- Hot Streets
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Hot Streets Studio album by Chicago Released October 2, 1978 Recorded May - June 1978 Genre Rock Length 41:53 Label Columbia Producer Phil Ramone and Chicago Chicago chronology Chicago XI
(1977)Hot Streets
(1978)Chicago 13
(1979)Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating Allmusic [1] Hot Streets is the 12th album by American rock band Chicago and released in 1978. In many ways, Hot Streets marked the beginning of a new era for the band. It was also first album with all-new material released by the band that didn't have a numbered title.
After working with James William Guercio since their 1969 debut, Chicago decided to part ways with him following the release of Chicago XI in 1977, finding him too controlling. But undeniably the biggest change was the death of guitarist Terry Kath in January 1978, who unintentionally shot himself at a roadie's house party. Chicago was devastated by his death, and considered breaking up. Kath was one of the key players who most defined the rhythmic sound of the band, and could not easily be replaced. After the immediate shock waned, they decided they still had something to offer, and carried on.
Phil Ramone, who had mixed some of their earlier albums, was called upon to co-produce their new effort. But before Chicago could begin recording, they had to contend with the difficult process of finding a new guitarist. Donnie Dacus, who had previously worked with Roger McGuinn and Stephen Stills, was chosen, being an accomplished guitarist who would bring his own distinctive style to the group.
Recording that spring took place - after years of work at Guercio's Caribou Ranch in Colorado - in Miami and Los Angeles and by the sessions' end, Chicago felt as though they were a still a strong musical proposition after losing Kath. The Miami sessions featured a guest appearance by the Bee Gees, as the Gibb brothers were recording their album Spirits Having Flown next door at the time with their backup band, which included keyboardist Blue Weaver. They added vocals to the song "Little Miss Lovin'" and Weaver added synthesized strings to "No Tell Lover" and "Show Me The Way", while the Chicago horn section played on Spirits Having Flown, most notably on the hit single "Too Much Heaven".
To mark this new beginning, the band decided to break with tradition by giving their album a proper title, Hot Streets, and feature themselves prominently on the cover with a picture of the band (shot by photographer Norman Seeff) rather than the famous logo. A later marketing study confirmed the fact, however, that the public expected to see the logo on the cover, and it would return in the form of a high-rise building for the following "Chicago 13."
Released in October 1978, and preceded by the defiant "Alive Again" as lead single, Hot Streets - distinguished by its lean sound - was another hit for the group, who had been concerned that the public might not accept them without Kath. Although it went platinum, and they scored a second top twenty hit in "No Tell Lover", Hot Streets was the first Chicago album since their debut that failed to reach the US Top 10. The album peaked at #12, signaling that, with the advent of punk music and disco, Chicago's current heyday had perhaps passed. However, in the music world, many things are cyclical, and the 1980s would eventually see a commercial rebirth for the group.
After the release of Chicago 13, and at the end of the Christmas 1979 tour, Dacus would be fired from the group, bringing his short tenure with Chicago to an abrupt end.
In 2003, Hot Streets was remastered and reissued by Rhino Records with an alternate version of Lamm's "Love Was New" sung by Dacus as a bonus track.
Contents
Track listing
- "Alive Again" (James Pankow) – 4:08
- "The Greatest Love on Earth" (Daniel Seraphine / David Wolinski) – 3:18
- "Little Miss Lovin'" (featuring The Bee Gees) (Peter Cetera) – 4:36
- "Hot Streets" (Robert Lamm) – 5:20
- "Take a Chance" (Lee Loughnane / Stash Wagner) – 4:42
- "Gone Long Gone" (Peter Cetera) – 4:00
- "Ain't It Time" (Donnie Dacus / Daniel Seraphine / Warner Schwebke) – 4:12
- "Love Was New" (Robert Lamm) – 3:30
- "No Tell Lover" (Peter Cetera / Lee Loughnane / Daniel Seraphine) – 4:13
- "Show Me the Way" (Daniel Seraphine / David Wolinski) – 3:36
The band
- Peter Cetera - bass, vocals
- Donnie Dacus - guitar, vocals
- Laudir de Oliveira - percussion
- Robert Lamm - keyboards, vocals
- Lee Loughnane - trumpet, vocals
- James Pankow - trombone
- Walter Parazaider - woodwinds
- Danny Seraphine - drums
Additional personnel
- Blue Weaver - synthesizer strings on "No Tell Lover"
- David "Hawk" Wolinski - Fender Rhodes on "Show Me The Way"
- The Bee Gees - background vocals on "Little Miss Lovin'"
Charts
Album - Billboard (North America)
Year Chart Position 1978 Pop Albums 12 Singles - Billboard (North America)
Year Single Chart Position 1978 Alive Again Pop Singles 14 1979 No Tell Lover Pop Singles 14 1979 Gone Long Gone Pop Singles 73 1979 No Tell Lover Adult Contemporary 5 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
- 1978 albums
- Albums produced by Phil Ramone
- Columbia Records albums
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