- Chicago XIV
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Chicago XIV Studio album by Chicago Released July 21, 1980 Recorded March - May 1980 Genre Rock Length 38:58 Label Columbia Producer Tom Dowd Chicago chronology Chicago 13
(1979)Chicago XIV
(1980)Greatest Hits, Volume II
(1981)Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating Allmusic [1] Chicago XIV is the 14th album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1980. Recorded at a time of waning interest in the band, Chicago XIV remains one of Chicago's poorest selling albums and was a commercial flop. It is also notable for being their last studio album with Columbia Records.
After the commercial and critical disappointment of Chicago 13, and the departure of guitarist Donnie Dacus, Chicago decided that a new strategy was in order. Instead of incorporating another guitarist into the band, they instead hired on Chris Pinnick as a session player and live performer. They also tried a new producer, this time Tom Dowd, who had worked with Aretha Franklin, Cream, Eric Clapton, and Toto. With Dowd taking the reins, and with Chicago abandoning the ill-advised dance club atmosphere that permeated the last album, the team recorded a lean, more streamlined record which would, predictably, be called Chicago XIV. It may have been a response to the under-produced, New Wave efforts on the radio at the time. The album was easily the least orchestrated effort to date. Still, it wasn't a perfect marriage, with Dowd having to shepherd a group whose members were not all on the same wavelength or headspace.
With Peter Cetera taking an even greater role in the band, his compositions included a mix of ballads, pop and rock songs, giving Chicago XIV a somewhat adult contemporary sound. Robert Lamm turned in the rockers "Manipulation" and "I'd Rather Be Rich" (a song from 1975) and James Pankow also delivered the uptempo - if downbeat - "The American Dream". Like Chicago 13, before it, Chicago XIV did not improve Chicago's fortunes. To the record-buying public, Chicago's image was out of touch in 1980 and once the new album was released, it became clear that any attempt to win back their fans would be in vain.
Poorly promoted by Columbia Records, a label that was increasingly disappointing Chicago, Chicago XIV went unnoticed upon release and bombed, only reaching #71 in the US, and disappeared quickly. There were no singles hits again, with "Thunder and Lightning" stalling below the top 50 and "Song For You" failing to chart. Chicago also saw a poor attendance in many venues during the supporting tour. Realizing that the relationship had soured considerably, Columbia Records terminated their relationship with Chicago. In 1982, Robert Lamm recalled,
""The thrill was gone as far as they were concerned, I think. Especially after Jeff Wald, who managed us in 1978 and 1979, kind of bullied them into signing a ridiculous multimillion dollar contract where every time we delivered an album, they had to cough up a million bucks. CBS didn't get close to recouping their money, and they wanted to get out of the deal. In fact they ended up paying us to leave the label."[2]
As a settlement to ending the arrangement early, Columbia released the band's second Greatest Hits album and jettisoned them from the label. The money from the settlement was used to record Chicago 16 independently, while the band shopped for a new label. Percussionist Laudir de Oliveira, with Chicago since 1973, decided to explore other options and would leave the band in 1981, realizing that the Latin percussion evident in the latter half of the previous decade no longer fit the band style.
In 2003, Chicago XIV was remastered and reissued by Rhino Records with three outtakes from the sessions, "Doin' Business" (which first appeared on the 1991 4-Disc anthology Group Portrait), "Live It Up" and "Soldier of Fortune" as bonus tracks.
Contents
Track listing
- "Manipulation" (Robert Lamm) – 3:45
- "Upon Arrival" (Robert Lamm/Peter Cetera) – 3:48
- "Song for You" (Peter Cetera) – 3:41
- "Where Did the Lovin' Go" (Peter Cetera) – 4:06
- "Birthday Boy" (Danny Seraphine/David Wolinski) – 4:55
- "Hold On" (Peter Cetera) – 4:15
- "Overnight Cafe" (Peter Cetera) – 4:19
- "Thunder and Lightning" (Robert Lamm/Danny Seraphine/Peter Cetera) – 3:32
- "I'd Rather Be Rich" (Robert Lamm) – 3:08
- "The American Dream" (James Pankow) – 3:19
Bonus Tracks on Rhino Re-issue:
- "Doin' Business" (Robert Lamm) – 3:31
- "Live It Up" (James Pankow) – 3:23
- "Soldier Of Fortune" (Robert Lamm) – 3:50
Personnel
The Band
- Peter Cetera - bass, vocals
- Laudir de Oliveira - percussion
- Robert Lamm - keyboards, vocals
- Lee Loughnane - trumpet, vocals
- James Pankow - trombone
- Walter Parazaider - woodwinds
- Danny Seraphine - drums
Additional personnel
- Chris Pinnick - guitar
- Mark Goldenberg - guitar
- David "Hawk" Wolinski - keyboards
- Ian Underwood - programming
- Karat Faye- Engineer
Charts
Album - Billboard (North America)
Year Chart Position 1980 Pop Albums 71 Singles - Billboard (North America)
Year Single Chart Position 1980 Thunder and Lightning Pop Singles 56 References
- ^ http://www.allmusic.com/album/r3856/review
- ^ "Revitalized Chicago Back On Road Again". Chicago Tribune June 13, 1982
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
- 1980 albums
- Albums produced by Tom Dowd
- Columbia Records albums
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