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Chicago/Earth, Wind & Fire DVD

 

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Chicago
 
 
“The Chicago-Earth, Wind & Fire shows are magic and bring out the best in all of us –from the musicians onstage to the fans dancing in the aisles. We can’t wait to get out there with our friends again.”
  
   ~Philip Bailey, Founding member of Earth Wind & Fire
 
 
The Players
Robert William Lamm
 
Born:
October 13, 1944
 
Birthplace:
Brooklyn, New York
 
Member since 1967
 
"My early training was really as a member of a church choir when I was a kid. It was a very good choir in Brooklyn, New York. It exposed me to some of the great sacred music from the Middle Ages, right up through Bach and into some of the 20th Century composers."
 
  ~Robert Lamm, A founding member of Chicago
Lee Loughnane 

 

Born:

October 21, 1946

 

Birthplace:

Elmwood Park, Illinois

 

Member since 1967

 

(Pronounced Lock-Nane)

"It has definitely been a blur at times, and along the way you miss out on some of your children's growth, and it can be hard on your wife.

 

"Or a few wives, in my case. I'm on my fourth, but it was a matter of taking a while to find the perfect mate, which I now have. Of course, I had to wait for her to get born, too, but she's not so young that I'll have to go to court or anything like that."

 

   ~Lee Loughnane, A founding member of Chicago

 

James Carter Pankow 

 

Born:

August 20, 1947,

 

Birthplace:

St. Louis, Missouri

 

Member since 1967

 

*Quote from an

interview with

freelance writer

Debbie Kruger

"Oh, man! Yeah, well, Terry Kath was very unhappy. He was not a happy camper, because Jimmy Page and Ten Years After and Eric Clapton, and all these English—The Yardbirds—all these English guitar players—and Hendrix—were getting all this acclaim. And, Terry Kath was a truck driver in Gary Glitter clothes it was, you know, "Who the fuck is this peasant from the United States?" 

 

"He was getting completely blown-off and put down, and he was one of the most incredible guitar players of his time."

 

"So we had a press conference in England. And, Terry Kath waited for the whole band to pose with every medium in Europe and Asia on the roof of that Hilton. And, when 400 photographers got ready to shoot the picture, he gave the finger to the whole bunch of them and went, "Fuck you England, you motherfuckin, teabag, faggot, motherfuckers!!" And, that was the last time we worked in the United Kingdom."  [Laughs]  

 

   ~James Pankow, A founding member of Chicago

 

Walter Parazaider

 

March 14, 1945

 

Birthplace:

Chicago, Illinois

 

Member since 1967

  

“I kept playing it when I discovered that you could make a buck and get some girls playing a saxophone in a rock 'n roll band.”

 

"I started playing when I was nine years old because I saw Benny Goodman on The Ed Sullivan Show. I was a clarinetist to start with." 

 

"I can't think of a time growing up when there wasn't music in the house, whether it was my dad practicing by himself or playing in a band that was rehearsing at the house or my mother listening to records."

 

"The support that I had from my mother and father over the years was phenomenal." 

 

   ~Walter Parazaider, A founding member of Chicago

 

William Bradford Champlin

 

Born:

May 21, 1947

 

Birthplace:

Oakland, California

 

Member since 1981 

"I was reluctant at first, about being in the band, especially after hearing I'd be singing Colour My World--I never really liked that one much, then I thought why not?  I'll give it a year, 29 years later and I'm still here."

 

"You know what they say. If it’s too loud you’re too old."

 

"We smoked all of our profits." (About back in the day.)

 

"I see all the Hollywood industry bullshit pretty closely. They call everything an act. They call U2 an act. Somebody once told me, ‘Whether you like it or not, you're in the some business as Pia Zadora.’ You know what two words you never hear together? Encore, Pia."

  

   ~Bill Champlin, 29 years with Chicago

 

Keith Howland

 

Born:

August 14, 1964

 

Birthplace:

Silver Spring, Maryland

 

Member since 1995 

"I try not to dwell on the little stuff as much and I try to live in the moment more than I used to."

 

"Finally, due to special requests, I have included the pulsing intro music that we have used to open the Chicago shows in recent years."

 

"I put this piece together specifically as a crowd getter upper and it wasn't meant to be listened to as music.  Anyway, here is the full length version of the piece for your pulsing pleasure.  Enjoy!"

  

   ~Keith Howland, 14 years with Chicago-The New Guy 

 

Gregory Tristan Imboden

 

Born:

July 27, 1951

 

Birthplace:

Orange County, California

 

Member since 1990

 

 

*Vic Furth Interview

"I remember the first time I ever saw them.  I had gone to the Shrine Auditorium, I was all of 16." 

