Complete List Of Chicago Band Members

Chicago Band Members

Feature Photo: Randy Miramontez / Shutterstock.com

Chicago is an American rock band formed in 1967 in Chicago, Illinois. Known for its fusion of rock and roll with horn sections, the band was originally known as Chicago Transit Authority before shortening its name because of a conflict with Chicago’s actual transit authority. Chicago is one of classic rock history’s longest-running and most successful rock groups, having released 37 albums with numerous singles topping the music charts. We all loved Chicago growing up in the 70s and 80s. Over the decades, Chicago has sold over 100 million records worldwide, making it one of the world’s best-selling groups of all time. Below is a rundown of all Chicago Band members.

LIST OF CHICAGO BAND MEMBERS

Robert lamm.

Robert Lamm joined Chicago at its formation in 1967 and remains a member to this day. As a keyboardist, singer, and songwriter, he has been a constant presence in the band. Lamm has contributed to all of Chicago’s albums, providing a significant portion of the band’s hit songs, including writing classics like “Saturday in the Park” and “25 or 6 to 4.” Beyond his work with Chicago, Lamm has released several solo albums.

Terry Kath was one of the founding members of Chicago and was widely regarded as one of the most influential guitarists in the band’s history. He played with Chicago from its inception in 1967 until his tragic death in 1978. Kath contributed heavily to the band’s early sound, especially noted for his guitar skills and soulful voice. He played on albums such as “Chicago Transit Authority” through “Chicago XI.” His untimely death marked a significant loss for the band and the music world.

Peter Cetera

Peter Cetera was with Chicago from 1967 until 1985, serving as the band’s bassist and one of its lead vocalists. Cetera’s distinctive voice led many of Chicago’s biggest hits, including “If You Leave Me Now” and “Hard to Say I’m Sorry.” He was integral to the band’s success in the 1970s and early 1980s. After leaving the band, Cetera enjoyed a successful solo career, with hits like “Glory of Love.”

Danny Seraphine

Danny Seraphine was the drummer and percussionist for Chicago from 1967 until 1990. He played on all Chicago releases from Chicago Transit Authority (1969) to Chicago 19 (1988) and was featured on Chicago XXXIV: Live in ’75 (2011) and VI Decades Live: This Is What We Do (2018). After leaving Chicago, Seraphine continued to be active in the music industry, including forming the band California Transit Authority.

Lee Loughnane

Lee Loughnane has been a trumpeter and vocalist with Chicago since its formation in 1967 and continues with the band as of the last update. He has played on all of the band’s albums and is known for both his trumpet playing and songwriting skills. Loughnane has also contributed vocals to several of the band’s hits.

James Pankow

James Pankow, the trombonist for Chicago, has also provided backing vocals and occasionally played percussion and keyboards. His work has been central to the band’s brass arrangements and overall sound.

Walfredo Reyes Jr.

Walfredo Reyes Jr. has been with Chicago since 2012 and has contributed to drums (2018–present) and percussion (2012–2018). His work appears on all Chicago releases from Chicago XXXVI: Now (2014) onwards, except VI Decades Live: This Is What We Do (2018).

Ray Herrmann

Ray Herrmann joined the band as a full member in 2016 after being a touring substitute since 2005. He plays saxophones, flute, and clarinet and provides backing vocals. His contributions are featured on several Chicago releases starting with Chicago XXXVI: Now (2014).

Neil Donell

Neil Donell joined Chicago in 2018 and has since provided lead and backing vocals and occasionally played the acoustic guitar. His voice features on albums such as Chicago XXXVII: Chicago Christmas (2019) and Chicago XXXVIII (2022).

Ramon “Ray” Yslas

Ramon “Ray” Yslas is known for his work on percussion and congas with Chicago, contributing his rhythmic talents to the band’s sound.

Tony Obrohta

Tony Obrohta joined Chicago in 2021 as a touring substitute for Keith Howland in November-December 2021. He plays lead guitar and provides backing vocals. Dont forget to check out our recent interview with Tony Obrohta .

Loren Gold has been with Chicago since 2022, initially joining as a touring substitute for Lou Pardini in August-September 2021 and then becoming a touring member in January-March 2022. He contributes to keyboards and provides both backing and lead vocals.

Eric Baines

Eric Baines joined Chicago in 2022, contributing bass and backing vocals to the band’s music.

Walter Parazaider

Walter Parazaider was one of the original members of Chicago, contributing saxophones, flute, clarinet, and backing vocals from 1967 until his retirement from touring in 2017. He played on all Chicago releases from Chicago Transit Authority (1969) to VI Decades Live: This Is What We Do (2018).

Laudir de Oliveira

Laudir de Oliveira was with Chicago from 1974 to 1981 as a percussionist, contributing to albums from Chicago VI (1973) and Chicago VII (1974) as a session musician to all releases up to Chicago XIV (1980).

Donnie Dacus

Donnie Dacus was with Chicago from 1978 to 1980, contributing lead guitar, lead and backing vocals. He played on Hot Streets (1978) and Chicago 13 (1979).

Chris Pinnick

Chris Pinnick joined Chicago in 1980 as a session musician and became a member until 1985. He played lead guitar on albums such as Chicago XIV (1980), Chicago 16 (1982), and Chicago 17 (1984).

Bill Champlin

Bill Champlin was a member of Chicago from 1981 to 2009, contributing keyboards, guitars, and both lead and backing vocals. He played on all Chicago releases from Chicago 16 (1982) to Chicago XXXII: Stone of Sisyphus (2008), as well as a live album.

Jason Scheff

Jason Scheff joined Chicago in 1985 and was with the band until 2016. He played bass and provided lead and backing vocals, occasionally contributing keyboards and guitar. His work is featured on all Chicago releases from Chicago 18 (1986) to Chicago at Symphony Hall (2015), with the exception of Chicago XXXIV: Live in ’75 (2011).

Dawayne Bailey

Dawayne Bailey was with Chicago from 1986 to 1994, playing lead guitar and providing backing and occasional lead vocals. He is featured on albums such as Chicago 19 (1988) and Twenty 1 (1991).

Tris Imboden

Tris Imboden joined Chicago in 1990 and was with the band until 2018. He played drums, percussion, and occasional harmonica. His contributions can be heard on all Chicago releases from Twenty 1 (1991) to Greatest Hits Live (2018), with a few exceptions.

Bruce Gaitsch

Bruce Gaitsch was with Chicago briefly from 1994 to 1995, playing lead guitar. His contributions can be heard on Night & Day: Big Band (1995) and as a session musician on other albums.

Keith Howland

Keith Howland was a member of Chicago from 1995 to 2021, playing lead guitar and providing backing and occasional lead vocals. His work is featured on all Chicago releases from The Heart of Chicago 1967–1997 (1997) to Chicago XXXVIII: Born For This Moment (2022).

Drew Hester

Drew Hester was with Chicago from 2009 to 2012, contributing percussion and serving as a drumming substitute during early 2009 touring. He is featured on Chicago XXXIII: O Christmas Three (2011).

Lou Pardini

Lou Pardini was a member of Chicago from 2009 to 2022, playing keyboards and providing lead and backing vocals. His contributions are featured on all releases from Chicago XXXIII: O Christmas Three (2011) to Chicago XXXVIII: Born For This Moment (2022).

Daniel de los Reyes

Daniel de los Reyes was with Chicago from 2012 to 2018, contributing percussion, mainly in live performances.

Jeff Coffey

Jeff Coffey joined Chicago in 2016 and was with the band until 2018, playing bass and providing lead and backing vocals as well as occasional acoustic guitar. He is featured on Chicago II Live on Soundstage (2018) and Greatest Hits Live (2018).

Brett Simons

Brett Simons was with Chicago from 2018 to 2022, playing bass and providing backing vocals. His contributions can be heard on Chicago XXXVII: Chicago Christmas (2019) and Chicago XXXVIII: Born For This Moment (2022).

Complete List Of Chicago Band Members article published on Classic RockHistory.com© 2023

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Chicago Announces Sprawling US Tour

Chicago has announced more than 60 new U.S. tour dates.

The band is scheduled to appear tonight in Milwaukee, followed by shows across the country that will keep them busy through fall. The tour will conclude in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, on Nov. 11.

You can see a complete list of dates below. Tickets are available on the band's website .

Chicago toured with  Brian Wilson  last year. They also released Born for This Moment , their first album of original music in close to a decade.

The band includes three original members - singer and keyboardist Robert Lamm, trumpeter Lee Loughnane and trombonist James Pankow - as well as Ray Herrmann on sax and flute, drummer Wally Reyes, Jr., singer  Neil Donell, Ramon "Ray" Yslas on percussion, guitarist Tony Obrohta, Loren Gold on keyboards and vocals and Eric Baines on bass and vocals.

Chicago, 2023 US Tour Dates May 9 - Milwaukee, WI @ Riverside Theater May 10 - La Crosse, WI @ La Crosse Center May 12 - Lincoln, NE @ Pinewood Bowl Theater May 13 - Coralville, IA @ Xtream Arena May 16 - Louisville, KY @ The Louisville Palace Theatre May 17 - Nashville, IN @ Brown County Music Center May 19 - New Buffalo, MI @ Four Winds Casino Resort / Silver Creek Event Center May 20 - Welch, MN @ Treasure Island Resort & Casino May 21 - Moorehead, MN @ Bluestem Center for the Arts - Bluestem Amphitheater May 23 - Salina, KS @ Stiefel Theatre for the Performing Arts May 25 - Ames, IA @ Stephens Auditorium - Iowa State Center May 26 - Kansas City, MO @ Starlight Theater May 27 - Camdenton, MO @ Ozarks Amphitheater June 16 - Evansville, IN @ The Old National Events Plaza June 17 - Springfield, IL @ UIS Performing Arts Center June 18 - Highland Park, IL @ Ravinia Festival June 20 - Toledo, OH @ Toledo Zoo Amphitheater June 21 - Rochester, NY @ Kodak Center June 23 - Westbury, NY @ NYCB Theatre at Westbury June 24 - Farmingville, NY @ Catholic Health Amphitheater at Bald Hill June 25 - New Brunswick, NJ @ State Theatre New Jersey June 27 - National Harbor, MD @ The Theater at MGM National Harbor June 29 - Stamford, CT @ The Palace Theatre Stamford June 30 - Springfield, MA @ MGM Springfield July 1 - Gilford, NH @ Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion July 6 - Cincinnati, OH @ PNC Pavilion July 7 - Traverse City, MI @ National Cherry Festival July 8 - Bay Harbor, MI @ Great Lakes Center for the Arts Aug. 10 - Colorado Springs, CO @ Pikes Peak Center for the Performing Arts Aug. 11 - Vail, CO @ Gerald R. Ford Amphitheater Aug. 12 - Albuquerque, NM @ Kiva Auditorium Aug. 15 - Tucson, AZ @ Linda Ronstadt Music Hall Aug. 16 - Prescott Valley, AZ @ Findlay Toyota Center Aug. 18 - Phoenix, AZ @ Celebrity Theatre Aug. 19 - Los Angeles, CA @ Greek Theatre Aug. 20 - Costa Mesa, CA @ The Pacific Amphitheatre Aug. 22 - San Diego, CA @ Humphreys Concerts by the Bay Aug. 23 - San Diego, CA @ Humphreys Concerts by the Bay Aug. 25 - Paso Robles, CA @ Vina Robles Amphitheatre Aug. 26 - Lincoln, CA @ The Venue at Thunder Valley Aug. 29 - Saratoga, CA @ The Mountain Winery Aug. 30 - Saratoga, CA @ The Mountain Winery Sept. 1 - Puyallup, WA @ Washington State Fair Events Center Sept. 2 - Toppenish, WA @ Legends Casino Event Center Sept. 3 - Boise, ID @ Outlaw Field at the Idaho Botanical Garden Sept. 14 - Tulsa, OK @ River Spirit Casino - Margaritaville Sept. 15 - Norman, OK @ Riverwind Casino Sept. 16 - Fort Worth, TX @ Will Rogers Memorial Center Sept. 19 - San Antonio, TX @ Majestic Theatre Sept. 20 - Sugar Land, TX @ Smart Financial Centre at Sugar Land Sept. 22 - Biloxi, MS @ Beau Rivage Theatre Sept. 23 - Biloxi, MS @ Beau Rivage Theatre Sept. 25 - Franklin, TN @ FirstBank Amphitheater Sept. 26 - Knoxville, TN @ Tennessee Theatre Sept. 28 - Durham, NC @ DPAC Sept. 29 - Columbia, SC @ Township Auditorium Sept. 30 - Atlanta, GA @ Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain Park Oct. 3 - Daytona Beach, FL @ Peabody Auditorium Oct. 4 - Hollywood, FL @ Hard Rock Live at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Oct. 6 - Tallahassee, FL @ Donald L. Tucker Civic Center Oct. 7 - Clearwater, FL @ The Sound Nov. 11 - Bethlehem, PA @ Wind Creek Event Center

2023 Rock Tour Preview

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Chicago is an American rock band formed in 1967 in Chicago, Illinois. The self-described "rock and roll band with horns" began as a politically charged, sometimes experimental, rock band and later moved to a predominantly softer sound, generating several hit ballads.

Discography

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Chicago announce more than 60 new tour dates.

Chicago

Classic Rock

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Chicago is for more than five decades on the road and will be touring again in 2023. The band announced more than 60 new tour dates for the United States and Canada that will happen next May, June, July, August, September, October and November.

The current line-up of the Rock group has the original members Robert Lamm (Keyboardist), Lee Loughnane (Trumpeter) and James Pankow (Trombonist). Walter Parazaider (Saxophone, flute and clarinet) still is a member of the band but he retired from touring in 2017.

Chicago 2023 tour dates

  • 9 – Milwaukee, WI – Riverside Theater
  • 10 – La Crosse, WI – La Crosse Center
  • 12 – Lincoln, NE – Pinewood Bowl Theater
  • 13 – Coralville, IA – Xtream Arena
  • 16 – Louisville, KY – The Louisville Palace Theatre
  • 17 – Nashville, IN – Brown County Music Center
  • 19 – New Buffalo, MI – Four Winds Casino Resort / Silver Creek Event Center
  • 20 – Welch, MN – Treasure Island Resort & Casino
  • 21 – Moorehead, MN – Bluestem Center for the Arts – Bluestem Amphitheater
  • 23 – Salina, KS – Stiefel Theatre for the Performing Arts
  • 25 – Ames, IA – Stephens Auditorium – Iowa State Center
  • 26 – Kansas City, MO – Starlight Theater
  • 27 – Camdenton, MO – Ozarks Amphitheater
  • 16 – Evansville, IN – The Old National Events Plaza
  • 17 – Springfield, IL – UIS Performing Arts Center
  • 18 – Highland Park, IL – Ravinia Festival
  • 20 – Toledo, OH – Toledo Zoo Amphitheater
  • 21 – Rochester, NY – Kodak Center
  • 23 – Westbury, NY – NYCB Theatre at Westbury
  • 24 – Farmingville, NY – Catholic Health Amphitheater at Bald Hill
  • 25 – New Brunswick, NJ – State Theatre New Jersey
  • 27 – National Harbor, MD – The Theater at MGM National Harbor
  • 29 – Stamford, CT – The Palace Theatre Stamford
  • 30 – Springfield, MA – MGM Springfield
  • 1 – Gilford, NH – Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion
  • 6 – Cincinnati, OH – PNC Pavilion
  • 7 – Traverse City, MI – National Cherry Festival
  • 8 – Bay Harbor, MI – Great Lakes Center for the Arts
  • 10 – Colorado Springs, CO – Pikes Peak Center for the Performing Arts
  • 11 – Vail, CO – Gerald R. Ford Amphitheater
  • 12 – Albuquerque, NM – Kiva Auditorium
  • 15 – Tucson, AZ – Linda Ronstadt Music Hall
  • 16 – Prescott Valley, AZ – Findlay Toyota Center
  • 18 – Phoenix, AZ – Celebrity Theatre
  • 19 – Los Angeles, CA – Greek Theatre
  • 20 – Costa Mesa, CA – The Pacific Amphitheatre
  • 22 – San Diego, CA – Humphreys Concerts by the Bay
  • 23 – San Diego, CA – Humphreys Concerts by the Bay
  • 25 – Paso Robles, CA – Vina Robles Amphitheatre
  • 26 – Lincoln, CA – The Venue at Thunder Valley
  • 29 – Saratoga, CA – The Mountain Winery
  • 30 – Saratoga, CA – The Mountain Winery
  • 1 – Puyallup, WA – Washington State Fair Events Center
  • 2 – Toppenish, WA – Legends Casino Event Center
  • 3 – Boise, ID – Outlaw Field at the Idaho Botanical Garden
  • 14 – Tulsa, OK – River Spirit Casino – Margaritaville
  • 15 – Norman, OK – Riverwind Casino
  • 16 – Fort Worth, TX – Will Rogers Memorial Center
  • 19 – San Antonio, TX – Majestic Theatre
  • 20 – Sugar Land, TX – Smart Financial Centre at Sugar Land
  • 22 – Biloxi, MS – Beau Rivage Theatre
  • 23 – Biloxi, MS – Beau Rivage Theatre
  • 25 – Franklin, TN – FirstBank Amphitheater
  • 26 – Knoxville, TN – Tennessee Theatre
  • 28 – Durham, NC – DPAC
  • 29 – Columbia, SC – Township Auditorium
  • 30 – Atlanta, GA – Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain Park
  • 3 – Daytona Beach, FL – Peabody Auditorium
  • 4 – Hollywood, FL – Hard Rock Live at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino
  • 6 – Tallahassee, FL – Donald L. Tucker Civic Center
  • 7 – Clearwater, FL – The Sound
  • 11 – Bethlehem, PA – Wind Creek Event Center

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I'm a Brazilian journalist who always loved Classic Rock and Heavy Metal music. That passion inspired me to create Rock and Roll Garage over 6 years ago. Music has always been a part of my life, helping me through tough times and being a support to celebrate the good ones. When I became a journalist, I knew I wanted to write about my passions. After graduating in journalism from the Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais, I pursued a postgraduate degree in digital communication at the same institution. The studies and experience in the field helped me improve the website and always bring the best of classic rock to the world! MTB: 0021377/MG

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Chicago Celebrates 55th Anniversary with New Album and Documentary, Even as Band Asks ‘If This Is Goodbye’

By Roy Trakin

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LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 15: Lee Loughnane, Robert Lamm, Joe Mantegna and James Pankow attend A Conversation With Chicago at The GRAMMY Museum on September 15, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Rebecca Sapp/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

As the new documentary on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame group puts it, Chicago is “The Last Band On-Stage,” marking its 55th anniversary since its founding in the city of the same name in 1967. The feature film is the second about the band from director Peter Curtis Pardini, who also helmed 2016’s “Now More Than Ever: The History of Chicago,” and catches us up on the last six years, the title referring to their 18-month absence due to the pandemic after a final performance on March 14, 2020 at Las Vegas’ Venetian before everything shut down.

Popular on Variety

Several other audience members emotionally testified during the hourlong Grammy Museum presentation, one after the other recalling how the band’s music marked momentous occasions in their lives, including one admirer who proposed marriage to the sound of “Beginnings.”

“When we bring someone new in, they’re usually familiar with our music and their idea of how to play it,” said Loughnane. “So we let them. We provide the arrangements, and we allow them to put their personalities into it. And that’s how the band keeps getting better.”

“The current lineup is arguably the best supporting cast we’ve ever had,” agreed Pankow. “You keep things fresh, weed out what doesn’t work and evolve. We’re having more fun now than we ever had.  I look on both sides of the stage and see Cheshire cats. What makes this music is the people who play it.” 

“They all really know the songs when they arrive,” adds Lamm. “They have respect for the body of work, and are willing to ask questions and learn.”

