- Chicago III
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Chicago III Studio album by Chicago Released January 11, 1971 Recorded Late November - Early December 1970, Columbia Recording Studios, New York Genre Rock, Jazz Fusion Length 71:29 Label Columbia Producer James William Guercio Chicago chronology Chicago
(1970)Chicago III
(1971)Chicago at Carnegie Hall
(1971)Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating Allmusic [1] Chicago III is the third album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1971. It is also the band's third consecutive double album of new studio material in less than two years, a feat that has yet to be repeated by any major artist or group.
Contents
Production
In the wake of Chicago's enormous worldwide success, Chicago spent almost all of 1970 on the road, an exhaustive undertaking. When the band came to record Chicago III at the end of the year - which producer James William Guercio had already determined would be another double, they were physically drained.
Their long hours on the road gave the principal songwriters, Robert Lamm, Terry Kath and James Pankow, much food for thought, resulting in more serious subject matter, which contrasted with the positivity of their first two sets. Lamm documented his homesickness in the "Travel Suite", while Pankow bemoaned the winning battle of industry over nature in the instrumental "Elegy" suite, (an issue Lamm also touches upon in "Mother"). While Kath's multi-part "An Hour In The Shower" provides a reprieve from the sobering explorations elsewhere, Chicago III was undeniably the result of a band who had seen the flip side of the world over the last several months.
Chicago III is also notable for its variety of musical genres, with the band relying slightly less on their trademark horns. Both "Sing A Mean Tune Kid" and "Free" feature the influence of funk, "What Else Can I Say" and "Flight 602" have a country feel, while abstract qualities are found in "Free Country" and "Progress?"
Released in January 1971, initially on Columbia Records, Chicago III - their first album to sport a Roman numeral in its title - sold well upon its release, yet its paucity of big hit singles and its more experimental nature meant that it didn't wear as well with the masses as The Chicago Transit Authority and Chicago did. "Free" was a Top 20 hit, and Peter Cetera's "Lowdown" reached the Top 40. And while Chicago III marked a dwindling in UK fortunes, reaching #9 in a brief chart run, it provided Chicago with their highest charting disc yet in the US, going to #2.
Included with the album was a poster of the band dressed in the uniforms of America's wars, standing in front of a field of crosses, representing those who had died in the still ongoing Vietnam War. It also gave the number of casualties from each war up until the time of the album's release.
In 2002, Chicago III was remastered and reissued on one CD by Rhino Records. Chicago III (Columbia 30110) reached #2 in the US during a chart stay of 63 weeks. It also peaked at #9 in the UK.
Track listing
No. Title Writer(s) vocals Length 1. "Sing a Mean Tune Kid" Lamm Cetera 9:13 2. "Loneliness Is Just a Word" Lamm Kath 2:36 3. "What Else Can I Say" Cetera Cetera 3:12 4. "I Don't Want Your Money" Kath/Lamm Lamm 4:47 5. "Travel Suite" - "Flight 602"
- "Motorboat to Mars"
- "Free"
- "Free Country"
- "At the Sunrise"
- "Happy 'Cause I'm Going Home"
Lamm/Seraphine/Kath/Parazaider Lamm/Kath/Cetera 22:30 6. "Mother" Lamm Lamm 4:30 7. "Lowdown" Cetera/Seraphine Cetera 3:35 8. "An Hour in the Shower" - "A Hard Risin' Morning Without Breakfast"
- "Off to Work"
- "Fallin' Out"
- "Dreamin' Home"
- "Morning Blues Again"
Kath Kath 5:30 9. "Elegy" - "When All the Laughter Dies in Sorrow"
- "Canon"
- "Once Upon a Time..."
- "Progress?"
- "The Approaching Storm"
- "Man vs. Man: The End"
Pankow/Guercio/Lascelles Lamm 15:27 Personnel
- Peter Cetera - bass, vocals
- Terry Kath - guitar, vocals
- Robert Lamm - keyboard, vocals
- Lee Loughnane - trumpet, vocals
- James Pankow - trombone
- Walter Parazaider - woodwinds, vocals
- Danny Seraphine - drums
References
Chicago Studio albums - The Chicago Transit Authority
- Chicago
- Chicago III
- Chicago V
- Chicago VI
- Chicago VII
- Chicago VIII
- Chicago X
- Chicago XI
- Hot Streets
- Chicago 13
- Chicago XIV
- Chicago 16
- Chicago 17
- Chicago 18
- Chicago 19
- Twenty 1
- Night & Day Big Band
- Chicago XXV: The Christmas Album
- Chicago XXX
- Chicago XXXII: Stone of Sisyphus
- Chicago XXXIII: O Christmas Three
Live albums - Chicago at Carnegie Hall
- Live in Japan
- Chicago XXVI: Live in Concert
- Chicago XXXIV: Live in '75
Compilations - Chicago IX - Chicago's Greatest Hits
- Greatest Hits, Volume II
- If You Leave Me Now
- Take Me Back to Chicago
- Greatest Hits 1982-1989
- Group Portrait
- The Heart of Chicago 1967-1997
- The Heart of Chicago 1967-1998 Volume II
- The Very Best of: Only the Beginning
- The Box
- Love Songs
- The Best of Chicago: 40th Anniversary Edition
Related articles Categories:- Chicago (band) albums
- 1971 albums
- Double albums
- Albums produced by James William Guercio
- Columbia Records albums
- English-language albums
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