 

"Wow, with horns, the drummer was on fire, the music was just amaaaaziinng, you know. I kept trying to find out who they were.  Finally I got someone to tell me who it was. 'Ahh, it's CTA, they're new in town.'  This was one of the first big shows they had done here in LA. I was so floored by them."

 

"I am repeating myself, but if someone would have said, 'Tris one day you are going to be the lead drummer for this band,' I would have said, yeah and I am Napolean."


"From the first rehearsal, they encouraged me to install my own style. So much of what Danny did in those first records, those first songs were so integral to who Chicago is.  I try to keep a lot of it and add a little of my own slant on it.  You never replace a drummer like Danny.  You just don't."

 

   ~Tris Imboden, 19 years with Chicago

 

Jason Randolph Scheff

 

Born:  

April 16, 1962

Birthplace:

San Diego, California

 

Member since 1985  

                                  

"Playing the bass was very natural for me, so I knew that it was a gift that my father had given me genetically."

 

Will You Still Love Me?, on which he sang lead, did well on the charts. According to Scheff, this was when he felt he finally belonged.

 

   ~Jason Scheff, 24 years with Chicago

 

 

The Top Ten Selling Musical Group of All Time in its 42 Year Run is Still Hot After All These Years

Michael Holloway and Dawn Bonner

 

Great news; Chicago will be reuniting with Earth Wind & Fire for another joint tour and people are excited about this.  The first joint tour between Chicago and Earth Wind & Fire was in 2004 through 2005. 


They released a DVD of the tour, Chicago/Earth Wind & Fire Live at the Greek Theatre and their fans loved the collaboration so much, it went platinum only two months later. Fans of both bands are eager to see the same chemistry and passion in the new tour.

 

In 2005, Earth Wind & Fire collaborated with Chicago for a new version of the latter band's classic If You Leave Me Now, which was also recently covered by Suzy Bogguss 

 

Robert Lamm is as enthusiastic about the tour as Philip Bailey of Earth Wind & Fire (see lead quote). 


Lamm said,  “Earth Wind & Fire are phenomenal. When we first decided to tour together, we knew it would be good, but I don’t think we could have guessed that the Earth Wind & Fire/Chicago shows would be some of our all-time favorites to play.”


Billboard Magazine Proves Rolling Stone Magazine is Good for the Shitter


Billboard Magazine says Chicago is the leading U.S. singles charting group of the 1970s. They have sold over 120 million albums worldwide, scoring 22 Gold, 18 Platinum, and eight Multi-Platinum albums.

Guess Rolling Stone Magazine doesn't always call it right.

"Yet, for all the bland (and ineffective) calculation, it's hard to find this band offensive--it doesn't exhibit enough smarts for that.  Because they're too stupefying to be taken seriously, the only people these guys are likely to fool are themselves."
   ~Rolling Stone's review of 'Chicago 13' (1979)

Well, we are a bunch of fools because they still grab us after all these years.  And, thank goodness they didn't take Rolling Stone seriously, look at all of the incredible music we would have missed.

"I read it all the time, mostly when I'm taking a shit."
  

   ~Peter Cetera on Rolling Stone's bad reviews of every one of Chicago's records up to 1974.

Cetera left Chicago in 1985 to pursue a solo career, which also proved to be quite successful.


In the Beginning...


Four of the six founding members are still with the eight member band today.  And, the new guy, who has only been with the band for 14 years has been accepted by Chicago fans as a vital and integral band member.
 
February 15, 1967 was an auspicious day for music lovers.  It was the day six people gathered in Walt Parazaider's Chicago apartment and made a gentleman's agreement to devote their lives to making music together.


These gentlemen were: saxophonist Walter Parazaider, trombonist James Pankow, trumpet player Lee Loughnane, guitarist Terry Kath, keyboardist Robert Lamm, and drummer Danny Seraphine.


They began playing venues around Chicago as The Big Thing. In 1967 The Big Thing was fronting for a band bigger than them at the time, The Exceptions.  They had the audacity to steal a member of The Exceptions’.  That person was bass player, Peter Cetera.  The year was 1967.


Shortly thereafter,  they changed their name to Chicago Transit Authority. However, a lawsuit by the Chicago Public Transportation Company enticed the band to shorten their name to Chicago.


Terry Kath, a founding member of Chicago

accidently shot himself in the head, sadly.


 

Some Come, Some Go, Some Still Inspire


The band has added and lost members over the years, through personal conflicts between the members, the yen for solo careers, and even the accidental suicide in 1978 of band co-founder, Terry Kath.


Kath was partying with several people and cleaning part of his large gun collection.  Someone expressed fear of him doing this and Kath wanted to assuage their concern.


Kath's last words to guitar technician, Don Johnson, were "Don't worry, guys. It isn't even loaded. See?"