Along with New York’s Blood, Sweat and Tears, Chicago Transit Authority was the first rock band to incorporate horns into its sound, starting with that ’69 double-album debut on Columbia Records. (Their first three releases, in fact, were all double albums, and their fourth was a quadruple live LP capturing their week-long series of performances in April 1971 at Carnegie Hall.) Produced by mentor James William Guercio, the debut CTA album featured such classics as Lamm’s Top 10 hits “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?” and “Beginnings,” as well as the double-sided single “Questions 67 and 68” backed with their soaring cover of the Spencer Davis Group’s Steve Winwood-penned “I’m a Man.”

After shortening their name due to a legal dispute with the actual Transit Authority, “Chicago II” featured a seven-part, 13-minute Pankow-composed suite, “Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon,” which yielded a pair of Top 10 hits in “Make Me Smile” and “Colour My World,” both sung by Kath. Lamm’s “25 or 6 to 4,” describing a writing session in the wee hours of the morning, was the band’s first Top 5 hit, sung by Peter Cetera. “Saturday in the Park,” which mixes everyday life with the band’s “revolutionary” politics, helped “Chicago V” reach No. 1 on both the pop and jazz charts, and the band continued to dominate until disco slowed their progress in the late ‘70s, marked by the tragic death of Kath in 1978 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound with a weapon he didn’t realize was loaded.

The band’s constantly mutating lineup and longevity are the subjects of the new doc which spotlights how the members coped with COVID, Loughnane building a studio in his Sedona, AZ, home (echoing their roots at Guercio’s Caribou Ranch in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado), and showing them recording their 38th and most recent album, “Born for This Moment.” The release includes the bittersweet “If This Is Goodbye,” which starts off, “Just a bunch of crazy kids / Look at all the things we did / Never thought it’d end like this,” and concludes, “If this is goodbye / Let’s sing one more song for the memories” as the members confront their own destinies.

The Chicago journey has not been without its tragedies – from the loss of founding member Kath to the Alzheimer’s diagnosis for longtime sax player Walter Parazaider, who has been off the road since 2017, but still considered a member. “The Last Band On-Stage” shows them doing what they love to do – playing live to their fans — as they contemplate an uncertain future.

Of “If This is Goodbye,” Lamm said, “It was striking close to home. People have to say goodbye.”

“At some point, we’re going to bid farewell, and this song captures the feeling of that eventuality,” Pankow admits in the doc. “This may be the last album… Mortality is a reality.”

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Brian Wilson, Chicago Set for Co-Headling Tour in 2022

by Tina Benitez-Eves December 1, 2021, 10:46 am

Brian Wilson and rock band Chicago have revealed a co-headlining U.S. tour in 2022.

Videos by American Songwriter

The tour kicks off in Phoenix in June 2022 and concludes in Clarkston, Michigan at the end of July.

For his sets, Willson will be joined by South African singer Blondie Chaplin and fellow Beach Boys co-founder Al Jardine. Coincidentally, Jardine, along with late Beach Boys co-founders Carl and Dennis Wilson sang backing vocals on Chicago’s 1974 single “Wishing You Were Here.”

chicago tour band members

In 1975, Chicago and the Beach Boys also embarked on the Beachago Tour together, and toured together again in 1989.

Chicago, who will play a six-date run of shows at the Venetian Resort Hotel in Las Vegas February 2022, most recently released their 25th album Chicago Christmas in 2019.

Now 79, Wilson recently released the album At My Piano, a collection of new instrumental re-recordings of Wilson’s songs played on piano. Wilson also wrote “Right Where I Belong” with My Morning Jacket frontman Jim James for the soundtrack to the documentary Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road, covering the life and times of the Beach Boys co-founder.

Brian Wilson and Chicago Tour Dates:

JUNE 2022 7 – Phoenix, Ak-Chin Pavilion 9 – Los Angeles, Forum 10 – Irvine, FivePoint Amphitheatre 11 – Concord, Concord Pavilion 14 – Salt Lake City, USANA Amphitheatre 16 – Morrison, Red Rocks Amphitheatre 18 – Maryland Heights, Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre 20 – Kansas City, Starlight Theatre 21 – Rogers, Walmart Arkansas Music Pavilion 24 – Dallas, Dos Equis Pavilion 25 – The Woodlands, Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion 28 – Tampa, MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre 29 – Alpharetta, Ameris Bank Amphitheatre

JULY 2022 1 – Charlotte, PNC Music Pavilion 10 – Mansfield, Xfinity Center 11 – Holmdel, PNC Bank Arts Center 13 – Camden, BBT Pavilion 14 – Bethel, Bethel Woods Center for the Arts 15 – Wantagh, Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater 17 – Saratoga Springs, Saratoga Performing Arts Center 20 – Noblesville, Ruoff Home Mortgage Music Center 22 – Burgettstown, Pavilion at Star Lake 23 – Cincinnati, Riverbend Music Center 24 – Tinley Park, Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre 26 – Clarkston, DTE Energy Music Theatre

Brian Wilson Photo by Pamela Littky / Decca Records)

Chicago (Photo: Courtesy Chicago The Band)

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5 Fascinating Facts About Neil Young’s ‘Harvest’ in Honor of the Anniversary of the 1972 Album Reaching No. 1

Neil Young to Release 1987 Demos He Forgot Recording

© 2024 American Songwriter

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Chicago

Live In Concert

  • Date May 29 , 2024
  • Event Starts 7:30 PM
  • Doors Open 6:30PM
  • Ticket Prices $59-$199 plus fees
  • On Sale On Sale Now
  • Seating Chart View Seating Chart

Purchase Promo

Parking is available in the SFC parking quadrants and in Lot E-14 for this event. All lots will open two hours prior to the show. 

CASH OR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED AT PARKING LOT ENTRANCES

Cars: $15 Day of Show, $13 Purchased in Advance

Buses: $30 Parking for those with disabilities is available in any of the surrounding quadrants on a first come first served basis.

The circle drive on the west side of the building is available for drop-off and pick-up.

SFC_parkinglot_map_THEATRE.jpg

Package includes:

  • One reserved ticket in the front row
  • Backstage/On-stage picture with the band pre-show
  • Exclusive Chicago VIP merchandise with Chicago's Latest Scrapbook
  • Limited edition Chicago signed tour Band Poster
  • Exclusive 3D Tour Poster
  • Commemorative Chicago VIP laminate
  • Early Entry to venue
  • Chicago Latest Tour Book
  • First-Access Merchandise Shopping
  • On-Site VIP Ticket Host to check you in

Package details are subject to change without notice. All VIP packages are non-transferable; no name changes will be permitted under any circumstances; no refunds or exchanges; all sales are final.

All VIP merchandise must be picked up on site. If you have questions regarding the VIP packages, please email [email protected] .

  • One reserved ticket in rows 2-8
  • Exclusive Chicago VIP merchandise with Chicago's Latest Tour Book
  • Limited edition Chicago tour Band Poster
  • Greatest Hits Live Tour Concert DVD (exclusive to VIP/Fan Club)
  • On-site VIP ticket host for check-in
  • One reserved ticket in the first 12 rows
  • Chicago VIP merchandise with Chicago's Latest Tour Book
  • Commemorative Chicago VIP sticker

Upgrade includes:

**Upgrade DOES NOT include tickets to the show. Must be purchased separately. A separate ticket to the performance is required for entry.

All VIP merchandise must be picked up on site. If you have questions regarding the VIP packages, please email  [email protected] .

Event Details

Hailed as one of the "most important bands in music since the dawn of the rock and roll era," the legendary rock and roll band with horns, Chicago, came in as the highest charting American band in Billboard Magazine's Top 125 Artists Of All Time. And Chicago is the first American rock band to chart Top 40 albums in six consecutive decades. 

Chicago recently received The Recording Academy’s Lifetime Achievement Award from the GRAMMYS. The Lifetime Achievement Award celebrates performers who have made outstanding contributions of artistic significance to the field of recording. A special award ceremony and tribute concert celebrating the honorees was held in 2020. 

Chicago was inducted into the 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. This was their first nomination. They’ve been eligible since 1994. A long time coming! 

Chicago's first album, Chicago Transit Authority, was inducted into the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame in 2014.  Chicago managed to fuse pop, rock and jazz together perfectly in this double album. 

Robert Lamm and James Pankow have become inductees of the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2017. These legendary songwriters wrote mega-hits such as, "25 or 6 to 4," "Saturday In The Park," "Feelin' Stronger Every Day," "Make Me Smile," and many others. 

The International Trombone Association presented its 2020 Lifetime Achievement Award to James Pankow. The Lifetime Achievement Award recognizes people who have distinguished themselves by their contributions to the trombone profession over a long career.  

Chicago became the first non-classical group to perform six nights in a row at Carnegie Hall 50 years ago. Between April 5 and 10, 1971, the band played eight shows at the celebrated venue (including two matinees) and recorded every one of them. In October of that year, performance highlights were featured on the band’s first-ever live album, Chicago at Carnegie Hall. That quadruple-LP reached #3 on the Billboard 200, was certified platinum, and is still the band’s best-selling live album. 

To honor the 50th anniversary of Chicago’s historic concerts, the band recently released all eight Carnegie Hall shows in their entirety for the first time in a new 16-CD deluxe boxed set. CHICAGO AT CARNEGIE HALL COMPLETE available through  www.rhino.com . 

Chicago founding member and trumpeter Lee Loughnane and engineer Tim Jessup spent nearly a year meticulously going through more than 40 concert tapes at Loughnane’s new studio in Arizona to remaster each concert. Their hard work paid off with eight fantastic-sounding shows. 

CHICAGO AT CARNEGIE HALL COMPLETE is presented in a white folio that’s embossed with the group’s trademark logo. The set beautifully commemorates the event through memorabilia that includes replicas of the three posters that accompanied the original vinyl release and images of the original concert program, tickets, and other memorabilia from the historic run. The collection also comes with a 28-page booklet illustrated with photos from the concerts, plus new liner notes with contributions by Loughnane; archivist Jeff Magid, writer/producer David Wild and comedy icon/Chicago fanatic Jimmy Pardo. 

Chicago’s lifetime achievements include two Grammy Awards, two American Music Awards, Founding Artists of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, a Chicago street dedicated in their honor, and keys to and proclamations from an impressive list of US cities. Record sales top the 100,000,000 mark, and include 21 Top 10 singles, 5 consecutive Number One albums, 11 Number One singles and 5 Gold singles. An incredible 25 of their 37 albums have been certified platinum, and the band has a total of 47 gold and platinum awards.  

Chicago have toured every year since the beginning - they’ve never missed a year.  The original three band members are Robert Lamm on keyboards and vocals, Lee Loughnane on trumpet and vocals and James Pankow on trombone. The band line-up also includes Wally Reyes, Jr. on drums, Keith Howland on guitar and vocals, Lou Pardini on keyboards and vocals, Ray Herrmann on sax and flute, Neil Donell on vocals, Brett Simons on bass and Ramon "Ray" Yslas on percussion. 

From the signature sound of the Chicago horns, their iconic Vocalists, and a few dozen of ever-Classic Songs, this band’s concerts are celebrations.  2023 will mark the band’s 57th consecutive year of touring! 

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The Original Members Of The Band Chicago

chicago tour band members

The legendary rock band Chicago has been making music for over 50 years, but who were the original members that started it all? This in-depth look at the origins of Chicago will introduce you to the band members that paved the way for decades of chart-topping hits.

If you’re short on time, here’s a quick answer to your question: The original members of Chicago were Robert Lamm, Lee Loughnane, James Pankow, Walter Parazaider, Terry Kath, Peter Cetera, and Danny Seraphine .

The Early Days and Formation

The band Chicago, originally known as The Chicago Transit Authority, was formed in 1967 in the vibrant city of Chicago, Illinois. The band emerged during a time when rock music was undergoing a significant transformation, and their unique blend of rock, jazz, and brass instrumentation quickly set them apart from other bands of the era.

How Chicago was formed in 1967

The formation of Chicago can be traced back to a chance meeting between keyboardist Robert Lamm and guitarist Terry Kath. The two musicians began playing together and soon realized they had a special musical chemistry.

They decided to form a band and started recruiting other talented musicians from the local music scene.

Over time, the lineup was solidified with the addition of Peter Cetera on bass, Lee Loughnane on trumpet, James Pankow on trombone, Walter Parazaider on saxophone, and Danny Seraphine on drums. Each member brought their unique musical talents and influences to the group, creating a diverse and dynamic sound that would become their signature style.

The original lineup of 7 members

The original lineup of Chicago consisted of seven members, each contributing their own unique flair to the band’s sound. Robert Lamm served as the lead vocalist and keyboardist, while Terry Kath showcased his exceptional guitar skills.

Peter Cetera’s melodic bass lines and harmonies added depth to the band’s music, and Lee Loughnane, James Pankow, and Walter Parazaider formed a powerful brass section that set Chicago apart from other rock bands of the time.

Danny Seraphine’s drumming provided the solid foundation that held the band’s complex arrangements together.

This talented group of musicians quickly gained recognition for their energetic live performances and innovative approach to songwriting. Their fusion of rock, jazz, and brass elements created a fresh and exciting sound that resonated with audiences around the world.

Their inspiration from bands like The Beatles

Like many bands of their generation, Chicago drew inspiration from legendary acts such as The Beatles. The Fab Four’s groundbreaking approach to songwriting and studio experimentation influenced Chicago’s creative process and helped shape their sound.

However, Chicago took their musical influences a step further by incorporating elements of jazz and brass instrumentation, giving their music a unique and distinctive edge.

Chicago’s ability to seamlessly blend different musical genres and create complex arrangements set them apart from their contemporaries. They were not afraid to experiment and push the boundaries of what was considered traditional rock music at the time.

This willingness to innovate and explore new musical territories allowed Chicago to carve out their own niche in the music industry and achieve great success.

Today, Chicago’s early days and formation serve as a testament to the power of musical collaboration and the enduring legacy of a band that continues to captivate audiences with their timeless music.

Robert Lamm – Keyboard/Vocals

Robert Lamm, born on October 13, 1944, is a talented musician known for his proficiency in playing the keyboard and his soulful vocals. He was one of the original members of the iconic rock band, Chicago.

Background and musical influences

Lamm’s musical journey began at a young age. Growing up in Brooklyn, New York, he was exposed to a diverse range of music styles, including jazz, classical, and R&B. These influences would later shape his unique musical style within Chicago.

During his early years, Lamm was inspired by legendary musicians like Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, and The Beatles. Their innovative approach to music sparked his passion for experimentation and pushing the boundaries of traditional rock music.

His role as a founding member

As one of the founding members of Chicago, Lamm played a crucial role in shaping the band’s sound and direction. His expertise in playing the keyboard brought a distinct texture and richness to the band’s music. Moreover, his vocal abilities added depth and emotion to their songs.

Together with the other original members, Lamm helped establish Chicago’s signature fusion of rock, jazz, and pop, setting them apart from other bands of the era. Their unique sound, characterized by intricate horn arrangements and memorable melodies, contributed to their immense popularity and success.

Notable contributions to Chicago’s songs

Lamm’s songwriting prowess was evident in many of Chicago’s greatest hits. He penned and co-wrote several of the band’s iconic songs, including “25 or 6 to 4,” “Saturday in the Park,” and “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?”

His compositions showcased his versatility as a songwriter, seamlessly blending different genres and creating timeless classics.

With his keyboard skills and soulful vocals, Lamm also played a significant role in delivering captivating live performances. His energy and stage presence added an extra layer of excitement to Chicago’s concerts, captivating audiences around the world.

To this day, Robert Lamm remains an integral part of Chicago’s legacy. His contributions as a keyboardist, vocalist, and songwriter continue to be celebrated, and his influence on the band’s sound is undeniable.

Lee Loughnane – Trumpet/Vocals

Lee Loughnane, one of the original members of the legendary band Chicago, is known for his exceptional trumpet skills and vocal contributions. With his unique blend of talent and creativity, Loughnane has left an indelible mark on the music industry.

Background and early music career

Born on October 21, 1946, in Elmwood Park, Illinois, Lee Loughnane developed a passion for music at a young age. He started playing the trumpet in his school’s band and quickly discovered his natural talent for the instrument.

Loughnane’s dedication and love for music led him to pursue a career in the industry.

Before joining Chicago, Loughnane honed his skills by playing in various local bands in the Chicago area. He gained valuable experience and earned a reputation as a skilled and versatile musician. These early experiences laid the foundation for his future success with Chicago.

His technical trumpet skills

Lee Loughnane’s trumpet skills are truly remarkable. His ability to play intricate melodies and execute complex musical arrangements with precision has made him a standout musician in the industry. Loughnane’s technical prowess on the trumpet has earned him the admiration of both fans and fellow musicians alike.

Throughout his career with Chicago, Loughnane has showcased his trumpet skills in numerous hit songs. His solos have become iconic parts of the band’s music, adding a distinctive flair to their sound. Loughnane’s trumpet playing is a testament to his dedication and mastery of his craft.

Vocal contributions to Chicago’s hits

In addition to his trumpet skills, Lee Loughnane has also made significant vocal contributions to Chicago’s hits. His smooth and soulful voice has been featured in many of the band’s songs, providing a perfect complement to the lead vocals.

Loughnane’s vocal talent is best showcased in songs like “Call on Me” and “Reruns.” His harmonies and backing vocals add depth and richness to Chicago’s sound, creating a truly immersive listening experience. Loughnane’s vocal range and control have made him an integral part of the band’s success.

To learn more about Lee Loughnane’s contributions to Chicago, you can visit the official Chicago website: https://chicagotheband.com/ .

James Pankow – Trombone

Background and early artistic talents.

James Pankow, born on August 20, 1947, in St. Louis, Missouri, is renowned for his exceptional talent as a trombonist. From a young age, Pankow displayed a natural aptitude for music, and his parents encouraged his artistic pursuits.

He began studying the trombone in grade school and continued honing his skills throughout his teenage years.

Pankow’s passion for music led him to attend Quincy College in Illinois, where he further developed his musical abilities. It was during this time that he discovered his love for jazz and big band music, which would later become defining elements of Chicago’s signature sound.

Innovative trombone playing style

Pankow’s trombone playing style brought a unique and innovative approach to the band Chicago. He seamlessly blended traditional jazz elements with rock and pop, creating a sound that was both energetic and sophisticated.

Pankow’s technical mastery of the trombone allowed him to create complex melodies and harmonies, adding depth and richness to the band’s compositions.

His distinctive tone and impeccable timing made him a standout member of the band, and his solos became highly anticipated moments in their live performances. Pankow’s proficiency on the trombone elevated the band’s music to new heights, setting them apart from their contemporaries.

Songwriting contributions to the band

Not only did Pankow excel as a trombonist, but he also made significant contributions as a songwriter for Chicago. His compositions showcased his versatility and ability to write in various musical styles.

Pankow’s songs often featured intricate horn arrangements, highlighting his expertise in orchestration.

Among his notable songwriting credits are hits like “Make Me Smile,” “Just You ‘n’ Me,” and “Colour My World.” These songs exemplify Pankow’s ability to craft memorable melodies and capture the essence of Chicago’s sound.

His songwriting prowess played a vital role in shaping the band’s success and solidifying their place in music history.

For more information on James Pankow and his contributions to Chicago, you can visit https://www.chicagotheband.com .

Walter Parazaider – Woodwinds

Walter Parazaider is widely recognized as one of the original members of the iconic band Chicago. Born on March 14, 1945, in Maywood, Illinois, Parazaider played a crucial role in shaping the band’s unique sound with his exceptional skills on woodwind instruments.

Background and musical training

Parazaider’s musical journey began at a young age when he started playing the clarinet. He later expanded his repertoire to include other woodwind instruments such as the flute and saxophone. His passion for music led him to pursue a degree in music education at DePaul University in Chicago, where he honed his skills and developed a deep understanding of music theory.

