includes tracks 13 through 17; and “Elegy” includes tracks 18 through 23. In effect, the album includes three conceptual sections and six separate tracks.

    The six separate tracks illustrate the musical diversity of Chicago. “Sing a Mean Tune Kid” is 70s funk with Chicago’s trademark horn section jazzing up the funk. “Loneliness is Just a Word” is styled as a jazz song, with a flavor of bebop. Continuing with the changeups, “What Else Can I Say” has a bit of a country flavor but the guitars sound right out of a Beatles song. Part of the harmony also has a bit of Beatles’ flavor to it as well. “I Don’t Want Your Money” takes us to another corner of musical style with the hardest rocking selection of the CD.

    The other two separate tracks are “Mother” and “Lowdown”, both appearing between “Travel Suite” and “An Hour in the Shower”. “Mother” combines strong horn music with a solid rock tapestry. The vocals here presage 10cc’s later 70s music that would frequently use a similar style, though without the brass. Brass will always set apart and define Chicago’s early music. “Lowdown” contains a strong organ lead-in a one of the more pop-like tracks on this CD, containing funky musical elements and style that were typical of that era.

    The separate tracks tell the listener that this group has an incredible musical breadth. However, it is in the three concept portions of the album where Chicago stretches their musical muscle and lets you know that this group was helping define one or more directions for music.

    “Travel Suite” fits well with the late 60s and 70s when many young Americans became nomads, wandering about the country in flower-painted vans and Beetles, on the search for enlightenment. The musical flavor here starts out like Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. However, the drum solo of “Motorboat to Mars”, relatively rare in rock music, especially for a rock group, is more experimental and definitely unusual, leading into the rock with horns song, “Free”, the defining word for the travelers of the time. “Free Country” has musical elements I associate with King Crimson, though they are classical in some respects as well. The suite continues through “At the Sunrise” to “Happy `Cause I’m Going Home”, a fitting end to a suite about wanderlust.

    “An Hour in the Shower” is a group of bluesy songs that covers in a very short period of musical time. The songs could all have been one song, but instead opens and closes with similar lyrics and style, and reflections on that style in the middle compositions. In some respects the style is similar to the technique The Moody Blues used to introduce and end smaller groupings of songs.

    The final suite is “Elegy”, a rather depressing grouping of songs, from the title, at least, that again would seem to fit well with the era of the late 60s. The songs seem to combine all the concern we had at the time regarding the war in Viet Nam, the side effects of technology, the state of the economy, the arms race, and whether we had the potential as a race to survive. The introduction to the suite is spoken poem, leading to two instrumentals with classical elements, almost seeming like a sound track to a movie. These two pieces lead to “Progress?”, which uses, for the first and only time in my knowledge, the sound of a flushing toilet to end the composition. The instrumental with a combination of instruments and sound effects, asks the musical question whether the current state of our society is progress, or whether we are all in the toilet.

    The next composition is “The Approaching Storm”, another instrumental, with more rock elements. While the title would seem to indicate that it is an indication of travails for mankind, the music here is fast-paced guitars and strident horns, with little indication of the dark foreboding that the title would seem to indicate. The final selection, “Man vs. Man: The End”, dovetails without pause with the previous selection. Finally some of the foreboding elements enter the music, and you come to sense that perhaps one of the ends for mankind is we against us, to the end.

    “Chicago III” is a monumental work in that it combines so many musical styles and tries to do so many different things on one CD. There are few artists outside classical music that would attempt the scope of this CD. Furthermore, of those who would try something of this scope, few could pull it off. In some ways, “Chicago III” defined the peak of progressive Chicago, incredibly experimental and seemingly fearless for 71 minutes in 1971.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. Bill Fleck says:

    This is probably the best live album Chicago ever recorded.

    Okay, technically, it’s not “live.” But of all the albums Chicago released, this one seems the ‘rawest’ to me (I find this is good and bad by turns). It’s also short on significant overdubs, which is why I call it live. The recent Rhino re-release and remaster has given me a chance to listen again to this early 70s release, and there’s a lot on here I really like; however, I think some creative editing could have made it great.

    As always with early Chicago, keyboardist Robert Lamm contributes most of the songs. The opener, “Sing A Mean Tune, Kid,” is his. Bassist Peter Cetera sings it in R&B style, but I feel the song–featuring an extended Terry Kath guitar solo–simply goes on too long before the fade-out. Lamm’s follow-up, “Loneliness Is Just A Word,” is much of what I think CHICAGO III as a whole is not: tight, compact, and melodic, with a jazzy Kath vocal and a snazzy Lamm organ solo. An early, hornless Peter Cetera tune (“What Else Can I Say?”) proceeds the excellent Lamm/Kath “I Don’t Want Your Money,” a freewheeling barn-burner with Lamm sounding suspiciously like Sammy Davis Jr. on lead vocals.

    The “Travel Suite” comes next; I find it to be a mixed bag of (mostly) Lamm tunes that features “Free” (outstanding–and those horns!), “Happy ‘Cause I’m Going Home” (quite catchy), “At the Sunrise” (really beautiful), “Filght 602″ (not my favorite), “Free Country” (rambling flute and odd hapsichordish sounds; I’m not much on it), and the drum solo “Motorboat to Mars” (Danny Seraphine at his best). “Mother”–a great Lamm tune–follows, featuring dueling trombones courtesy of James Pankow and a tape recorder. This leads into the Cetera/Seraphine rocker “Lowdown,” a really catchy effort with some great Cetera bass playing.

    The next suite of songs, Kath’s “Hour in the Shower,” follows, and I’ll commit Chicago blasphemy here by saying I’ve never really cared for it much as a whole (though I’ve always liked the upbeat “Off to Work”); your opinions, of course, will vary. Then, for me, the album grinds to a halt while Lamm reads a poem called, “When All the Laughter Dies in Sorrow,” which I find to be about as pretentious a piece of writing as I’ve ever encountered (the follow-up, Pankow’s “Canon,” seems attached to the poem as an effort to give it a stately, church-like status).

    Things pick up with Pankow’s instrumental suite. “Once Upon A Time” has a beautiful melody handled by flute and trombone; “Progress?” is a dissonant mess ending in an actual toilet flush; “The Approaching Storm” has a jazzy hook and features great instrumental solos (especially Lee Loughnane on trumpet), and “Man vs. Man: The End” brings the set to a rousing close.

    There aren’t any bonus tracks here, because Chicago put everything they wrote for the album ON the album. For me, that’s the biggest problem with the set. The excellent liner notes indicate that the band felt pressed for time, and had exhausted a lot of their musical ideas when they hit the studio for this one. CHICAGO III certainly features a lot of great material; I feel, though, that producer James William Guercio should have shortened and shaped a lot of it.

    Still, it’s great to hear the young bad, talented, vibrant, raw, unconcerned by convention, and (almost) live; as such, the Rhino remaster of CHICAGO III is very much welcome.
    Rating: 3 / 5

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