Jimmy Pankow said, "Terry was the living breathing soul of what this band was all about and he still lives with us today. We'd like to think that he's somewhere up there holding a spot for us in the band."


The band members still hear Kath's influence in the music they are writing and playing today.  They also say he was an incredible musician, one of the best, ever.


Jimi Hendrix Knew What Rolling Stone's Expertise Couldn't See or Hear


Jimmy Pankow with his beloved trombone.


In an early 70s issue of FM Magazine is a priceless quote about Chicago.


Jimi Hendrix said to Parazaide, "When I saw you guys out there, I saw three horn players with one set of lungs, and a guitar player who's better than me!"


Hendrix was referring to Kath's incredible mastery of the guitar, which to this day, many musicians, still marvel at his prowess.


Chicago had only been playing together for two years when they began opening for music icons Janis Joplin and Hendrix.


Into the 80s and 90s

 

After Kath's death in 1978, he was replaced with Donnie Dacus. The next year they released, Hot Streets, in 1979.  Cetera had already released a self-titled debut solo album and desired a return to this path. He also objected to the band's extensive touring regime and wanted to spend more time with his family and work on the new album.

In 1985, the band rejected Cetera's insistence they take a hiatus, so he chose to leave the band and was replaced by Jason Scheff. This line-up continued into the 1990's. Some say the band's popularity had begun to wane during the post-Cetera era. 
 
Many others say the band improved musically when Cetera left. The fans who were glad Cetera left, say Chicago's music got better because Cetera led the band to a more bubble-gum/pop rock sound, thus, leading Chicago away from the jazz rock they had come to love Chicago for.  Even some of the band members say Cetera wanted the horns to play as little as possible. 

Drummer Danny Seraphine had also fallen out with the band and was replaced with Tris Imboden.
 
A Long Story
 
In 1993, Chicago recorded their 22nd album, Stone Of Sisyphus, but the record label was unhappy with the finished product and refused to release it. Originally titled Chicago XXXII (following a long tradition of titling their albums with the band's name followed by a Roman numeral), the album was shelved for an incredible 15 years and finally released in 2008.
 
Despite years of speculation, especially through fan sites on the internet, the real reason behind the album's shelving was unknown for many years.

However, the band did eventually reveal that their management had been negotiating a licensing of their back catalogue with the label. When that deal fell through, Warner Records retaliated by scrapping the project.

They have all of their work now licensed under one label, Rhino, which seems to be working very well for the band, as new releases are coming out on a consistent basis.

Random Song Trivia

One of the founding members of Chicago, Robert Lamm


In an interview with Larry King, Bill Champlin told a story about 25 or 6 to 4.  He said it means 3:34 or 3:35 A.M.  The song is about whether Lamm should stay awake and keep trying to write his songs or not.

"Feeling like I ought to sleep..." is part of the lyrics.  Champlin also said Lamm is a great song writer and may have just written the lyrics this way simply because they sound good.

Questions 67 & 68

Lamm said the song refers to a man who was asked a lot of questions by his girlfriend in 1967 & 1968. I think there is a strong possibility that man was Lamm because he broke up with his woman in 1968.

My Take on Their Longevity
[Dawn]
It is my personal belief Chicago has celebrated their 42nd anniversary of non-stop tours, album and CD releases, hits on the charts, and filling the seats of every venue they play because they all respect each others talents and love music.

The eight members of the band have several things in common.  They are all incredibly talented.  They each truly support one another in writing, composing, singing, and adding their own flavor to the band.  It is clear on the albums they release, one time perhaps it will feature mostly one person's creations and the next time another. And, they are loyal to each other.

There is no one ego, no leader of the band, no one personality who sticks out--while the support players in the background file in and out of the band.  The lack of these factors allowed them to become one poignant personality--Chicago. Woohoo for us music lovers.

The personality?  A great rock band with fabulous musicians, great vocals, bangin' guitar, and a sterling unique horn section.  It also is very clear, they really have fun together on stage. 

Lastly, each member of the band is a genuinely nice man, each has a wonderful sense of humor, and each is grateful to get paid to see the world, doing what they love: Playing music and being on stage in front of us fans.  They say without the fans, what would the point be of their music?

Thank you Chicago for being so refreshing in the days of BIG EGOS, Big personalities, and boy/girl band formulas where the back-up singers are expendable.  As long as you play, we will be with you.

Did you know? One other thing the members of Chicago are passionate about are humanitarian causes.  For instance, Nothing But Nets. This charity seeks to educate people about the malaria blight in Africa and to find ways to control this dreadful disease.
 

Chicago's current tour schedule with Earth Wind & Fire is a great opportunity to see both bands together (whose fan base covers four generations).  Live, up close and personal.

 

 
... .. .
 

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