During his time at DePaul, Parazaider met several musicians who would later become his bandmates in Chicago, including Terry Kath, Robert Lamm, and Danny Seraphine. They shared a common vision of blending rock, jazz, and classical music, which eventually became the foundation of Chicago’s distinctive sound.

Instrumental talents and stage presence

Parazaider’s instrumental talents were a key component of Chicago’s success. His fluid and expressive playing on the flute added a touch of elegance and sophistication to the band’s music, while his saxophone solos injected energy and excitement into their live performances.

Aside from his musical prowess, Parazaider also had a charismatic stage presence that captivated audiences. His lively performances and dynamic interactions with other band members helped create a memorable concert experience for fans around the world.

Collaborations with other Chicago members

Throughout Chicago’s extensive discography, Parazaider collaborated with his bandmates on numerous iconic songs. His woodwind arrangements can be heard on classics like “Make Me Smile,” “Saturday in the Park,” and “Beginnings.”

These collaborations showcased Parazaider’s creativity and ability to seamlessly integrate his instruments into the band’s complex arrangements.

Parazaider’s contribution to Chicago’s success is immeasurable. His unique playing style and dedication to pushing musical boundaries played a significant role in establishing the band as one of the most influential and enduring acts in rock history.

Terry Kath – Guitar/Vocals

Terry Kath, born on January 31, 1946, in Chicago, Illinois, was a founding member of the legendary band Chicago. Renowned for his exceptional guitar skills and powerful vocals, Terry played a key role in shaping the band’s sound and identity.

Let’s take a closer look at his journey in the world of music.

Early bands and Hendrix influence

Before joining Chicago, Terry Kath played in several local bands, honing his skills and developing his own unique style. One of the biggest influences on his guitar playing was none other than Jimi Hendrix.

Terry was captivated by Hendrix’s innovative approach to the instrument, and he incorporated elements of Hendrix’s style into his own playing.

It was during a Jimi Hendrix concert that Terry Kath had a truly life-altering experience. As the story goes, Hendrix invited Terry to jam with him on stage, an opportunity that few musicians could even dream of.

This encounter left a lasting impression on Terry, solidifying his dedication to music and inspiring him to push the boundaries of his own guitar playing.

Innovative guitar playing and showmanship

Terry Kath’s guitar playing was characterized by a unique blend of rock, jazz, and blues. He experimented with different techniques and effects, constantly pushing the limits of what the guitar could do. His solos were a masterclass in improvisation, showcasing his incredible skill and musicality.

In addition to his technical prowess, Terry was also known for his charismatic stage presence. He had a knack for captivating audiences with his energy and showmanship. Whether he was playing a blistering guitar solo or belting out a soulful vocal, Terry had a way of connecting with the crowd and leaving a lasting impression.

Unforgettable vocal performances

While Terry Kath’s guitar skills were a defining aspect of his contribution to Chicago, his vocals were equally impressive. His powerful and soulful voice added depth and emotion to the band’s songs. From the soulful ballad “Colour My World” to the rocking anthem “25 or 6 to 4,” Terry’s vocals were an integral part of Chicago’s sound.

One of the most memorable examples of Terry’s vocal prowess is his performance on the iconic song “Make Me Smile.” His soaring vocals and passionate delivery elevate the song to new heights, leaving listeners in awe of his talent.

Despite his untimely death in 1978, Terry Kath’s legacy as a guitarist and vocalist continues to inspire musicians to this day. His innovative playing, electrifying stage presence, and unforgettable vocals solidify his place as one of the original and most influential members of the band Chicago.

Peter Cetera – Bass/Vocals

Peter Cetera is widely known as the original bassist and one of the lead vocalists for the band Chicago. Born on September 13, 1944, in Chicago, Illinois, Cetera began his musical journey at a young age, playing various instruments and singing in his high school choir.

His passion for music led him to pursue a career in the industry, and he eventually became one of the most recognizable voices in rock history.

Musical origins and early bands

Cetera’s musical journey started in the 1960s when he joined a local rock band called The Exceptions. This early experience allowed him to refine his skills as a bassist and vocalist, laying the foundation for his future success.

In 1967, Cetera was introduced to a group of talented musicians who would go on to form the iconic rock band Chicago. Together, they would create a unique blend of rock, jazz, and pop that would captivate audiences around the world.

Bass skills and tenor vocal style

Cetera’s bass playing skills were a crucial component of Chicago’s sound. His melodic bass lines added depth and complexity to the band’s songs, creating a rich musical tapestry. In addition to his bass skills, Cetera’s tenor vocal style became a signature element of the band’s sound.

His smooth and emotive voice perfectly complemented the band’s brass section, and his vocal range allowed him to soar on the band’s ballads and anthems.

Lead singing on Chicago’s biggest hits

One of the highlights of Cetera’s career with Chicago was his lead vocals on some of the band’s biggest hits. Songs like “If You Leave Me Now,” “Hard to Say I’m Sorry,” and “You’re the Inspiration” showcased his remarkable voice and helped solidify Chicago’s place in music history.

Cetera’s heartfelt performances on these tracks resonated with audiences worldwide, earning the band numerous accolades and a devoted fan base.

For more information on Peter Cetera and his contributions to the band Chicago, you can visit the official Chicago website at https://chicagotheband.com/ .

Danny Seraphine – Drums

Early drumming inspirations.

Danny Seraphine, the original drummer of the band Chicago, is known for his incredible talent and versatile drumming skills. He was born and raised in Chicago, where he was exposed to a variety of musical genres from a young age.

Seraphine’s early drumming inspirations included jazz legends like Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich, who ignited his passion for the instrument.

As a teenager, Seraphine began honing his drumming skills by playing in local bands and studying different drumming styles. He quickly developed a reputation for his technical proficiency and innovative approach to drumming.

Jazz, rock, and Latin drumming styles

Seraphine’s drumming style was heavily influenced by his love for jazz, rock, and Latin music. He seamlessly blended these genres together to create a unique and dynamic sound for Chicago. His ability to incorporate complex jazz rhythms into rock music set him apart from other drummers of his time.

With his Latin-inspired drumming, Seraphine brought a new level of energy and excitement to Chicago’s music. His use of syncopated rhythms and intricate fills added a vibrant and infectious groove to the band’s songs.

Rhythmic foundation of Chicago’s signature sound

One of the key elements that contributed to Chicago’s iconic sound was Seraphine’s rhythmic foundation. His precise and dynamic drumming provided a solid backbone for the band’s melodic and harmonious compositions.

The combination of Seraphine’s impeccable timing, technical prowess, and creative drumming patterns helped establish Chicago as one of the most successful and influential bands of the 1970s and beyond.

His contributions to the band’s sound can be heard in hits like “25 or 6 to 4,” “Saturday in the Park,” and “Make Me Smile.”

To this day, Danny Seraphine’s drumming continues to be celebrated and revered by drummers around the world. His innovative approach to rhythm and his ability to blend different musical styles have left a lasting impact on the music industry.

Chicago was truly revolutionary in blending rock, jazz, and horn arrangements into a signature sound. The original genius of the 7 founding members gave the band its creative spark that still endures today. Through their innovative instrumental virtuosity and songwriting talents, the original lineup left an indelible mark on music history.

We covered the backgrounds, musical strengths, and notable contributions of each original member. Understanding where this band of musical trailblazers began provides a deeper appreciation for the vibrant legacy of Chicago.

chicago tour band members

Hi there, I'm Jessica, the solo traveler behind the travel blog Eye & Pen. I launched my site in 2020 to share over a decade of adventurous stories and vivid photography from my expeditions across 30+ countries. When I'm not wandering, you can find me freelance writing from my home base in Denver, hiking Colorado's peaks with my rescue pup Belle, or enjoying local craft beers with friends.

I specialize in budget tips, unique lodging spotlights, road trip routes, travel hacking guides, and female solo travel for publications like Travel+Leisure and Matador Network. Through my photography and writing, I hope to immerse readers in new cultures and compelling destinations not found in most guidebooks. I'd love for you to join me on my lifelong journey of visual storytelling!

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Chicago’s lee loughnane on the band’s new concert film and their debut album turning 55.

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The rock band Chicago: front (L-R) Lee Loughnane, Robert Lamm, James Pankow; back (L-R) Neil Donell, ... [+] Eric Baines, Ramon Yslas, Tony Obrohta, Ray Herrmann, Loren Gold, Walfredo Reyes Jr.

In November of last year, the veteran rock band Chicago performed a special show at Atlantic City’s Ocean Casino Resort that featured guest appearances by Steve Vai, Robert Randolph, Chris Daughtry, Judith Hill, VoicePlay, Robin Thicke and Christone “Kingfish” Ingram. For Chicago trumpeter and original member Lee Loughnane, the show marked a rare occasion of the band collaborating with multiple artists onstage.

“It was great to work with all the guest artists,” he says recently. “We don't have anybody sit in with us on a normal basis. And maybe if we do, it's like one person or something like that. But to have seven was challenging and very interesting to work with each one, and see how they brought their expertise to work with us and how they were able to give us their interpretation of our music. It was very cool watching it happen.”

The experience in Atlantic City was also filmed and is now being presented as Chicago & Friends in Concert , which will be screened in theaters this Thursday, April 18, and Sunday, April 21 (the film will be available in a variety of commercial formats in the future). A collaboration between the band, Fan Tracks, Iconic Events and Mercury Studios, Chicago & Friends in Concert features Chicago – led by co-founders Loughnane, trombonist James Pankow and keyboardist/singer Robert Lamm – playing over two hours of classic hits including “Saturday in the Park,” “25 or 6 to 4,” “Old Days, “If You Leave Me Now,” “Hard to Say I’m Sorry” and You’re the Inspiration.”

Loughnane felt that the special guest artists brought something new to the time-tested Chicago material as captured in the new film, which was executive produced by Decades Rock Live! series creator Barry Summers. “I think they had a great time too,” Loughnane says of the artists. “Talking to them backstage and then performing with them, you could see that they were enjoying what they were doing.”

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For his appearance, Thicke sang lead on two Chicago songs, including “Call on Me” (from 1974’s Chicago VII album) that Loughnane wrote. “I think he did a great job,” Loughnane says. “And interestingly enough, he's singing it in a little more falsetto, which you're not used to hearing. I think it added something different to the song that was very emotionally pleasing.”

Poster for 'Chicago & Friends in Concert.'

Another highlight from the shows was the vocal group VoicePlay performing such Chicago songs as “Look Away,” “If You Leave Me Now” and “Happy Man” with the band in an semi-acoustic setting. “At various times, we do an unplugged segment ourselves on stage just to sort of break it up,” Loughnane says. “It was great to hear how they approached our songs and how we were able to blend the two bands together.”

Meanwhile, Chicago will be marking another year of summer touring as they join forces with Earth, Wind and Fire again on the Heart and Soul tour beginning July 10 in Missouri. Says Loughnane: “We can't wait for it. We're going to rehearse a couple of days with Earth, Wind and Fire, and then do about 30 shows with them. We've always played the encore at the end, where we do a half-hour’s worth of music, three of their songs and three of our songs, and everybody plays. It's really cool.”

The new film and the upcoming summer tour with EWF come as Chicago marks the 55th anniversary of their groundbreaking debut album, The Chicago Transit Authority , which featured the original band lineup of Loughnane, Lamm, Pankow, guitarist Terry Kath saxophonist Walt Parazaider, drummer Danny Seraphine and bassist Peter Cetera. A good number of that album’s tracks were performed during the group’s Atlantic City appearance last year, including the deep cuts “Poem 58,” “South California Purples” and “Listen” for the first time in many years.

“We hadn't played them since we had enough hits…and people wanted to hear our current hits,” Loughnane says. “So as we amassed more hits and live performances, we weren't able to do the deeper cuts anymore because people would actually complain. Not that we weren't playing things that they would enjoy hearing, but they wanted to hear the hits even over the deeper cuts.”

Recorded in New York City with producer James William Guercio, The Chicago Transit Authority ( which was also Chicago’s original name) was an ambitious double album of jazz rock, progressive rock and pop. Upon its initial release, the record’s singles didn’t become immediate hits.

“Interestingly enough, AM radio wasn't ready for it either because when we initially released “Beginnings” and “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is,” they didn't want to play it,” Loughnane recalls. “Top 40 didn't want to play it because they said we hadn't had a hit yet. So that was the excuse, the catch-22 type thing. But obviously, how are you going to have a hit if you don't play it?”

But interest in the songs from The Chicago Transit Authority was revived when the band’s second album, 1970’s Chicago (a.k.a. Chicago II ), became a success and generated hits with “Make Me Smile,” “Colour My World” and “25 or 6 to 4.” “And then we went back and re-released the songs off of the first album,” Loughnane says, “So it worked for us in retrospect.

“The thing that was the most bizarre was the way the press acted toward it,” he continues, “because they put the first album as ‘groundbreaking,’ ‘way ahead of our time’ and all of that stuff. And then when we went back and re-released the songs [from The Chicago Transit Authority ] and they became hits, the same people started saying that we had sold out because the songs were hits. We hadn't changed one note on any of those songs. I think it told us that we should concentrate on what we're doing on our music, try to keep all of the other noise away from us, and just do what we enjoy doing.”

Not only did that debut album highlight the horns and Lamm’s songwriting but it also showcased the electrifying guitar work of Kath, who died in 1978. “Terry is greatly overlooked as far as the greatest guitar players of all time in pop music. And he got overlooked because, I think, unfortunately, the horns got more notoriety than the guitar. People who listen to it now go, ‘Oh, my God. Who is this guitar player?’ And he's getting more applause for what he did. He left us way, way too soon. But finally, he's getting some recognition.”

On The Chicago Transit Authority ’s legacy, Loughnane ranks it up there alongside other Chicago albums such as II , III , VII , 16 and 17 . Coincidentally, Chicago 17 is marking a special anniversary by turning 40 this year–it remains the group’s best-selling studio album with the hits “You’re the Inspiration.” “Hard Habit to Break,” “Stay the Night” and “Along Comes a Woman.”

“It definitely [a turning point] was because David Foster came in as a producer and he focused in on the tenor voice in the band,” Loughnane says of 17 . “ And he focused in on using the horns as more of an effect than you know really doing full-on brass arrangements like we had in the past. So me, Jimmy and Walt picked up other instruments and were able to get better at other instruments during that period. It was a pretty interesting time for us, but in no way did we think we were ever going to stop playing horns. If someone was attempting to get us out of the band, we weren't going to go without a problem.”

The combined success of Chicago 16 and Chicago 17 connected the band to the MTV generation after their commercial fortunes dwindled during the late ‘70s. “ 16 and 17 became like a second wave of success for us where people saw our 16th and 17th album [and] they thought those were the first and second [Chicago] albums. They were growing up during that period. And so they would say, ‘Mom and Dad, look at this!’ And then Mom and Dad would go get the albums from I to XV and say, ‘You mean these guys?’”

As for the future, Loughnane says the band is writing new music though but has no plans at the moment to put it on an album (the group’s last studio record was 2022’s Chicago XXXVIII: Born for This Moment ). Fifty-seven years into Chicago’s existence, Loughnane could have never imagined the band would endure this long amid changing trends and lineup changes (in addition to Loughnane, Lamm and Pankow, the current band configuration features singer Neil Donell, drummer Walfredo Reyes Jr, bassist Eric Baines, guitarist Tony Obrohta, keyboardist Loren Gold, percussionist Ramon Yslas and saxophonist Ray Herrmann).

“I am ecstatic that we're still able to do this for a living, says Loughnane, adding, “I would have thought we're lucky if we get one album and maybe two. That's the way we were thinking back then. There's no way to look you know this far ahead and have any idea that you would be able to do this at this level, especially.”

Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016, Chicago still garners airplay and concertgoers. The group has also generated admiration from musicians of different generations as indicated by the diverse guests on Chicago & Friends in Concert . “It's very gratifying to see that they have not only respect for their music, but we have influenced their music in some way and they felt honored to be able to come and share that with us,” says Loughnane.

‘Chicago & Friends in Concert’ will be in theaters on Thursday, April 18, and Sunday, April 21. For information on venues and showtimes, visit chicagoandfriendsintheatres.com .

David Chiu

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Chicago’s Lee Loughnane On The Band’s New Concert Film And Their Debut Album Turning 55

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In November of last year, the veteran rock band Chicago performed a special show at Atlantic City’s Ocean Casino Resort that featured guest appearances by Steve Vai, Robert Randolph, Chris Daughtry, Judith Hill, VoicePlay, Robin Thicke and Christone “Kingfish” Ingram. For Chicago trumpeter and original member Lee Loughnane, the show marked a rare occasion of the band collaborating with multiple artists onstage. “It was great to work with all the guest artists,” he says recently. “We don't have anybody sit in with us on a normal basis. And maybe if...

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The three members of Drinking Boys and Girls Choir pose backstage at Chicago's Thalia Hall, March 9, while on tour in the United States. Courtesy of Fleurette Estes

CHICAGO — Drinking Boys and Girls Choir's founding members Bae Meena and Kim Myeong-jin (MJ) have been relentless in the face of adversity and indifference after forming the skate punk band way back in 2013 in Daegu .

Punk music has never been hugely popular in Korea, but after signing to Britain-based label Damnably , they had the opportunity to tour Britain in 2019. They toured Europe in early 2020 and plans were made for a U.S. tour later that year, but you can guess what happened next. In March 2024, they were finally able to tour the United States as well as Canada with labelmates Otoboke Beaver from Japan .

From Feb. 20 until March 30, the two East Asian bands played 27 shows in the U.S. and two in Canada.

The three members of Drinking Boys and Girls Choir perform at Thalia Hall in Chicago, March 9, during their U.S. tour. Courtesy of Fleurette Estes

The three members of Drinking Boys and Girls Choir perform at Thalia Hall in Chicago, March 9, during their U.S. tour. Courtesy of Fleurette Estes

During their two nights at Chicago’s Thalia Hall on March 9 and 10, DBGC ran into some old friends and made some new ones. Here are two perspectives of that show, one from an old fan, and one from a new one.

New fan, photographer Fleurette Estes

I was excited to have the opportunity to photograph DBGC at Thalia Hall in Chicago. I mean who doesn’t want to see an all-girl punk band from Korea, right? When we met with them for an interview, they were the kindest people I’ve ever met! If time had permitted, I would have loved to just hang out with them. I am looking forward to seeing them again in the future.

The three members of Drinking Boys and Girls Choir pose with Fleurette Estes, lower right, Kyle Decker, back left, and sound engineer Young-do at Chicago's Thalia Hall, March 9, while on tour in the U.S. Courtesy of Raymond B. Estes

The three members of Drinking Boys and Girls Choir pose with Fleurette Estes, lower right, Kyle Decker, back left, and sound engineer Young-do at Chicago's Thalia Hall, March 9, while on tour in the U.S. Courtesy of Raymond B. Estes

Whatever expectations I had were blown away! I’d heard about how much energy they have and, well, they have enough for 100 people. And they sounded great! Sometimes you prepare for a show and you never really know what a show is going to be like in person. Thalia Hall was a great place to experience them for the first time. I hope more people get out to see them and support these amazingly talented gems. Especially in their home country!

I first met Megan in the lounge room before Meena and MJ joined us. Megan greeted us by offering beverages. I was immediately surprised at how down-to-earth, nice and accommodating she was. I wish the roles were reversed — I felt like I should have been the one offering her a beverage. We sat down for a small chat before Meena and MJ came in.

Many moments stood out during the show. But seeing MJ on the drums was the best! She is a beast! She is about five feet tall (152.4 cm) and has the most incredible stamina. It was amazing and an inspiration to female punk rockers.

Drinking Boys and Girls Choir's MJ plays the drums during a show at Thalia Hall in Chicago, March 9. Courtesy of Fleurette Estes

Drinking Boys and Girls Choir's MJ plays the drums during a show at Thalia Hall in Chicago, March 9. Courtesy of Fleurette Estes

You can tell that Meena and MJ have been playing together for over 12 years, but it's unbelievable to me that this lineup has been together for only a little over a year. Megan has fit in seamlessly and brings a fresh breath of air to the group. The drums were on point, the bass and guitar played well, and the vocals were awesome!

I loved looking at the crowd and seeing their response as they danced and sang to the music. You can also tell that the band was having fun doing their thing.

Witnessing all three members enjoying the moments like playing a sold-out show was inspiring not only to me but to many fans, too.

DBGC had so much energy. Considering they had been on tour for almost two weeks at this point, I was amazed at how vibrant they were. I’ve been following them on social media and being able to see fans across the U.S. excited to be part of their sold-out shows is pretty incredible. They deserve the welcome and recognition for their music and the hard work it took to get them here. And to be an all-woman band paves the way for more women punk rockers not only in South Korea and the U.S. but worldwide.

Fleurette Estes is a Navajo visual artist originally from the Southwest United States now residing in Chicago. Drawn to a variety of subjects, from florals to landscapes, Fleurette celebrates her native cultural background as her main subject. Her work has been shown through four online publications, Dying Scene, Native Hoop, ReGen and Statik Magazines. When she is not photographing, Fleurette enjoys painting, crafting, participating at any of the American Indian Center events and attending live music shows with her husband.

Old fan and friend of the band, Kyle Decker

Smiths founder Morrissey once sang, “We hate it when our friends become successful.” But standing amid a sold-out crowd at Chicago’s 800-capacity Thalia Hall as my good friends and former scene mates DBGC took the stage, nothing felt further from the truth. My heart swelled to the point of bursting. The joy was overwhelming.

While living in Daegu, the city’s music scene was quite literally underground as most of the venues were in basements. Bands came and went at a dizzying rate. Foreigners are on a constant rotation and the Korean men who are of the age at which one typically plays in punk and indie bands get sent to their army conscription. Yet DBGC was and remains a constant. My own band at the time, Food for Worms , played our first show with them at the long-gone Jengiy Collective in September 2014.

I got a chance to meet up with OG members Meena and MJ at Bang Bang Pie and Biscuits for lunch before their Chicago show, and we reminisced about the bands and clubs in Daegu during that era. We recalled defunct clubs like Jengiy and Urban, and the still-active Club Heavy and Led Zeppelin. They filled me in on the renovations at Communes. We discussed bands like Sevendred, Skanking Bunny, Skaleton, Keukryul and The Plastic Kiz — a former project of MJ’s. These days, it seems, the punk scene is them, Meena and MJ, Daegu’s first two punks and last two punks.

While DBGC may struggle to gather people in its hometown, the Windy City showed up en masse. It had been on a 42-day tour across North America with Japanese punk band Otoboke Beaver, finally doing what was supposed to happen over three years ago. It has been getting some State-side buzz ever since they played SXSW in 2019, but its jaunts on this side of the pond had yet to bring them to Chicago. And say what you will about this city, it treats bands well. DBGC's unique plethora of angelic harmonies sung over lightning-fast So Cal-style melodic punk has been warmly embraced by the Midwest's largest city.

Meena, bassist of Drinking Boys and Girls Choir, performs at Thalia Hall in Chicago, March 9. Courtesy of Fleurette Estes

Meena, bassist of Drinking Boys and Girls Choir, performs at Thalia Hall in Chicago, March 9. Courtesy of Fleurette Estes

I happened to mention at a Super Bowl party that some friends of mine from a Korean band were touring with Otoboke Beaver, and someone chimed in, "You know Drinking Boys and Girls Choir!?" When I was standing in the audience on the second night — Chicago needed two nights — someone shouted, "Play ‘ Oh My California ,’” a song the band has been doing for 12 years. This was a song I’d seen the band play to a room in its local scene that consisted only of the other bands on the bill and the significant others of said bands. And one they’d done the night before, to enthusiastic response.

“We are not in California,” vocalist Meena responded wryly, “we are in Chicago.”

To see hundreds of people go buck-wild to its cover of The Blue Hearts' “ Linda, Linda ,” another long-standing part of its set? I nearly cried. This is what the band deserved.

Meena had the audience eating out of her hand like petting zoo ponies. She even dove into the audience to slap some bass amid a circle pit. MJ has always been a beast on the drums, and she’s only gotten faster and more precise. The woman is a blur. And relative newcomer Megan Nisbet brings more guitar prowess than any other member who has cycled through that role. Her chill stage demeanor while shredding solos provided a wonderful juxtaposition to Meena’s wild, audience-baiting antics.

Megan of Drinking Boys and Girls Choir performs during a show at Thalia Hall in Chicago, March 9. Courtesy of Fleurette Estes

Megan of Drinking Boys and Girls Choir performs during a show at Thalia Hall in Chicago, March 9. Courtesy of Fleurette Estes

The band has made it its mission to show the world that Korean music has more to offer the world than K-pop, although the members will roll their eyes at the “ K-punk ” label, and the tendency to slap a “K-” on anything coming out of Korea.

It’s been a long road for Daegu's most resilient punks. But as the band's first album’s title suggests, the mbmers just “ Keep Drinking .” Album #2, “ Marriage License ,” picked up international buzz and found itself on SPIN’s best of the year list. But these women have their eyes ever forward. They released a new single, “ History ,” earlier this year. Given that the recording features Nisbet on guitar, the track is a great example of what DBGC will sound like moving forward.

As for their next target? They have their sights set on putting together a headlining tour. And when that day comes, and they pass through Chicago I will gather every punk, skater and fan of great music I can find. Daegu might not fully appreciate what they’ve had sitting under their noises for 12 years, but Chicago does. And it took them less than two nights.

Kyle Decker is a Chicago-based author, educator and punk vocalist. He lived in Daegu from 2013 to 2018, where he fronted the multi-national punk band Food for Worms and co-organized the Once a Month Punk show series. He currently provides vocals for Bad Chemicals, the punk band from his 2023 novel "This Rancid Mill."

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FROM CHICAGO TO THE COAST: TERRAPIN FLYER'S WESTERN WONDERLAND TOUR

Article contributed by gratefulweb | published on tuesday, april 16, 2024.

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Terrapin Flyer will soon embark on its Spring Tour of the western United States. The tour will hit 7 states, 15 shows in 23 days.  Terrapin Flyer is a Chicago-based Grateful Dead band performing for the last 25 years with the best musicians in the Grateful Dead extended family of musicians. Previous tours have featured former members of the Grateful Dead: Tom Constanten and Vince Welnick, former Jerry Garcia Band Melvin Seals, and many other prominent musicians. The band has a dedicated following across the United States and is currently enjoying some of their greatest success.

This is in no small part to lead guitarist Josh Olken who is recognized as one of the best guitarists emulating the sound and style of Jerry Garcia. Josh has been performing in Terrapin Flyer for the last 10 years and cut his teeth with Melvin Seals and Tom Constanten who both thought he was a great up-and-coming player in the Grateful Dead scene. Melvin was often impressed enough to comment about how Josh’s tone was so on target with Jerry’s. Also though Josh would play much like Jerry, Melvin recognized that Josh was throwing in classic jazz licks from artists like Coltrane, Miles Davis, and others. Melvin loved playing with Josh at shows, they would often trade licks and you’d see Melvin smiling that familiar smile that lights up any room.

Josh Olken of Terrapin Flyer | Photo by June Jameson

Inputting the influence of other musicians and incorporating it all into a fresh and unique approach that is hauntingly familiar and multidimensional makes Josh such a compelling player to not just other musicians but to Deadheads in general. Terrapin Flyer audiences have been growing steadily since Josh has been in the band as word of mouth spreads about his ethereal playing. It’s a psychedelic style that gets in your head and tells a story. It’s emotional and complex, similar to what made Jerry Garcia so unique. It’s difficult to emulate and often those who attempt to copy end up with a hollow recreation. Josh can capture that style and that is why so many are recognizing his presence.

You can see Josh and Terrapin Flyer on the band’s Spring Tour starting on April 26 with a special Josh birthday show at the Chop Shop in Chicago. The entire tour is listed below:

4/26 Chop Shop Chicago IL

5/2 Club Fox Redwood City CA

5/3 & 4 Axiom Repertory Theatre Redding CA

5/7 Lost Camp Bar & Grill Kerby OR

5/8 Talent Club Talent OR

5/9 The WOW Hall Eugene OR

5/10 Volcanic Theatre Pub Bend OR

5/11 Showdown Saloon Portland OR

5/14 The Shakedown Bellingham WA

5/15 High Dive Seattle WA

5/16 The Hive Sandpoint ID

5/17 The Wilma Missoula MT

5/18 The ELM Bozeman MT

5/19 The State Room Salt Lake City UT

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On the Town: OKC Broadway hosts ‘Chicago’ tour

By: Lillie-Beth Brinkman // The Journal Record // April 11, 2024 //

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A Chicago Story

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The History of One of the Most Popular Rock Bands of All Time

Perhaps more than any other city in the United States, Chicago, located at the center of the nation, has reflected the cultural diversity that has served as both a nurturer of significant musical talent and a magnet that drew the best from other areas. Jazzman Lionel Hampton arrived in Chicago when he was 11 years old in 1919, blues man Muddy Waters got there in 1943, when be was 28. But Benny Goodman, the King of Swing, didn’t have to travel, he was born in Chicago in 1909.

In 1967, Chicago musicians Walter Parazaider, Terry Kath, Danny Seraphine, Lee Loughnane, James Pankow, Robert Lamm, and Peter Cetera formed a group with one dream, to integrate all the musical diversity from their beloved city and weave a new sound, a rock ‘n’ roll band with horns. Their dream turned into record sales topping the 100,000,000 mark, including 21 Top 10 singles, 5 consecutive Number One albums, 11 Number One singles and 5 Gold singles. An incredible 25 of their 34 albums have been certified platinum, and the band has a total of 47 gold and platinum awards.

Chapter I – A Dream

Most pop stars who emerged in the 1960’s will tell you that they got their inspiration by seeing Elvis Presley perform on TV in the ’50’s. But Walter Parazaider, born in Chicago on March 14, 1945, had a slightly different experience. “I started playing when I was nine years old because I saw Benny Goodman on The Ed Sullivan Show,” he says. “I was a clarinetist to start with.” Parazaider came by his interest in music naturally. His father was a musician who had turned from full-time to part-time work when he started a family. “I can’t think of a time growing up when there wasn’t music in the house,” Parazaider says, “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, and that’s from my earliest recollection.” As a result, when he began to take an interest in playing music himself, “the support that I had from my mother and father over the years was phenomenal.” Parazaider studied and practiced the clarinet for the next several years, and by his teens had displayed so much proficiency that he became the protege of Jerome Stowell, who was the E-flat clarinetist in the Chicago symphony.

chicago tour band members

Pursuant to that goal, Parazaider enrolled at Chicago’s DePaul University, where his teacher, Hobie Grimes, taught, all the while still playing “Many gigs and smoke-filled rooms and dance halls, and also some orchestra balls.” It was at DePaul that he met another young Chicago musician, Jimmy Guercio, who years later would become Chicago’s producer. “We started playing in different rock ‘n’ roll bands in the area,” Parazaider recalls, “played a lot of the beer bashes at Northwestern University and the surrounding colleges in the area, and we became quite friendly.” Meanwhile, Parazaider was maintaining his “schizoid” musical existence at DePaul, though with increasing difficulty. He recalls, “After about a year and a half of realizing I didn’t want to study trigonometry and how to teach health class in school, and also realizing with the help of some of my professors that, because I wasn’t a patient person, I wasn’t cut out to be a teacher. I changed my major. I prepared for about a year and a half and played a degree recital for the principal members of the Chicago symphony and an audience. I passed with flying colors and received a playing degree in orchestral clarinet. In the meantime, I had taken all my masters credits in English Lit.”

But while doing all that academia work, Parazaider had also gotten a non-classical musical idea he thought had promise: a rock ‘n’ roll band with horns. In the trendy world of pop music, horns took a back seat in the mid-’60’s, when bands, imitating the four-piece rhythm section of the Beatles, stayed with the limits of guitars-bass-drums. Even the Saxophone, so much a part of ’50’s rock ‘n’ roll, was heard less often. Only in R&B, which maintained something of the big band tradition, did people such as James Brown and others continue to use horn sections regularly.

In the summer of l966, the Beatles turned around and brought horns back. Their Revolver album featured songs such as “Got To Get You Into My Life,” which included two trumpets and two tenor saxophones.

Chapter II – The Birth of a Band

chicago tour band members

Loughnane, born in Chicago on October 21, 1946, was the son of a former trumpet player. “My dad was a product of the Swing Era,” he recalls. “He was a bandleader in the Army Air Force in World War II.” In that capacity, Chief Warrant Officer Loughnane worked with some of the top players from the big bands of the era, who had been drafted. But he also came in contact with their lifestyles. “My dad knew that they were only going to be with him for a certain amount of time, and then they were going to get shipped out to the front lines,” says Loughnane. “So, he was a little more lax in his discipline than he might have been under other circumstances. Some of the guys would go AWOL on weekends to play gigs in town and then come back drunk or high on something, and my dad would cover for them. As a result, he gained a dislike for drugs and alcohol, and when he left the army, he left the music behind. The only thing he brought home was his trumpet, which was the first one that I used. I had never heard him play.”

Loughnane began trying to play that trumpet at the age of 11. When he was 11, in the summer of 1959, between seventh and eighth grades, he met with the band director, Ralph Meltzer. “He wanted me to show him my teeth,” Loughnane recalls. “If you have any crooked teeth, you start messing up your lip because of the pressure. My teeth were okay. He gave me some “Mary Had A Little Lamb” books, and I couldn’t wait to go home and play the songs. My dad then found me a private teacher by the name of John Nuzzo. He started giving me some lessons, and my playing improved immensely.”

When Loughnane went to high school, be enrolled at St. Mel’s High School rather than St. Patrick’s, which was much closer to his home, because St. Mel’s had a concert band, a jazz band, and a marching band. Also, the band director, Tom Fabish, had taught Loughnane’s father when he was in high school. “Tom was a major influence on my playing, and he and my dad wanted me to go to a school where l could play music,” he says. “I didn’t like the marching part of it too much, however. They could never get me to lift any legs up and look good as a marcher. ‘You want to hear the parts or you want me to march?’ I was always into making the music sound good, and that still lives within my thinking on-stage. But now I have learned how to be more of a performer and still play as good as I can rather than trying to jump around and miss a lot of notes. I’ve always thought it was very important to be true to the music.”

By the time he graduated from high school in 1964, Loughnane knew that he wanted to be a professional musician. “There was nothing else that I wanted to do,” he recalls. “I had no other calling.”

“Tom Fabish was also the band director at DePaul University, so when I got ready to enroll in college, it was the perfect school. Tom, my dad, and I decided that if I was intent upon a career in music, I should get a teaching degree for insurance, just in case my lofty plans at success as a professional musician didn’t pan out.” But, as with Parazaider, it didn’t work out that way. “I loved the music classes, but I didn’t so much love the general education classes that I had to take in order to get that kind of degree,” Loughnane says, “and I would get to the point where I just wouldn’t go to those classes.”

Maybe that was because his extracurricular activities were taking up so much of his time. Like other future members of Chicago, Loughnane began performing in local groups. First, there was the Shannon Show Band, an Irish group in which he found himself part of a three-man horn section trumpet, trombone, and tenor saxophone just like the one Chicago would use. Catering to the large Irish population of the city, the Shannon Show Band appeared at such venues as the Blarney Club, playing Elvis Presley, country and western, and Top 40 music, in addition to the obligatory Irish waltzes. “I even sang my first lead vocal in that band,” Loughnane recalls. “I sang “Kicks,” by Paul Revere and the Raiders. I was so good at it that I became a singing sensation with Chicago. I sang three leads on 23 albums!”

Loughnane’s other band in this period was Ross and the Majestics, who earned a residency one summer in a bar in the basement of the Palmer House, a ritzy Chicago hotel. To take the gig, Loughnane was forced to leave a summer job his father had arranged for him on the graveyard shift at Revere Copper and Brass Company. “Dad and I disagreed on my decision to take the job with Ross, but that was the band at the time, and I couldn’t let them down.”

Another summer job at the Chicago State Hospital only confirmed Loughnane’s dislike of manual labor. “I knew that playing the trumpet was a lot more fun and definitely easier on the back,” he says. Later that summer, be decided it was time to spread his wings. “I went out and got an apartment, and then I met Terry.”

Through Kath, Loughnane met Seraphine and Parazaider, and he started to sit in with the Missing Links. Terry and I became thick as thieves,” he recalls. “Walt was the only horn player in that band, and he encouraged me to come by and sit in a lot so there would be two horns and you could get that octave R&B sound. It was sort of the thing at the time, and I really enjoyed playing with the band.”

Now, Parazaider, Kath, Seraphine, and Loughnane decided to develop Parazaider’s concept for a rock ‘n roll band with horns. To make the concept work, they needed to bring in additional band members. The first musician Parazaider approached, in the fall of 1966, was a newly transferred DePaul sophomore from Quincy College who played trombone. “Walt had been kind of keeping an eye on me in school,” says James Pankow. “He approached me and said, “Hey, man, I’ve been checking you out, and I like your playing, and I think you got it. I said, “Well, what do you mean, I got it?” He had that twinkle in his eye, and I figured, well, whatever the hell be means, I guess he likes what I do.”

Pankow, born in St. Louis, Missouri, on August 20, 1947, had certainly spent enough time with his instrument by then to have gotten something. “I was in fifth grade, and my folks realized that I was a human beat box,” he says. “I was kicking to records in the crib before I could walk, and I was snapping my fingers and tapping on walls and making all kinds of gestures in tempo with whatever music they were listening to. They figured they better channel this nervous energy, so they took me to an audition at the local elementary school, and I of course wanted to play drums or guitar or sax. Nobody wanted to play trombone. It wasn’t cool.”

But a conference took place between Pankow’s parents and the band director (who happened to be a trombone player), and, as Pankow notes, “might makes right, and between my parents and the band director, they persuaded me to try something that was less competitive. So, bottom line, I wound up with the trombone, and for the first three years it was sheer hell.”

One reason for this was the difficulty for a ten year-old in maneuvering such a large instrument. “It was like putting a dwarf in a semi and telling him to drive to New York,” says Pankow. But by his mid-teens, with the encouragement of a father with an enormous record collection who took him out to local nightspots, Pankow began to enjoy the horn, so much so that he even persevered with it during three bruised and bloody years spent with braces on his teeth.

Pankow’s musical aspirations were encouraged at Notre Dame High School by Father George Wiskirchen, who, he remembers, “wrote the book on high school jazz lab and big bands,” and who took the young trombone player under his wing. “I played in concert band and marching band,” Pankow says, “but the high school jazz band was my saving grace and my real love.”

After high school, Pankow won a full music scholarship to Quincy College, but like Parazaider and Loughnane, he was starting to be tempted from his studies by the fun he could have and the money he could earn in bar bands. After his freshman year, he went home for summer vacation and put a band together that got work doing society parties, colleges, weddings, and bar mitzvahs. He also acquired an agent who got him pickup gigs with all the big bands coming through Chicago. As fall approached, Pankow had become so involved with his work that he did not want to give it up. He telephoned his teacher at Quincy to say he was not returning for the fall semester. But be intended to continue his education, and so enrolled at DePaul.

Pankow’s recruitment brought the new band’s complement of horns up to three, but they still needed bass and keyboards. They thought they had found both in a dive on the South Side when they heard piano player “Bobby Charles” of Bobby Charles and the Wanderers, whose real name was Robert Lamm.

Lamm, born in Brooklyn, New York, on October 13, 1944, like Pankow seemed to be rocking in the cradle. “I was interested in music from the time I was a toddler,” he says. “Both my mother and father were collectors of jazz records, and there always seemed to be music playing at our house.”

Lamm’s first formal music training came when his mother put him in a Brooklyn Heights choir. It was here that he began playing the piano and found that be could sit down and pick out songs by ear.

When Lamm was 15, his mother remarried and moved the family to Chicago, where he met other aspiring high school musicians and they put a band together. He also studied with the prominent jazz teacher Millie Collins. His idol became Ray Charles, who both wrote and played, and Lamm named himself after his hero. “I was writing songs in a band or two before Chicago,” he recalls, “the dubious quality of which is another discussion. Writing songs wasn’t yet the all-consuming passion it is now.”

Lamm received a phone call. He isn’t sure who called him, but the voice on the other end of the phone outlined the ideas of forming a band that could play rock ‘n roll with horns in it and asked it he was interested. He said he was. He was also asked if he knew how to play the bass pedals on an organ, thus filling up another sound in the band. “I lied and told them I could,” he says. “I needed to learn how to do it real quick, and I did, on the job.”

Lamm met the rest of the guys at a meeting set up to determine how to go about achieving their musical goals. The date was February 15, 1967. “We had a get together in Walter’s apartment on the north side of Chicago,” says Pankow. “It was Danny, Terry, Robert, Walter, Lee, and myself, and we agreed to devote our lives and our energies to making this project work.”

They rehearsed in Parazaider’s parents’ basement as often as they could. “We figured that the only people with horn sections that were really making any noise were the soul acts,” says Pankow, “so we kind of became a soul band doing James Brown and Wilson Pickett stuff.”

The group needed a name. Parazaider recalls: “An Italian friend of mine who was going to book us said, “You know, everybody is saying “Thing, Thing this, Thing that. There’s a lot of you. We’ll call you the Big Thing.”

Chapter III – The Big Thing

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In Niles, they arranged a meeting with Parazaider’s old friend Jimmy Guercio, who had become a producer for CBS Records. “He heard us play,” Parazaider recalls “He was very impressed.” It was the big break they had been looking for. Guercio told the band to hang on, that he would be in touch. Encouraged by this, they began to develop more of their own original material. “I began to write songs,” says Pankow. “Robert began to write more songs, and Terry Kath began to contribute material.”

Meanwhile, the Big Thing stayed on the Midwest club circuit through the fall, building a following. An engagement during the second week of December proved to be another important gig. “We were an opening act at Barnaby’s in Chicago for a band called the Exceptions, which was the biggest club band in the Midwest, and we stuck around and listened to them,” says Pankow. “I was just blown away.”

If the Big Thing had stayed late to see the Exceptions, one of the Exceptions had come early to see the Big Thing. “I had heard a lot about these guys,” says Peter Cetera, then the bass player for the Exceptions. “I was just floored ’cause they were doing songs that nobody else was doing, and in different ways. They were doing the Beatles’ “Magical Mystery Tour” and “Got To Get You Into My Life” and different versions of rock songs with horns.” After the gig, says Pankow, he approached us and said, “I don’t know what you guys are doing, but I like it. It’s really refreshing. It’s cool.” “At the end of the two-week stint, ” says Cetera, “I was out of the Exceptions and into the Big Thing.”

Peter Cetera was born in Chicago on September 13, 1944, and his first instrument was the accordion, which he took up then he was ten. “That’s unfortunately true,” he admits, when asked about it. “There was accordion and guitar, and for some reason I chose accordion. I don’t know why. I guess because I was half Polish, and we played a lot of polkas. It didn’t do me any good for my rock ‘n’ roll career, but it actually was a lot of fun.”

His more serious musical career commenced a little later. “I started listening to music,” he recalls, “and when I was a sophomore in high school, I bought a little guitar from Sears and started singing at the school functions. I met a senior who played guitar, and we started singing together.” He said, “Let’s start a group,” and I went, “Fine, I’ll buy a bass.” We played all the Homecoming dances and all the weekend dances, doing Top 40 material. My senior year, I got together with the Exceptions. I stuck with them for five or six years.”

Cetera perfectly fit the musical needs of the Big Thing. “We needed a bass player at the time,” notes Loughnane. “Robert was playing the bass pedals on the organ. He did a pretty good job, but there just wasn’t enough bottom with the bass pedals. You needed a real bass in the band. And we needed a tenor voice. We had two baritones (Lamm and Kath), so we had midrange and lower notes covered. But we needed a high voice for the same reason that you have three horns. You have trumpet, tenors and trombone. You cover as much range harmonically as you can, and we wanted to do the same thing vocally. When Peter joined the band, that solidified our vocals. You could get more color, musically, and we started building from there.”

It was probably at the Big Thing’s next appearance at Barnaby’s, March 6 – 10, l968, that Guercio came back for a second look. Impressed by the band’s improvement, he took action. “He told us to prepare for a move to L.A.,” says Pankow, “to keep working on our original material, and he would call us when he was ready for us.”

Chapter IV – Chicago Transit Authority

The band, now renamed Chicago Transit Authority by Guercio in honor of the bus line he used to ride to school, was in a creative fervor. Kath, Pankow, and especially Lamm were writing large amounts of original material, with Lamm completing two of the group’s most memorable songs, “Questions 67 and 68” and “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?” just prior to the departure from Chicago.

Guercio moved quickly. “He got a little two-bedroom house near the Hollywood Freeway, and he told us that he was ready,” Pankow recalls. “We made the move in June of 1968. We threw all of our lives in U-haul trailers and drove across the country. The married guys left their wives at home at first because they couldn’t afford to bring their families out. We got disturbance calls from the neighbors five times a day because all we did was practice day and night.”

The band began to play around the Los Angeles area. “I think we made all of $15, $20 at whatever beer hall we could play in the suburbs of Los Angeles for a while there,” says Parazaider.

chicago tour band members

According to the terms of his production deal with CBS, Guercio was given the opportunity to showcase prospective signings for the label three times. He arranged Chicago Transit Authority’s first showcase at the Whisky-A-Go-Go in August, but CBS’s West coast division turned them down. A month later, CBS turned CTA down again, strike two.

Running short of money, Guercio was asked to produce the second album by Blood, Sweat & Tears, a jazz-rock group on CBS. Intending to use his earnings from the project to continue funding Chicago Transit Authority and to find a way to get them signed to CBS, Guercio sought the band’s permission to produce someone else.

“Jimmy called me up, and be asked me to ask the other guys, would it be okay if he did the Blood, Sweat & Tears second album,” Parazaider recalls. “At first I was going, Well, jeez, man, that’s horns, and what’s going on?” and I voiced that opinion to him. He says, “To tell you the truth, I really haven’t recorded horns as a whole band situation. I’ve recorded horns that did sort of blaps here and there or little parts here and there. This would be a good way for me to learn how to record horns.” I don’t think it was lip service, because he really hadn’t recorded horns per se. We were basically a band with integrated horns in the band, not as backup horns. I had to believe him on this because, if you think about it, what the horn section did, from the start, was a lot different from Blood, Sweat & Tears, and the sound was copied many times over after we got the Chicago horn sound.” So, I think with Blood, Sweat & Tears the horns were recorded in a much different way than Chicago’s horns were. Of course, if you look at the two bands, you would say that they were really a jazz-rock ‘n’ roll band, where we were different. They called us a jazz-rock band after Blood, Sweat and Tears faded away, but we were basically a rock ‘n’ roll band with horns.”

Instead of risking another showcase with CBS, Guercio cut a demo of CTA, and when it began to get notice in the industry, CBS president Clive Davis reversed the decision of the West Coast executives and signed the group.

Seven months after arriving in California, almost two years since they had come together in Parazaider’s apartment, and after more than a cumulative half century of playing and practicing, the seven members of Chicago Transit Authority finally were given a chance to show the world what they could do.

Chapter V – Making a Statement

In January 1969, when the group flew to New York to begin work on its first album, it faced two problems it knew nothing about. The first was that, because the Guercio-produced Blood, Sweat and Tears LP at first appeared to be a flop (though it later became a spectacular hit), the status of his new project, CTA, suffered: The label curtailed the amount of time the band would have in the CBS studio. The group was allowed only five days of basic tracking and five days of overdubbing. And then there was the second problem. Although they were well rehearsed, the band members had never been in a studio before.

“We actually went in and started making Chicago Transit Authority and found out we knew very little about what we were doing,” says Walt Parazaider. “I had done commercial jingles in Chicago, but this was a totally different thing for all of us. The first song was “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?” We tried to record it as a band, live, all of us in the studio at once. How the hell do you get seven guys playing it right the first time? I just remember standing in the middle of that room. I didn’t want to look at anybody else for fear I’d throw them off and myself, too. That’s how crazy it got. I think that we actually realized after we didn’t get anything going that it had to be rhythm section first, then the horns, and that’s basically how we recorded a lot of the albums.”

Chicago Transit Authority

But after they worked out the basic mechanics of recording, the large bulk of material the band had amassed began to be a problem to fit on the then standard 35-minute, one-disc LP. The band had more than enough material for a double album, and they wanted to make a statement.

If they had lot to say, this seemed like the time to say it. Early 1969 was a period when rock was taking on a seriousness undreamed of only a few years before. The Beatles had recently released their two-record “white” album and had also shattered the previously sacrosanct three-minute limit for a single by spending over seven minutes singing “Hey Jude.”

When told of the band’s intention to make a double album, Columbia’s business people informed Guercio that CTA could have a double album only if they agreed to cut their royalties. The band agreed.

Chicago Transit Authority is a time capsule of the popular musical styles of the late ’60’s, with CTA’s own unique flavor on top. One can pick out the group’s classical, jazz, R&B, and pop influences, bearing references to Beatles as well as Jimi Hendrix. One can hear the band’s own history: Kath’s “Introduction,” which does in fact introduce the band in confessional form (“We’re a little nervous”), is CTA’s own version of the kind of funky bar band rave-up of Sly and the Family Stone’s “Dance To The Music” or Archie Bell and the Drells’ “Tighten Up.” Midsong, one moves from the bar to the lounge for some lovely horn playing, and moments later one is in a concert hall listening to a screaming rock guitar solo by Kath.

And so it goes, “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?” starts with an acoustic piano that is equal parts Erik Satie and Art Tatum, while the song itself is a bright, pop melody contrasted with a typically anti-establishment lyric. “Questions 67 And 68” combines a stately horn chart with some hot guitar and a musical cadence reminiscent of pop songs such as Jimmy Webb’s “MacArthur Park.” All through, there are the inventive horn charts, the sophisticated rhythm changes and startling musical juxtapositions, the alternating smooth (Lamm), soaring (Cetera), and soulful (Kath) singing that would become hallmarks of the classic Chicago sound.

Released in April 1969, Chicago Transit Authority was played by the newly powerful FM album rock stations, especially college radio. “AM radio wouldn’t touch us because we were unpackageable,” says Pankow. “They weren’t able to pigeonhole our music. It was too different, and the cuts on the albums were so long that they really weren’t tailored for radio play unless they were edited, and we didn’t know anything about editing. Actually, we released three singles off the first album. We edited three songs and released them, but AM radio was nowhere near ready for this kind of music, The album was an underground hit, FM radio was embraced by the college audiences in the late ’60’s. All of a sudden, the college campuses around the country discovered Chicago, and it was over. That was the beginning of the snowball. If you didn’t listen to Chicago, you weren’t hip. It was the college kids and word of mouth that made that album such an incredible, enormous mainstay on the pop charts.”

The album broke into Billboard magazine’s Top LP’s chart for the week ending May 17, 1969, and eventually peaked at Number 17. By the end of 1972, it had amassed 148 weeks on the chart (and that wasn’t the end of its total run), making it the longest running album by a rock group up to that time.

Chapter VI – Revolution

By December 1969, Chicago Transit Authority, still without benefit of a hit single, was a gold-selling album, and Chicago was a famous band. It changed their lives. “Your life dream is to have a hit record,” says Parazaider. “It was amazing because we were close friends, we had gone through all of this upheaval of leaving Chicago, moving to L.A. at a young age, leaving our families, just rolling the dice. We stuck real close together, kept everybody’s ego in check. I think for some guys in the group it was harder to cope with the success than others. I don’t think there were any of us that sat down around my kitchen table that day in February of ’67 and said, “Hey, our goal is to be famous.” The one good thing that seemed to help us is, we were the faceless band behind that logo.”

Indeed, though critics would always misinterpret their intentions, Chicago’s logo and its facelessness were very much in keeping with the style of the late ’60’s that valued group effort over individual ego. (To the delight of the poor folks who have to put up the letters on theater marquees , the group shortened its name simply to Chicago during its first year as a national act.)

In early December, Chicago flew to London to begin a 14-date European tour. Robert Lamm remembers it as a tour during which the band played for audiences that understood them and took them seriously for the first time. “Even we were not aware of how edgy and different the first album was,” he says. “We were just doing what we were doing, and we were hoping that it was different enough for people to notice it was different. But when international audiences heard the album, it just really stopped them cold. We played in clubs all over Europe, and the audience took to it much more readily than we had experienced anywhere in the States. When we came back, the album had gone gold, and we began headlining a little bit, but still the feeling was that American audiences didn’t really get it. They got that the band was becoming popular, but we didn’t have the sense that they were hearing the music for what it was. So, I think playing in Europe and being treated to a certain musical and artistic respect was eye-opening and really encouraging to the band. It made us realize that what we were doing was substantial, was artistic, and was respectable rather than just this pop commodity that we always felt like in the States, because of the audience, the press, and the way the record company regarded us. That success in Europe and the feeling that we got from the regard we were given as artists really told us in a way that has lasted to this day that this is more than just kid stuff.”

In between tour dates in August 1969, Chicago had found the time to record its second album. One of the first songs Lamm brought in for the album was “25 Or 6 To 4,” a song with a lyric Chicago fans have pondered ever since. What does that title mean? “It’s just a reference to the time of day,” says Lamm. As for the lyric: “The song is about writing a song. It’s not mystical.”

Perhaps the album’s most ambitious piece was Pankow’s “Ballet For A Girl In Buchannon,” which affected the tone of the whole LP. “The second record had more of a classical approach to it,” says Parazaider, “whereas the first one was really a raw thing. The second one seemed a little more polished.”

“I had been inspired by classics,” says Pankow of the Ballet. I had bought the Brandenburg concertos, and I was listening to them one night, thinking, man, how cool! Bach 200 years ago, wrote this stuff, and it cooks. If we put a rock ‘n’ roll rhythm section to something like this, that could be really cool. I was also a big Stravinsky fan. His stuff is classical, yet it’s got a great passion to it. We were on the road, and I had a Fender Rhodes piano between Holiday Inn beds. I found myself going back to some arpeggios, a la Bach, and along came “Colour My World.” It’s just a simple 12-bar pattern, but it just flowed. Then I called Walt into the room, and I said, “Hey, Walt, you got your flute? Why don’t you try a few lines?,” and one thing led to another. These things were disjointed, but yet I liked it all, and ultimately it was a matter of just sewing these things together, creating segues and interludes.”

The second album also saw the debut of a new songwriter in the band, although the circumstances under which he became a writer are unfortunate. During a break in the touring in the summer of 1969, Peter Cetera was set upon at a baseball game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. “Four marines didn’t like a long-haired rock ‘n’ roller in a baseball park,” Cetera recounts, “and of course I was a Cub fan, and I was in Dodger Stadium, and that didn’t do so well. I got in a fight and got a broken jaw in three places, and I was in intensive care for a couple of days.”

The incident had two separate effects on Cetera’s career. The first was an impact on his singing style. “The only funny thing I can think about the whole incident,” he says, “is that, with my jaw wired together, I actually went on the road, and I was actually singing through my clenched jaw, which, to this day, is still the way I sing.”

The second effect of the incident was Cetera’s first foray into compositions. With a broken jaw, the singer had some silent time on his hands. “I was lying in my bed convalescing when they landed on the moon, and I grabbed my bass guitar and started this little progression on the bass, and started writing “Where Do We Go From Here.” I think Walter Cronkite actually had said that, and I thought, “Wow, where do we go from here?” So, l wrote it about that and about myself and about the world and about everything in general, and that was my first writing credit.”

The second album also took a more direct look at the political situation. Chicago had included chants from the Yippie demonstrators outside the 1968 Democratic Convention on its first album. The second album’s liner notes (penned by Robert Lamm) dedicated the record, the band members, their futures, and their energies “to the people of the revolution and the revolution in all of its forms.”

chicago tour band members

When the band moved to California and continued working up original songs, Lamm’s awareness of the world around him affected his lyric writing. In songs like “It Better End Soon” and “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?”, he reflected on the kinds of questions: political, social, and philosophical that young people around the country were starting to ask. “I’m not sure exactly what led me to the realization that I could write about things other than romantic topics,” Lamm says, “but I think just being alive in those times and watching that conflict in Asia unfold on television daily because Lord knows we all sat around and watched a lot of television, then the culture shock of moving from Chicago to California. And then the alternative press, the L.A. Free Press, was very much into the hot topic of revolution. It seemed that the generation of which I was a member and the generation which was peopling the new bands had a connection, and so it seemed natural to give voice to some of the thinking. As pinheaded (he laughs) as some of my opinions and those of some of my contemporaries may have been at the time, it felt really real, and also it felt like it was right, it was right that a lot of bands at the time were giving voice to the idea of the average person having a certain amount of power, and power maybe enough to stand up to the policies of the government and protest the war.”

At the same time, a confluence of the music business and the political movements was occurring. “We had begun in 1969 to play universities and colleges, Lamm recalls, “and very often those concerts were used as a springboard for political gatherings”. In other words, everybody would show up at the show, and then they would go and talk about either the anti-war effort or the more abstract concept of actual revolution. Then we played the pop festivals, which were a melting pot of everything, everything from free love to drug use to information dissemination about the anti-war movement, political climate, and social issues. So, it was really heavy stuff for everybody because nobody knew what was going on, but we all had a sense that there was some power available, just by the sheer numbers of us.”

Looking back, Lamm says, “I think there has been a revolution. You may argue with the term ‘revolution,’ but I think for those of us in our late teens or early 20’s, that sure was a sexy word.” Of course, the political activists at the time sought an idealistic and disruptive revolution that would replace “the system.” Lamm feels the actual revolution was less concrete, but perhaps ultimately more persuasive.

“In my view, the promise of paradise and peace on earth, that was something we all fervently believed was possible,” he says, “and what occurred was something more subtle. I believe that there was a revolution, and I believe that it happened so gradually that we didn’t realize what was going on. Even if you take something as mundane as music (he laughs), there’s a whole young generation of rap artists who are saying everything they want and actually expressing themselves politically and socially, and people of all cultures are hearing it, and that form of protest has flourished within the system, and it’s accepted, and for the most part it’s okay, except to extreme right wingers.”

The most obvious example of the social/philosophical revolution Lamm perceives are the changes brought about by the civil rights and anti-war movements so prevalent at the time. “I hate to harp on the whole racial thing, but I think that’s probably the easiest way to spot that things have changed immensely since the ’60’s,” he says. “Obviously, they’re not perfect for people of color in this country, but they are a lot different. We don’t think of black men the same way that we did in 1969. We just don’t. The stereotype has changed 180 degrees. Then, certainly a lot of the people who were on the front lines, whether civil rights movement, student revolt, or the anti-war movement, now are in the government. You could say they were absorbed by the system, but I think that looking back now, it was fantasy to think that you could replace the system. You couldn’t replace the system, but you could change the system.” So, perhaps the revolution, in at least some of its forms, has come to pass.

Chapter VII – Success

When it was released in January 1970, the second album, instead of featuring a picture of the band on the cover and a title drawn from one of the songs, had the band’s distinctive logo on the cover and was called Chicago II. From the start, Chicago took a conceptual approach to the way it was presented to the public. The album covers were overseen by John Berg, the head of the art department at Columbia Records, and Nick Fasciano designed the logo, which has adorned every album cover in the group catalog. “Guercio was insistent upon the logo being the dominant factor in the artwork,” says Pankow, even though the artwork varied greatly from cover to cover. Thus, the logo might appear carved into a rough wooden panel, as on Chicago V, or tooled into an elaborate leatherwork design, like Chicago VII, or become a mouth-watering chocolate bar, for the Chicago X cover, which was a Grammy Award winner.

And then there were those sequential album titles. “People always asked why we were numbering our albums,” jokes Cetera, “and the reason is, because we always argued about what to call it. ‘All right, III, all right, IV!”, Actually, the band never attempted to title the albums, feeling that the music spoke for itself.

In commercial terms, the major change that came with Chicago II was that it opened the floodgates on Chicago as a singles band. In October 1969, Columbia had re-tested the waters by releasing “Beginnings” as a single, but AM radio still wasn’t interested, and the record failed to chart. All of this changed, however, when the label excerpted two songs, “Make Me Smile” and “Colour My World,” from Pankow’s ballet and released them as the two sides of a single in March 1970.

“I was driving in my car down Santa Monica Boulevard in L.A.,” Pankow remembers, “and I turned the radio on KHJ and ‘Make Me Smile’ came on. I almost hit the car in front of me, ’cause it’s my song, and I’m hearing it on the biggest station in L.A. At that point, I realized, hey, we have a hit single. They don’t play you in L.A. unless you’re hit-bound. So, that was one of the more exciting moments in my early career.”

The single reached the Top 10, while Chicago II immediately went gold and got to Number 4 on the LP’s chart, joining the first album, which was still selling well. A second single, Lamm’s “25 Or 6 To 4,” was an even bigger hit in the summer of ’70, peaking at Number 4.

chicago tour band members

Ironically, Chicago’s belated singles success cost the group its “underground” imprimatur. “All of a sudden,” Loughnane recalls,” people started saying we sold out. The same music! Exactly the same songs!”

As January 1971 rolled around, once again Chicago had found time to record a new double album. “That third album scared us,” says Parazaider, “because we basically had run out of the surplus of material that we had, and we were still working a lot on the road. We were afraid that we were getting ready to record a little under the gun. But I don’t think it shows.” “That whole album was more adventurous in terms of instrumental exploration than the first two albums,” says Pankow. “Robert wrote a lot of in-depth stuff.”

Cetera also was flexing his muscles as a writer again. “Danny and I had got together one night, and I said, ‘I got this little thing that I’ve been working on,'” he recalls. The result was “Lowdown,” which became the second single from Chicago III. (The first was Lamm’s “Free.”) “I’m still proud of it,” Cetera says.

After the singles from Chicago III had run their course, helping the album to its chart peak at Number 2 and its gold record award, Columbia turned back to the first and second albums which were still in the charts, re-releasing as a single “Beginnings” backed by “Colour My World,” and then “Questions 67 and 68.” “They all become hits,” notes Loughnane, “to the point where radio said, ‘If you release something off that first album again, we’ll never play another one of your records.'”

All of this meant that, with its first three albums, Chicago had reached astonishing popular success. All three double albums were still on the charts throughout 1971, and hits came from each one. But how to top that? In October, Columbia released a lavish four-record box set chronicling the group’s week-long stand at Carnegie Hall, the previous April 5-10.

Chicago At Carnegie Hall holds mixed memories for the band members. Cetera feels that all the extra sound equipment inhibited the band’s performance. “Within the first two or three songs of the opening night, I’m singing and playing, and all of a sudden the level on my bass drops considerably,” Cetera remembers. “I turn around, and there’s a roadie out there messing with my knobs. I’m wondering, ‘What the hell are you doing?’ He goes, ‘Well, the sound truck told me to tell you to turn down, and since I couldn’t tell you, they told me to go out here and turn you down.’ That’s kind of what happened all the way along with everybody.”

“I hate it,” Pankow says. “The acoustics of Carnegie Hall were never meant for amplified music, and the sound of the brass after being miked came out sounding like kazoos.” Parazaider, however, notes with pride that the album marks a milestone for the group, that they were the first rock group to sell out Carnegie Hall for a week. “That was an exciting week,” adds Lamm, “to actually play in Carnegie Hall.”

Lamm got the chance to premiere “A Song For Richard And His Friends,” which was to have appeared on Chicago V. April 1971 was a long time before Watergate, and the resignation of a U.S. president was inconceivable, but that didn’t stop Lamm from offering a helpful suggestion to Richard M. Nixon. “I love that song,” Lamm says, “and later on I did a version of it for my first solo album, Skinny Boy though I didn’t end up including it where, in the tag chorus I add the line, ‘Thank you, John Dean.’ (Dean was the presidential assistant who blew the whistle on Nixon.) I’ve been told by one of the foremost psychics in Los Angeles that I’m psychic, I just don’t know it.”

Manager/producer Guercio had to fight Columbia to get the label to release the album, due to its manufacturing cost. He agreed to assume the extra expense if the album didn’t sell a million units. The bill never arrived. Chicago At Carnegie Hall went gold out of the box and has since been certified for sales of two million copies. (In fact, according to the current policy of the Record Industry Association of America, that each in a multi-disk set is counted individually, the three-CD album ought to be certified at six million copies.)

“When I listen to some of the Carnegie Hall album, it is really good,” says Loughnane. “There’s a lot of good material but there’s a lot of stuff that I was unhappy with and I didn’t think should be released, but that’s what it was. There was a history behind that record. The story, the marketing, all of that stuff went into it. The program, the pictures of the building, the diagrams, all of that was part of the charisma, and it worked. But I think we could do great live albums today. I would love to do that”

Though Chicago had made previous visits to Europe and the Far East, it embarked on its first full-scale world tour in February 1972. “We played 16 countries in 20 days,” recalls Walt Parazaider. “It’s that old movie: If it’s Tuesday, it’s Belgium. People said, “You went around the world, you played in all those countries.” I said, ‘Yeah, I remember some of the ceilings in some of the nicest hotels in Europe.” But we became an international success, and that was great, because people all over the world really enjoyed our music. And there’s nothing more flattering to people who create music than to have somebody singing your song when you’re in Germany or Australia or Japan. We marveled at it. We had to pinch ourselves that we were having all the success we were having.”

The high point of the tour was in Japan, where Chicago recorded another live album that was so superior to the Carnegie Hall album, there’s really no comparison. “The Japanese hooked up two eight-track machines together to make 16 tracks,” notes Parazaider. “The quality of the sound was excellent. “The LP was released only in Japan at the time, but it is now available soon on Chicago Records.”

Chapter VIII – Caribou Ranch

Chicago’s next studio album marked a change from its first three studio works in a number of respects. For one thing, Chicago V, released in July 1972, was only a single album. For another, the lengthy instrumental excursions of past records had been cut down, leaving nine relatively tightly arranged songs.

James Pankow offers an explanation for the change in the band’s approach. “About the time of that release, radio had started changing,” he notes. “FM radio became more commercial, and it started to deal with formats. This band has never said, ‘Let’s sit down and write an album of hit singles.’ That’s just not the way we do things.” But they knew things were changing.

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Lee Loughnane suggests a little-known business reason why, with the exception of Chicago VII, the group stopped making double albums containing many compositions. “One thing that really changed music in a major way is the way that we were paid on song copyrights,” he says. “When we released all those double records, there wasn’t a limit on how many songs you could have on a record and how many copyrights you could get off of that record. Then the companies decided that they were only going to pay on ten copyrights per record no matter how many songs there were.”

The new copyright rule benefited some recording artists at a time when performers were recording extended compositions, sometimes fitting only one per side of a record. But Chicago, which previously had given its fans extra value for their money on double-record sets, suffered. “We wanted to be able to write songs that stretched and said everything we wanted to say,” Loughnane notes. “VII was the last double record, I don’t think you ever saw another double record, from anybody, as a matter of fact, because there was no reason. Monetarily, everybody lost from that.”

Chicago V is perhaps best remembered for Lamm’s “Saturday In The Park.” “I was rooming with him, and we were in Manhattan on the Fourth of July,” recalls Parazaider. “Robert came back to the hotel from Central Park very excited after seeing the steel drum players, singers, dancers, and jugglers. I said, ‘Man, it’s time to put music to this!'” Lamm had films of his adventures in the park and later edited the film and wrote “Saturday In The Park” as a kind of score. The album sold very well, topping the charts for nine weeks, the first of five straight Chicago Albums to reach Number 1. “Saturday In The Park” became the group’s first gold single, hitting Number 3.

As Chicago V was streaking up the charts, the band and its producer were taking a break from touring and recording by working on the film Elector Glide in Blue which was produced and directed by Guercio. The film was shot in Arizona and starred Robert Blake as well as Chicago members Terry Kath, Lee Loughnane, Walt Parazaider, and Peter Cetera. Guercio also wrote most of the music on the soundtrack, which was played by Kath, Parazaider, Loughnane, Pankow, and some of L.A.’s top studio musicians.

In October 1972, a second single from Chicago V, Lamm’s “Dialogue (Part I & II)” with vocals by Kath and Cetera, was released. “Dialogue” became an instant favorite with fans. Guercio, meanwhile, bought a ranch in Colorado and built a recording studio there that he dubbed “Caribou.” He was seeking to avoid the expense and restrictions of the New York studios and what he considered their outdated equipment. “We got a little tired of recording in New York, with maids beating on hotel room doors,” says Parazaider. “The sixth, seventh, eighth, tenth and eleventh albums were done up at Caribou Ranch, 8,500 feet up in the Rockies, about an hour’s drive outside of Boulder.”

The ranch was intended to facilitate uninterrupted work, but after two or three weeks holed up there, the city-bred guys would start to go stir-crazy. They couldn’t take all the nature and quiet. But the ranch did help focus the group, and the sound and the overall quality of the work improved. The first fruits of the new studio were released in June 1973, in the form of the single “Feelin’ Stronger Every Day” and the album Chicago VI. “Feeling Stronger Every Day” was about a relationship, Pankow says, but “underlying that relationship it’s almost like the band is feeling stronger than ever.”

Pankow’s “Just You ‘N’ Me,” which would be released as the album’s second single, and which would go gold and hit Number 1 in the Cash Box chart (Number 4 in Billboard), was one of Chicago’s most memorable ballads and very much a harbinger of the future. “‘Just You ‘N’ Me’ was the result of a lovers’ quarrel,” Pankow recalls. “I was in the process of becoming engaged to a woman who became my wife for over 20 years. We had a disagreement, and rather than put my fist through the wall or get crazy or get nuclear, I went out to the piano, and this song just kind of poured out. We wound up getting married shortly thereafter, and the lead sheet of that song was the announcement for the wedding, with our picture embossed on it.”

When Chicago gathered at the Caribou Ranch to record its seventh album in the fall of 1973, the initial intention was to do a jazz album, with the resulting “Italian From New York,” “Aire,” and “Devil’s Sweet” contributed by Lamm, Seraphine, Parazaider, and Pankow. On his own, Pankow brought in another gorgeous ballad, though this time his subject matter went beyond romance. ” “‘(I’ve Been) Searchin’ So Long’ was a song about finding myself,” he says. “I just had to talk about who I was and what I was feeling at the time. The ’70’s was a time for soul-searching.”

Cetera, who never claimed to be a Jazz musician, was discouraged about the original concept of the album, and also at his lack of participation as songwriter. He showed Guercio the lilting, Latin-tinged ballad “Happy Man.” “You know when people talk about these flashes of something coming?” Cetera asks. “They do, in fact. Every once in a while, a song will just come out of your mouth, the words and everything. It’s remembering it or having a tape player around when that happens that’s the important part. I wrote “Happy Man” about midnight driving down the San Diego Freeway on my motorcycle. It was the one and only song that I ever remembered, words and music, and I went home and sang it into a tape a day later.”

Cetera’s second last-minute contribution to Chicago VII is one of the Album’s best-remembered songs, “Wishing You Were Here.” “There’s two people that I always wanted to be,” Cetera confesses, “and that was a Beatle or a Beach Boy. I got to meet the Beach Boys at various times and got to be good friends with Carl Wilson.”

Cetera wrote the song in the style of the Beach Boys, who were at Caribou when it was to be recorded. Guercio, who had known the group since his backup days in the mid ’60’s, had recently taken over their management. Cetera asked the Beach Boys to sing on the bridge and chorus of “Wishing You Were Here.” “They said, ‘Yeah, we’d love to,'” he recalls. “So, I got to do the background harmonies with Carl and Dennis (Wilson) and Alan Jardine. For a night, I was a Beach Boy.”

As a result of the good vibrations between the members of both bands, it was agreed that a national tour would be fun and exciting for the bands and the audiences. The following summer, the Chicago-Beach Boys tour filled stadiums from coast to coast, nearly eclipsing the Rolling Stones, who were touring simultaneously.

Trumpeter Lee Loughnane was the next band member to write for the group. “Terry, Jimmy and Robert were the writers in the beginning, and then Peter and Danny started breaking into it,” he notes, “and then, by the seventh album, I started coming into it. I had just divorced and decided to write a song, and I presented ‘Call On Me.'” It was, he recalls, daunting company to try to break into: “These guys were very good at what they did, and I didn’t think they were going to like it.” Understandably, his band mates, also had been writing hit singles for five years, were more concerned with their own efforts. “Everyone went, ‘Yeah, that’s a good song, but listen to this,’ and listen to this,’ and ‘Yeah, check this out.” But Peter Cetera, who had had his own trouble breaking into the group’s songwriting fraternity, worked with Loughnane on “Call On Me,” which he ended up singing on the record. “He changed a couple of the words and the way he sang the melody in order for him to be able to play the bass and sing the melody at the same time because that’s the way he felt it,” Loughnane notes. “I appreciate his efforts, and we did make the song a hit.”

Chicago VII was preceded by the February 1974 single release of “(I’ve Been) Searchin’ So Long,” which become the band’s eighth Top 10 hit. “Call On Me” became their ninth, and “Wishing You Were Here” became their tenth, peaking at Number 9 in Cash Box, Number 11 in Billboard. The album was another chart topper. The year 1974 also marked the addition of an eighth member of Chicago, Brazilian percussionist Laudir De Oliveira, a former member of Sergio Mendez’s Brazil ’66. De Oliveira had first appeared on Chicago VI as a sideman. And in 1974, Robert Lamm released a solo album, Skinny Boy. Lamm wrote all the songs except “Temporary Jones,” which he co-wrote with Bob Russell, a celebrated lyricist who had worked with Duke Ellington and Billie Holiday. Terry Kath played bass on the album, also contributing acoustic guitar on two songs. The Pointer Sisters sang on the title track, which also appeared on Chicago VII with horns added.

Chapter IX – Tragedy

Chicago began work on its next album August 1, 1974, at Caribou Ranch, and the results started to emerge in February 1975, with the release of the single “Harry Truman,” Lamm’s tribute to a president America could trust and a reference to the recently concluded Watergate scandal. Pankow wrote the sentimental “Old Days.” “It’s a memorabilia song, it’s about my childhood,” he says. “It touches on key phrases that, although they date me, are pretty right-on in terms of images of my childhood. ‘The Howdy Doody Show’ on television and collecting baseball cards and comic books.” “Old Days” was a Top 5 hit when it was released as the second single from Chicago VIII, which appeared in March 1975.

The year 1975 marked an early commercial peak in Chicago’s career, a year during which the band scored its fourth straight Number 1 album, a year when all its previous albums were back in the charts. Chicago’s worldwide record sales for this single year were a staggering 20 million copies. The group returned with an all-new album in June 1976, when it released Chicago X. (Chicago IX had been a greatest hits collection.) The big hit from the album was a song that just barely made the final cut, Peter Cetera’s “If You Leave Me Now.” “That was one of those magical ‘We need one more song (situations),'” Cetera recalls.

Three months later, Parazaider remembers, “I’m sitting around a pool, and a song comes on, I’m going, ‘That’s a catchy tune. Where have I heard this before?’ The next thing, they go, ‘That’s Chicago’s latest release, “If You Leave Me Now.” The main point of the story, outside of me being a dummy, is that often songs that just made the album end up being some of the biggest hits.”

“If You Leave Me Now” streaked to Number 1, Chicago’s first Billboard singles chart topper. It also topped charts around the world. Chicago X won the band its first platinum record (the awards had only just been inaugurated that year), selling a million copies in three months. Afterward, the ballad style of “If You Leave Me Now” increasingly seemed to become the preferred style of Chicago’s audience and radio listeners. “That drove me crazy,” says Lamm. “I know it drove Terry crazy, because that isn’t what we set out to be and it isn’t how we heard ourselves.”

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In September, Chicago XI was released, its most notable song being “Take Me Back To Chicago,” written by drummer Danny Seraphine and David “Hawk” Wolinski. It has a darker theme than may be immediately apparent. “‘Take Me Back To Chicago’ is about Freddy Page, the drummer in the Illinois Speed Press who died tragically,” says Guercio. Like Chicago, the Speed Press had been brought to L.A. from the Midwest by Guercio in 1968. “Illinois Speed Press had the best shot, had the biggest budget, had the first record, and totally could not get along,” he recalls.

The mounting tensions between Chicago and Guercio finally erupted. The split between group and manager had been a long time coming. Guercio had exerted a powerful control over the members of Chicago, especially in the early days, and as they became stars, it probably was inevitable that they would begin to chafe under his harsh leadership. “It started happening with the tenth record,” says Parazaider. “He didn’t want us to learn any of the production techniques. He’d go to sleep at nine o’clock, and we’d start producing the records ourselves. Or trying to. I think if you’re the producer of your album, you have a fool for a client. You can’t be that objective about what you’re doing on both sides of the glass.”

“As I look back, I was much too hard on these guys,” Guercio admits. “I felt a thoroughbred by committee is a goddamn mule. I totally manipulated them for my own ends as well as theirs, whether they understood them or not.”

In the short term, little seemed changed. “Baby, What A Big Surprise” sailed into the Top 5, and Chicago XI was certified platinum the month after its release. But only a few months later, the band would be devastated by a terrible loss. On January 23, l978, Chicago guitarist and singer Terry Kath died from an accidental gunshot wound. “Terry Kath was a great talent” says Jim Guercio, who worked with him on a solo album that was never completed. “Hendrix idolized him. He was just totally committed to this band, and he could have been a monster (as a solo artist).”

Kath’s death devastated Chicago, and the band considered breaking up. “Right about there was probably what I felt was the end of the group,” says Peter Cetera. “I think we were a bit scared about going our separate ways, and we decided to give it a go again.” A short time after Kath’s death, “Take Me Back To Chicago,” which by now seemed as much about Kath as about Freddy Page, was released as a single.

If the band was going to continue, it would need a new guitarist, and auditions began in earnest in the spring of 1978. “We felt that we were being left behind by the new music,” says Cetera, “and we thought we needed a young guitar player with long hair. We sat through I don’t know how many guitar players, but I’m sure it was 30, 40, or 50 guitar players. Toward the end, Donnie Dacus showed up. He played a couple of songs right and with fire, and that’s how he was in the group.”

Chapter X – New Era

The band went to Miami’s Criteria Studios with producer Phil Ramone, who had mixed many of their singles and television specials. “Hot Streets was a scary experience,” says Pankow of the album even band members occasionally slip and called Chicago XII. “Guercio was no longer in the picture, and neither was Terry. But Phil Ramone believed in the band from the beginning. After recovering from the enormous tragedy of losing Terry, I think we did a damn good job.”

Perhaps the album’s most notable song is the up tempo “Alive Again,” which was also the first single. “If you read between the lines, it’s a tribute to Terry Kath’s passing,” says Pankow. “That’s the first song we recorded subsequent to Terry’s death. It’s the band saying we’re alive again, and Terry’s looking down on us with a big smile.”

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The band went on the road to support the album and did a concert tour with a small orchestra conducted by Bill Conti, who had risen to fame as the Oscar-winning composer of the soundtrack to Sly Stallone’s Rocky. Ultimately, Donnie Dacus didn’t work out and left the band, though he remained through the 13th album. The personnel problem was compounded by a musical one: As the late ’70s wore on, the sophisticated, jazz-rock, pop-oriented style of Chicago was being squeezed by disco on one side and punk/new wave on the other, each of them making the band seem unfashionable.

Responding to pressure to change the sound, Chicago 13 , which was released in August 1979, contained the song “Street Player,” which has a disco flavor. According to Parazaider, the album “hit the wall at 700,000 copies, a good sale for some, but very disappointing by Chicago’s standards.

At this time, Chicago signed a new, multi-million dollar record contract with Columbia. “There was no way either party should have made that deal,” says Lamm. “It created a lot of animosity at the company.” After Chicago XIV suffered disappointing sales, Columbia bought the group out of the remainder of the contract and released Greatest Hits, Volume II, counted as the 15th album.

To replace Donnie Dacus, Chicago had hired guitarist Chris Pinnick as a sideman. “Chris came closest to Terry’s rhythmic approach,” says Lamm. Laudir De Oliveira also departed the group at this point.

Chapter XI – The Next Hurdle

In the fall of 1981, Chicago asked Bill Champlin, a noted Los Angeles session singer and musician, to join them. “They needed a little bit of guitar work,” says Champlin, “and they needed somebody to sing Terry’s stuff.” “Bill might come the closest to Terry’s gutsy lead vocals,” says Parazaider.

Champlin had had a long career already. Born on May 21, 1947, in Oakland, he grew up in various California cities, settling in Marin County north of San Francisco when he was l2. Champlin’s mother played the piano and wrote songs, and he took piano lessons between the ages of three and five. “I was reading music before I was reading English,” he recalls. But it wasn’t until the advent of Elvis Presley and early rock ‘n’ roll that he took up the guitar and began to think of music as a future profession. “I’d had enough early training with piano that it wasn’t really hard for me to get back into it,” he notes, “and then I took a million music classes in high school. I was trying to learn as many instruments as I could because I wanted to get a masters in music.”

While in high school, Champlin was part of the Opposite Six, a band with two horns that played James Brown-style R&B. “We were the house band at this one community center,” be says, “so we backed up a lot of the acts that they brought in, like Jan and Dean and the Righteous Brothers.”

The Opposite Six evolved into the Sons of Champlin, which released a single on Verve in 1965. Champlin was attending the College of Marin in pursuit of a music degree at the same time, when he got some good advice. “My theory teacher, Larry Snyder, suggested that I drop out because he said I was doing better music with my band than I was ever going to do in school,” Champlin recalls.

The Sons of Champlin became one of the original San Francisco rock groups of the 1960’s, releasing seven albums, though they never became a major commercial success. Champlin quit the band and moved to Los Angeles in 1977, where he began doing session work. Also a songwriter, he co-wrote “After The Love Has Gone,” which was a hit for Earth, Wind & Fire and a Grammy R&B Song of the Year. He would win a second R&B Song of the Year Grammy for co-writing “Turn Your Love Around,” which became a hit for George Benson just after be joined Chicago.

Champlin had worked closely with Canadian producer and songwriter David Foster, whose other clients had included Hall and Oates and the Average White Band. “A lot of people think Foster brought me into Chicago,” Champlin notes, “and it’s the other way around, I actually brought Foster into Chicago.” Champlin knew Danny Seraphine, and Seraphine went to him for advice about Foster, who had been considered as a possible producer for the 14th album before the job went to Tom Dowd and was now being considered for the 16th album. “Danny called me and said, ‘What do you think of David Foster as a producer?’,” Champlin recalls. “I said, ‘You’ll probably end up rewriting a lot, but I think Foster would be great for you guys.”

As Champlin had predicted, David Foster took a strong hand in the making of Chicago l6, co-writing eight of the album’s ten songs, including “Hard To Say I’m Sorry,” which became a worldwide Number 1 single when the album was released by Full Moon/Warner Bros. Records in June 1982. The album went into the Top Ten and sold a million copies.

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“It was a new career for us again,” says Loughnane, “and I think also Warner Bros. liked being able to sell something that Columbia said wasn’t going to be able to go. That kind of competition could only benefit us because they would work harder to make their company look better than the other company.”

The next Chicago-Foster project, Chicago 17, released in May 1984, became the band’s greatest seller. Such hits as “Stay The Night,” “Hard Habit To Break,” “You’re The Inspiration,” and “Along Comes A Woman” propelled the album past the six million mark and reaffirmed Chicago’s status as one of America’s top bands. They once again played sold-out concerts in North America and Asia. “We had a great time playing the big time again,” says Loughnane. “It was the second big wave. People would give their eye teeth for the first amount of success that we had in the ’70s, and to be able to do it for the second time is a major milestone in the history of rock ‘n’ roll as well as our history. Not too many people have had this opportunity, and we had a lot of fun with it.”

But Chicago’s renewed success presaged a new challenge when Peter Cetera, whose singing and songwriting on a series of romantic ballads had fueled that popularity, decided to leave the group and launch a solo career after the summer 1985 tour. In an ironic twist, however, the beginning of his new solo act would lead to the successor who helped Chicago maintain and extend its success. “When Peter left, he stayed with Warner Bros.,” explains Jason Scheff. “I had just signed a song publishing deal, and Michael Ostin at Warner Bros. called over to my publisher and said, “Do you have any songs for Peter’s solo album and/or someone to collaborate with him for the album?’ They said, ‘Yeah, we just signed this new kid.’ So, they sent the demos of the first three songs that I’d brought in, and the story that I have always heard is that Michael heard the voice and said, ‘Wait a minute, this could be the guy we’re looking for to replace Peter in Chicago.’ I didn’t know this was going on. I just got a phone call one day saying, ‘We have heard your tape, and we think that you could be the guy to replace Cetera in Chicago.’ It was a pretty amazing phone call to get, at 23 years old.”

Scheff was being asked to join the band on the basis of his tenor singing voice. Though he is the son of the legendary bass player Jerry Scheff, who backed Elvis Presley and has played with countless other musicians, nobody seems to have made the connection to the instrumental hole that Cetera’s departure also left. Howard Kaufman, the manager, asked me, ‘What instrument do you play?’ I said, ‘I’m a bass player,’ and he freaked out,” Scheff recalls. “He said, ‘Oh, my God! This sounds like a match made in heaven.”

Growing up in San Diego, Scheff didn’t see much of his father, since his parents had divorced when he was young. But when he picked up an instrument, he could feel the connection. “Playing the bass was very natural for me, so I knew that it was a gift that he had given me genetically,” he says. Scheff’s mother is also a musician, and the two had a bond together when he was 14. As he went through his teens, Scheff played in local Top 40 bands, and his first break came when he was 19 and Peter Wolf (the record producer, not the ex-J. Geils Band singer), who would later produce Chicago, hired him for his band, which opened for the Rolling Stones in Vienna in 1982. Back in L.A., he continued to write songs and perform on recording sessions. But being asked to join Chicago was the biggest break of his short career. It was also, he says, “the last thing that I would have imagined.” With Scheff in place, Chicago went into the studio with David Foster to make Chicago 18. The album emerged at the end of September 1986 as the band took to the road for a fall tour to introduce the new member.

Chicago 18 proved to be a gold-selling success, and Scheff’s acceptance by fans was cemented with the Top Ten status of the single “Will You Still Love Me?,” on which he sang lead. It was the hit that finally convinced him that he belonged. “When I first joined the band, they put all of their confidence in me and never looked back,” he says. “They invested in me as the future of the franchise. There were a lot of people who were skeptical. ‘Will You Still Love Me?’ was a big hit, and then I finally felt comfortable that I was in.”

The next hurdle, Scheff notes, was to keep that success going. Working with producers Chas Sandford and Ron Nevison, Chicago recorded 19, released in June 1988. The album yielded three Top 10 hits, with “Look Away” becoming the fastest rising single in the band’s history and hitting Number 1. It was, Loughnane notes, the first Chicago hit single in a long time not to be a ballad sung in a tenor voice; Bill Champlin sang lead. That should have broken the radio demand for ballads and allowed the band greater musical flexibility. Instead, says Loughnane, “People still didn’t understand that that was Chicago! We would play that song live in concert, and you could see people going, ‘what are they doing that song for? I didn’t know they did this song. My God, that is them!’ It didn’t really translate to Chicago because of what had been.”

“We had come to the tail end of this long great run that was really dominated by pop ballad songs,” notes Scheff, “and coupled with that was the fact that two of the singles on 19 (“Look Away” and “I Don’t Wanna Live Without Your Love”) were not even written by us . “The songs were written by Diane Warren, perhaps the most successful pop songwriter of the day. “Granted, we had two big hit singles that were really good for us because they helped give us a platinum album again and establish Bill Champlin more as a focal point. That was very good for us,” Scheff acknowledges, but he notes that the songs did not have Chicago’s individual signature.

In the summer of 1989, the Beach Boys and Chicago joined forces once again for a memorable tour. Also, two greatest hits albums were released simultaneously in the U.S., Greatest Hits 1982-89 (counted as the 20th album), and in Europe, The Heart of Chicago, which contained hits from both the Columbia and Warner years. The band entered the current decade with another hit single, Jason Scheff’s “What Kind Of Man Would I Be,” originally released on 19 and included on the new hits collection. This gave Chicago hit records in four consecutive decades.

Chapter XII – The Next Duke Ellingtons

The group faced another personnel change in 1990, when they parted ways with drummer Danny Seraphine. To replace him, they turned to that surfing drummer who had become a fan of theirs 22 years earlier at the Shrine Auditorium. “I was really taken by surprise when I got the phone call, and they said, ‘Would you like to join Chicago?'” says Tris Imboden. I said, “Letmethinkaboutit.Yes!”

Of course, much had changed for Imboden in the intervening decades. Growing up in the beach cities of Orange County, south of Los Angeles, he had experienced an earlier defining moment as a child that determined his career path. “This sounds kind of corny,” he admits, “but I’ll never forget it. When I was five years old, my dad took me to a Fourth of July parade in Huntington Beach, California. This marching band came marching by, and the drum section was just smoking. I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry, I was so deeply moved. But I knew at that moment that was what I was going to have to do.”

Imboden’s parents encouraged him, at least until it began to look like he was going to be a professional. “My folks had very eclectic taste,” he says, “so I was exposed to a lot of jazz in my home, as well as rock ‘n’ roll and R&B and everything, and I’m grateful for that.”

chicago tour band members

He also got steady jobs as a backup musician, first for ex-Fairport Convention and Matthews Southern Comfort founder Ian Matthews. Then, he auditioned for Kenny Loggins. Chosen over 187 other applicants, Imboden became Loggins’ drummer for the next several years, playing on his records and tours. It was, he recalls, “a lot of hits and a lot of great music.”

By the mid-1980’s, Loggins, like much of the industry, had begun to use drum machines more and his tours and records came less frequently. Imboden continued to work on the road, playing with Chaka Khan and Al Jarreau.

But in 1990 he was facing his first summer ever without a tour when the call came from Chicago. “The timing was exquisite,” he says, “and gratefully the chemistry amongst the band and myself was immediate. It was just really, really a great thing, musically and personality-wise, too.”

Chicago Twenty 1 was released in January 1991. Again, the group drew on Diane Warren for two songs, “Explain It To My Heart” and “Chasin’ The Wind,” and they were released as singles. But this time they did not become big hits. “Those first two singles were really nice songs,” says Scheff, “but you’re releasing something that you’re going to try and top songs like ‘Hard Habit To Break’ and ‘What Kind Of Man Would I Be?” Ironically, Chicago’s long-term success made radio resistant to the new music: They were competing with themselves, while their recent hits continued to be played as recurrents.”

Especially in the case of “Explain It To My Heart,” that meant radio missed out. “I thought that was the best Diane Warren song that I’d ever heard up to that time,” says Loughnane. (He thinks Warren finally bettered it with “Because You Loved Me,” the 1996 Celine Dion hit.) “It was gorgeous, and it was in our style. I thought, and I still think to this day, that that’s a Number 1 record.” But “Explain It To My Heart” was not typical of the album as a whole, since it was one of only three songs in 12 not written by members of the group. Chicago Twenty 1 marked the beginning of a resurgence of the Chicago horns as a driving force and a return to the composers within the band as the principal source. In a sense, through the album, Chicago was rediscovering where its heart lay, and that effort transcended commercial considerations. As Lamm says, “We considered the possibility that perhaps it was better to succeed or fall on our own merits.” The same year, Chicago was honored with its own star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame.

In 1993, Chicago began to work on a new album with producer Peter Wolf, who insisted the band prepare all the material themselves and work in a manner similar to the way they worked in their early years. Parazaider recalls: “Peter Wolf said to me, ‘I want you to bring over your bass clarinet, your clarinet, all your saxes all your flutes, everything. We’re going to use everything the way you used to use it in the old days,’ and that was a very exciting thing for us.”

The result was the still unreleased album The Stone of Sisyphus. “That was a record that had to be made,” says Parazaider. “Especially after all the prodding by Warner Bros., with the success of all of the ballads that we had, this band had to go back into doing a band approach, band concept album, where the band lives with the music from the get-go, we’re all involved in it, from the writing to throwing in our suggestions to rehearsing the stuff or whatever, and that’s what we did with Sisyphus.”

Parazaider is unequivocal about the importance of the album to Chicago. “I think at that point, if that record wasn’t done, the band wouldn’t be together in the form that we see it,” he says, “because we were frustrated that we weren’t doing what we wanted to do, cranking out things that Warner Bros., wanted us to do that sold. You can’t look a gift horse in the mouth, a hit is a hit is a hit. But there was other stuff for us to say, and that’s where Sisyphus comes in.”

Band members felt strongly that this was one of their finest albums, but their enthusiasm was not shared by their record label. “Warner Bros. didn’t get the record,” says Parazaider. “In fact, they disliked it so much, they figured maybe we should part ways, which we did. But the master tapes weren’t burnt, because we believed in it, and I know you’ll see that somewhere along the way. This thing will get released.” Some of the songs from the album are already beginning to show up on international greatest hits albums such as The Very Best Of Chicago in Europe.

Chicago moved on to a new project, embracing an idea put forward by record executive John Kalodner, and recording Night & Day (Big Band), released in May 1995 on Giant Records. The album features standards associated with Glenn Miller (“In The Mood”) and Duke Ellington (“Don’t Get Around Much Anymore,” Sophisticated Lady,” and “Take The A Train”), among others.

The association with Ellington helped convince band members to try the project, since it seemed to pay back a musical debt to the Duke. Back in the early ’70’s, Ellington had asked to have Chicago appear on his TV special, Duke Ellington: We Love You Madly, along with such august company as Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Ray Charles, Peggy Lee, and Count Basie. After the show, Parazaider and Pankow went to meet Ellington, who was near the end of his illustrious career. “I said, “Mr. Ellington, it really was an honor to be asked to be on your show,” Parazaider recalls, “and he looked at Jimmy and me, and he said, ‘On the contrary young men, the honor is all mine because you’re the next Duke Ellingtons.’ Jimmy and I were gassed to meet him and that he said that. We were going away, and I said, ‘Yeah, right, now if we can make another hit record to pay the rent we’ll be happy,’ not thinking about the long haul. When the idea for the big band album presented itself, at first it got a lukewarm reaction by the band. Then Jimmy and I remembered this, and I thought, maybe this is what we were supposed to do in the scheme of our musical life. So, that was one of the reasons that we warmed up to the idea of it.”

“The approach that we wanted to take on Night & Day – and I think were successful in doing – was to contemporize,” says Imboden. “We didn’t do anything traditional, at least in the rhythm section.” At the same time, however, the album continued the effort Chicago has always made to bring horns back to a primary place in popular music. “Horns were the vocals of the time,” says big band enthusiast Lee Loughnane of the Swing Era. “They did all the playing, and then halfway through the song the vocalist would come in with a couple of choruses, and then he’d sit down again. Then rock ‘n’ roll comes out, and what was the rhythm section, the guitar, became the lead voice for a long time. And then Chicago comes, and we try to make the horns the lead voice again, and we’ve been pretty successful at it.”

Says Robert Lamm, “When we embarked on this project, we weren’t trying to say, well, this is what Chicago has always been about. Rather, we wanted to see where we could take it by staying within what we do, which is rock-pop with horns.” Bill Champlin agrees. “For me, the challenge was to arrange the vocals so they would sound like traditional Chicago without taking away from the original feel of the songs,” he says.

Joining Chicago on Night & Day (Big Band) were such diverse guest artists as world music favorites the Gipsy Kings, the hip hop R&B trio Jade, Aerosmith’s Joe Perry, and David Letterman’s bandleader Paul Shaffer, who also wrote the liner notes. Bruce Fairbairn, known for his projects with such hard-rock acts as Van Halen, AC/DC, Aerosmith, and Bon Jovi, among others, handled the production chores at the Armoury Studios in Vancouver.

“It was a great musical experience, and that’s what it’s all about, in my mind,” Loughnane concludes. “I think it should have been more popular than it has become, but it’s still a great piece of music as far as I’m concerned, and I’ll take that to the grave with me. I know we put everything we had into it, and it came out sounding great.”

Chapter XIII – Call Them Chicago

In 1995 Chicago once again faced the task of finding a new guitarist. The band scheduled two days of auditions to hear a select group of prospects. As it turned out, however, the new group member would be one who crashed the party.

“They had a pretty firm list of guys that they were going to listen to,” recalls Keith Howland. “I actually heard that Chicago was looking for a guitar player on the first day of the auditions through a friend of mine who happened to be working in the building where they were being held.” Howland contacted the band’s management only to be told that the audition was closed. “As a last ditch effort, I just went ahead and drove down there, and I sat in the parking lot and waited for the band to show up,” he says. Howland had had a brief contact with Jason Scheff, who had once stopped in to listen to a band he’d been in, and when Scheff drove up, he reintroduced himself to the bass player. “I said, ‘Any chance I could get an audition?,’ and he told me to go on home because they were full that day, but that he’d talk to the guys,” Howland says .

They must not have heard anybody who satisfied them, because Howland got a call from Scheff that night saying they had extended a third day just to hear him.” I went down, and I was the only guy to play that day,” he recalls. “I was so nervous it was ridiculous, I played through a bunch of tunes with them, did some a cappella background vocals with Bill, Jason, and Robert. We finished up, I was packing up my gear. They all went into the hallway and were talking. Bill came walking back in and said , ‘Hey, you want a gig?’

Howland’s persistence is explained by his longtime interest in Chicago. Born on August 14, 1964, in Silver Spring, Maryland, Howland and his whole family have been Chicago fans since the group’s first national success. “My older brother was the first one that turned me on to the band, actually,” he noted. Howland began playing guitar at the age of seven, and Terry Kath was one of his earliest influences. Howland headed for Los Angeles after graduating from college in 1988. He found gigs with Patty Smyth and Rick Springfield, but landing a place in Chicago, one he says he will keep “for the duration, as long as they’ll have me,” is the biggest break in his career.

What gave Howland the edge over the other guitarists the band listened to? It was a sound the members of Chicago had not heard in a long time. “When Keith made the audition, be played so much of the inside stuff and the rhythm stuff like Terry did that he was the guy,” says Parazaider. “You just knew he was the guy to do this.”

chicago tour band members

In 1995, Chicago secured rights to its catalog of recordings originally made for Columbia between 1969 and 1980. That catalog has now been reissued on the group’s Chicago Records label, which also has released sole efforts by the band members as well as other projects. “We are Chicago Records, which means we can look for talent, we can look for other catalogs to put out on our record company,” says Parazaider. “We’ve got some interesting things coming up.”

Among the other interesting things that came up for Chicago was a new approach to concerts and a new record. On July 7, 1996, the band played at the Hollywood Bowl backed by the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra. The show featured newly written orchestral charts, including the complete “Ballet For A Girl In Buchannon” from Chicago II. “When I saw the score that Dwight Mikkelson wrote for the orchestra for ‘Ballet For A Girl In Bachannon,’ I just got goose bumps,” Parazaider says. “‘Labor of love’ isn’t even the right words. I was just ecstatic.”

Parazaider credits the Moody Blues, with whom Chicago toured, for inspiring the idea. “Then we started thinking that a lot of our music would really be suited to an orchestra,” says the man who gave up a seat in the Chicago Symphony to play rock ‘n’ roll. “We’ve done little things, bits and pieces of stuff like that here and there. But this is a major undertaking. We were investing quite a bit of time, talent, and money to this thing to get all of these things written up, but if it does go over, this might be something we could sit in and do with different orchestras. Maybe, we’ll just say maybe, it’ll be shades of things to come. If I sound excited about it, I am!”

The likely next Chicago recording to be released will be its Ultimate Greatest Hits. Over the years, various hits compilations have come out, but none of the American ones has contained the band’s hits from the ’60’s to the ’90’s. The Ultimate Greatest Hits will rectify that and also bring Chicago’s story up to date. “It’s something that I think we’ll start working on come the fall after we get done with our summer touring,” says Parazaider. “We’re excited to put a greatest hits compilation together that’s never been done before and also to go in and put a couple of new tunes down, which will be a statement of where we are now. We’re talking about a Christmas release, or maybe the beginning of next year.”

In 1997, Chicago released the 30th Anniversary celebration record, The Heart of Chicago 1967-1997. It was here that the opportunities to work with Glen Ballard and celebrated composer James Newton Howard, as well as Lenny Kravitz presented themselves. The album was quickly certified gold, and featured the #1 AC hit, “Here In My Heart.”

In 1998, the band followed up with The Heart of Chicago 1967 – 1998 Volume II, which represented another fresh collaboration, in this case with Roy Bittan of the E Street Band. That Fall, Chicago again worked with Roy to create Chicago 25, the band’s first ever holiday album. Released on their own Chicago Records, Chicago was certified gold in 1999.

In 1999, Chicago released Chicago 26, the group’s first live record since the epic Chicago At Carnegie Hall Volumes I-IV. The reasoning behind the Chicago 26 was simple: Chicago’s current line-up deserves to be captured live. In 1999, Chicago also added a unique twist to that year’s live show: working with VH1’s Save The Music Foundation, the band invited young musicians to come up onstage and perform alongside Chicago on one of their classic cuts. In city after city, fans gave standing ovations to the kids who participated. In November of that year, the group even brought a high school trumpet player to perform with them on NBC’s “Today Show” – a once in a lifetime thrill that the youngster will never forget.

In 2002, Chicago signed an impressive pact with Rhino Entertainment, which unified their early catalog with the later Warner Bros. work. Since then, Rhino has remastered and repackaged all of the band’s early works on CD, giving fans the very best sound and packaging. Rhino has also released an acclaimed 39-song collection called Only The Beginning: the Very Best Of Chicago, which has been certified platinum, a comprehensive 5-CD box set featuring a special archival DVD, and a live performance DVD culled from the band’s appearance on the popular TV show, A&E Live By Request.

In 2004 and 2005, Chicago created headlines by partnering with their friends Earth, Wind & Fire for one of the most inspired co-headlining runs in recent concert business memory. Fans were enthralled by the 3 hours of music, featuring solo sets and full-band collaborations that must be seen. A DVD of the tour, “Chicago and Earth, Wind & Fire: Live At the Greek Theatre” was certified platinum less than two months after release.

In 2006, Chicago released its 30th album, Chicago XXX. Produced by Jay DeMarcus of the superstar country group Rascal Flatts, Chicago XXX found a large audience of music fans disenchanted by much of today’s music. Chicago XXX was welcomed as a tour de force studio album, with inventive melodies, great lead vocals and harmonies, the trademark horn sound, and superb all around musicianship.

Another 2006 highlight, was the University of Notre Dame’s invitation to perform with its marching band during halftime at the Notre Dame vs. North Carolina football game – the first such invitation in Notre Dame history. Heroes to generations of marching bands, the members of Chicago participated in a weekend full of activities, culminating in a spectacular half-time concert in front of 80,000 people. The entire celebration was filmed and plans are in the works now for a late Summer DVD release via Rhino Entertainment/Warner Bros.

The Chicago-Notre Dame connection is well known: Chicago’s manager, Peter Schivarelli, played football for Notre Dame Football under coaching legend Ara Parseghian. Since 1995, because of the strong personal tie, Chicago has donated a portion of each ticket sold to the Ara Parseghian Medical Research Foundation, which seeks a cure to the fatal children’s disease, Neimann-Pick Type C. Recently, band members Robert Lamm, Jimmy Pankow, Walt Parazaider and Lee Loughnane found out from Schivarelli that current Notre Dame football coach Charlie Weis had started the Hannah & Friends Foundation to improve the quality of life for children and adults with special needs. They readily agreed to donate an additional portion of ticket sales to help raise money for Coach Weis’ foundation. For Chicago, the concept of “giving back” is literal, active and daily.

Other highlights of the last few years includes the frequent use of the band’s songs and music in TV shows such as HBO’s “The Sopranos” and “Sex and the City,” as well as movies such as “My Girl 2,” “Summer Lovers,” “Happy Feet,” “Three Kings,” “Starsky & Hutch,” “Little Nicky,” and “A Lot Like Love.”

Today, decades after they gathered at Parazaider’s apartment, the members of Chicago continue the legacy of music they inherited from their parents and their teachers and that they have brought to millions of fans. “My dad, he must be playing now 65 years professionally, something like that, off and on,” Parazaider notes. “I sat down with him, and he was practicing. He looked at me, and he held the trumpet in his hand, and he said, ‘You know, Walt, one day I’m going to learn this thing.’ That’s when I had a moment of clarity, and I realized that what we’ve been doing all these years is not measured in a time limit, that it’s a way of life, the way my father has pursued it and enjoyed it his whole life. So, later on in life, I learned what I want to be when I grow up. I’m in the pursuit of my life’s work, and I finally realized it.”

2007 was a milestone year for Chicago, the legendary rock ’n’ roll band with horns. Well known for extraordinary creativity, influential musicianship and staggering commercial success, Chicago now celebrates its 42rd Anniversary – a show of longevity rarely achieved in most careers, let alone the music business.

In September, 2008, Rhino Records released Stone of Sisyphus, the great, long-awaited and unreleased album that has been an underground fan favorite for more than 15 years. The release featured bonus tracks and new liner notes. Rhino also issued the Best of Chicago: 40th Anniversary Edition, a top-selling hits package, and has reissued Chicago’s landmark first two albums, Chicago Transit Authority and Chicago II, as special 180 gram vinyl releases, complete with exceptional packaging. Additionally, Rhino is readying a limited edition box set of 7 inch singles, a cool nod to the band’s history, both as hit makers and as champions of innovative album packaging.

This past summer, Chicago reunited with Earth, Wind & Fire for an epic third co-headlining US summer tour. The two bands last teamed up in 2005 and their reunion has been a fan request ever since. Meanwhile, in the last past 12 months, Chicago has sold out extensive domestic and international tours across Japan, Europe, Canada, Mexico and of course, the USA.

Most recently, Chicago welcomed new member Lou Pardini, a Grammy-nominated keyboardist who replaces Bill Champlin. Champlin left Chicago in August 2009 after a remarkable 29 years with the band, and the band wishes him all the best as he embarks on his new solo project.

Through it all, Chicago continues to be true ambassadors for their beloved hometown, carrying the city’s name with pride and dignity around the world.

Chicago is an American rock band formed in 1967 in Chicago, Illinois. They have recorded 38 albums, sold over 100,000,000 records and are one of the longest-running and best-selling music groups of all time.

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About Billy Joel: The 100th - Live at Madison Square Garden

Billy Joel's 100th residency special cut during pivotal 'Piano Man' performance, CBS apologizes

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CBS did not turn the lights back on during the  100th show of Billy Joel's residency .

The network in a statement on Monday apologized for ending the singer's "Billy Joel: The 100th – Live at Madison Square Garden" special two minutes early on Sunday, blaming a "network programming timing error." CBS also said it will rebroadcast the two-hour special on Friday at 9 p.m. ET.

"We apologize to Mr. Joel, his fans, our affiliated stations, and our audience whose viewing experience was interrupted during the last song," CBS said in a statement to USA TODAY Monday.

The special marked the centennial of Joel's record-setting run at Madison Square Garden , which began in January 2014 and will conclude July 25.

Excited fans who tuned in were upset after the broadcast was delayed by 30 minutes due to the 2024 Masters Tournament and ultimately cut off in the middle of Joel's larger than life "Piano Man" for local news programming.

The Barstool Sports account chimed into the discourse on X, formerly Twitter, writing , "How do you cut a Billy Joel Concert in the Middle of Piano Man?!"

"CBS has been promoting the Billy Joel concert special every two minutes for WEEKS. So what better way to air it than to preempt it for a half hour and the cut him off MID-PIANO MAN? C'mon guys," one upset fan posted .

Another wrote , "You couldn't produce a worse product than CBS just did on the Billy Joel special Way too many commercials, didn't play some of his best songs, went extremely out of order in his set list, and then cuts away to the local news in the middle of Piano Man?!? A total flop by CBS."

"Just an absolute disaster by CBS tonight producing the Billy Joel concert. Ineptitude at its finest. Start it late and cut it off early. Just horrible. #BillyJoel100," another dissatisfied viewer posted .

Billy Joel releases new song 'Turn the Lights Back On' ahead of Grammy Awards performance

Where to watch Billy Joel concert special

Joel's special is available to stream on Paramount+ for those that didn't get the full experience.

Billy Joel was happy to 'hang out' with Taylor Swift and Ed Sheeran, talks 100th MSG show

In an interview with USA TODAY , the "Uptown Girl" singer said the 100th performance, including appearances from pals Jerry Seinfeld and Sting, was different from the earlier shows "because there were a bunch of cameras on stage!"

"I've been playing (Madison Square Garden) since the '70s. The 100 just happened to be a round number and happened to coincide with a Garden show I was already doing," he said.

When it came to including Sting in this particular show, Joel said, "I've known him quite a while,  since he was in The Police.  We became friends right away and I always admired his musicianship. We respect each other as musicians. It's very easy for me to work with him. It doesn't require a long rehearsal process. I hate rehearsal."

"I'm OK with making a mistake. A lot of the fun of it is in the spontaneity of the recovery," he added. "He and I have great bands, and if you're working with good musicians it makes life so much easier. I've written songs with Sting in mind, like 'Big Man on Mulberry Street,' which we do in this show."

Contributing: Melissa Ruggieri , Brendan Morrow

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  1. Band Members

    Tony Obrohta. Guitar, Vocals. Loren Gold. Keyboard, Vocals. Eric Baines. Bass, Vocals. ABOUT. Chicago is an American rock band formed in 1967 in Chicago, Illinois. They have recorded 38 albums, sold over 100,000,000 records and are one of the longest-running and best-selling music groups of all time.

  2. List of Chicago band members

    1967-2009. Chicago was formed under the name The Big Thing on February 15, 1967, with the original lineup comprising guitarist and vocalist Terry Kath, keyboardist and vocalist Robert Lamm, drummer Danny Seraphine, saxophonist Walter Parazaider, trumpeter Lee Loughnane and trombonist James Pankow. [1] In December, bassist Peter Cetera was ...

  3. Complete List Of Chicago Band Members

    Terry Kath. Terry Kath was one of the founding members of Chicago and was widely regarded as one of the most influential guitarists in the band's history. He played with Chicago from its inception in 1967 until his tragic death in 1978. Kath contributed heavily to the band's early sound, especially noted for his guitar skills and soulful voice.

  4. Chicago (band)

    Chicago is an American rock band formed in Chicago in 1967. The group began calling themselves the Chicago Transit Authority (after the city's mass transit agency) in 1968, then shortened the name in 1969.Self-described as a "rock and roll band with horns," their songs often also combine elements of classical music, jazz, R&B, and pop music.Growing out of several bands from the Chicago area in ...

  5. List of Chicago band members

    Chicago is an American rock band from Chicago, Illinois. Formed in February 1967, the group was originally known as The Big Thing and later Chicago Transit Authority, before becoming Chicago in 1969. Initially featuring guitarist and vocalist Terry Kath, keyboardist and vocalist Robert Lamm, drummer Danny Seraphine, saxophonist Walter Parazaider, trumpeter Lee Loughnane and trombonist James ...

  6. Chicago Announces Sprawling US Tour

    Chicago has announced more than 60 new U.S. tour dates. The band is scheduled to appear tonight in Milwaukee, followed by shows across the country that will keep them busy through fall. The tour ...

  7. Chicago

    Chicago is an American rock band formed in 1967 in Chicago, Illinois. The self-described "rock and roll band with horns" began as a politically charged, sometimes experimental, rock band and later moved to a predominantly softer sound, generating several hit ballads. Discography. Chicago Transit Authority.

  8. Chicago announce more than 60 new tour dates

    The current line-up of the Rock group has the original members Robert Lamm (Keyboardist), Lee Loughnane (Trumpeter) and James Pankow (Trombonist). Walter Parazaider (Saxophone, flute and clarinet) still is a member of the band but he retired from touring in 2017. Chicago 2023 tour dates May. 9 - Milwaukee, WI - Riverside Theater

  9. Chicago Celebrates 55th Anniversary with New Album and ...

    As the new documentary on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame group puts it, Chicago is "The Last Band On-Stage," marking its 55th anniversary since its founding in the city of the same name in ...

  10. Chicago and Brian Wilson Launch Legendary Co-Headlining U.S. Tour

    TOUR DATES: Tue Jun 07 - Phoenix, AZ - Ak-Chin Pavilion ... American rock band formed in Chicago, IL in 1967. In their 50+ years of existence, Chicago have sold over 100 million records, making them one of the best selling music groups of all time. ... (a double album) was inducted into the Grammy Hall Of Fame, and original band members ...

  11. Brian Wilson, Chicago Set for Co-Headling Tour in 2022

    Brian Wilson, Chicago Set for Co-Headling Tour in 2022 by Tina Benitez-Eves December 1, 2021, 10:46 am Brian Wilson and rock band Chicago have revealed a co-headlining U.S. tour in 2022.

  12. Reliving a 1971 performance by the band Chicago

    Chicago still bring the big wall of sound with their high energy infectious music, a larger-than-life approach presented with the same urgency with which they started, I'm gonna say it again, 54 years ago. The Dallas show opened with "Introduction," the first song from the band's first album, released at the beginning of 1969.

  13. Chicago 2022 Tour Set List

    Chicago 2022 Tour Set List. Chicago, in England to top the bill at the 1970 Isle of Wight festival. From left to right; Pete Cetera (bass), James Pankow (trombone), Lee Loughnane (trumpet), Terry Kath (guitar), Walter Parazaider (saxophone) and Danny Seraphine.

  14. Chicago

    Chicago became the first non-classical group to perform six nights in a row at Carnegie Hall 50 years ago. Between April 5 and 10, 1971, the band played eight shows at the celebrated venue (including two matinees) and recorded every one of them. In October of that year, performance highlights were featured on the band's first-ever live album ...

  15. Chicago Band

    Welcome to the official YouTube channel for the band Chicago - the YouTube home of Chicago's numerous 70s and 80s hits like "If You Leave Me Now," "You're th...

  16. Peter Cetera

    Peter Paul Cetera (/ s ə ˈ t ɛr ə / sə-TERR-ə; born September 13, 1944) is a retired American musician best known for being a frontman, vocalist, and bassist for the American rock band Chicago from 1967 until his departure in 1985. His career as a recording artist encompasses 17 studio albums with Chicago and eight solo studio albums.. With "If You Leave Me Now", a song written and sung ...

  17. The Original Members Of The Band Chicago

    If you're short on time, here's a quick answer to your question: The original members of Chicago were Robert Lamm, Lee Loughnane, James Pankow, Walter Parazaider, Terry Kath, Peter Cetera, and Danny Seraphine. The Early Days and Formation. The band Chicago, originally known as The Chicago Transit Authority, was formed in 1967 in the vibrant city of Chicago, Illinois.

  18. Chicago's Lee Loughnane On The Band's New Concert Film And ...

    The veteran rock band's co-founder talks about the new film, 'Chicago & Friends in Concert,' which will screen in theaters on April 18 and 21.

  19. Chicago's Lee Loughnane On The Band's New Concert Film ...

    For Chicago trumpeter and original member Lee Loughnane, the show marked a rare occasion of the band collaborating with multiple artists onstage. "It was great to work with all the guest artists," he says recently. "We don't have anybody sit in with us on a normal basis.

  20. Daegu punk band Drinking Boys and Girls Choir returns home after N

    Kyle Decker is a Chicago-based author, educator and punk vocalist. He lived in Daegu from 2013 to 2018, where he fronted the multi-national punk band Food for Worms and co-organized the Once a ...

  21. From Chicago to the Coast: Terrapin Flyer's Western Wonderland Tour

    Terrapin Flyer will soon embark on its Spring Tour of the western United States. The tour will hit 7 states, 15 shows in 23 days. Terrapin Flyer is a Chicago-based Grateful Dead band performing for the last 25 years with the best musicians in the Grateful Dead extended family of musicians. Previous tours have featured former members of the Grateful Dead: Tom Constanten and Vince Welnick ...

  22. On the Town: OKC Broadway hosts 'Chicago' tour

    On the Town: OKC Broadway hosts 'Chicago' tour . By: Lillie-Beth Brinkman // The Journal Record // April 11, 2024 // ... Cameron Blake Kinnear conducted the lively band from the stage.

  23. Chicago And Earth, Wind & Fire Launch Heart & Soul 2024 North America Tour

    HEART AND SOUL TOUR 2024 DATES: Wed Jul 10 - Maryland Heights, MO - Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre. Fri Jul 12 - Rosemont, IL - Allstate Arena. Sat Jul 13 - Saint Paul, MN - Xcel Energy Center. Tue Jul 16 - Cuyahoga Falls, OH - Blossom Music Center. Wed Jul 17 - Clarkston, MI - Pine Knob Music Theatre. Fri Jul 19 ...

  24. A Chicago Story

    Kath, born in Chicago on January 31, 1946, had been a friend of Parazaider's and Guercio's since they were teenagers. On drums was Danny Seraphine, born in Chicago on August 28, l948 , who had been raised in Chicago's Little Italy section. Trumpet player Lee Loughnane, another DePaul student, sometimes sat in with the band.

  25. Billy Joel: The 100th

    The concert special was shot live in March 2024 at Joel's record-breaking 100th consecutive performance of his residency at Madison Square Garden. The legendary Piano Man celebrates this historic milestone after having sold out the World's Most Famous Arena every show of his franchise run for ten years, from January 2014 through his final ...

  26. Billy Joel's 100th residency special on CBS cut short: Where to watch

    CBS did not turn the lights back on during the 100th show of Billy Joel's residency. The network marked the centennial of his record-setting run at Madison Square Garden, which began in January ...