Chicago - Loneliness Is Just A Word (Carnegie Hall, 1971)
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- Опубліковано 13 кві 2013
- Bonus track from the 2005 Rhino records remastered 'Chicago At Carnegie Hall' CD. This live version was previously unreleased.
Written by Robert Lamm
Terry Kath (lead vocal, guitar)
Robert Lamm (organ, backing vocal)
Peter Cetera (bass, backing vocal)
Danny Seraphine (drums)
James Pankow (trombone)
Walt Parazaider (sax)
Lee Loughnane (trumpet)
Produced by James William Guercio
I will never stop loving the beautiful music made by the men who made up Chicago!! Rest in Peace Terry 🙏 Miss you 😔
Terry was one badass
Horns breathtakingly featured as lead melodic voices. Average age of the band, 24
Seven of the most talented musicians, singers, composers and arrangers of all time. We, simply put, will never witness a musical collaboration better than this! 😎
Phenomenal song by the best band in the history of EVER.
Robert Lamm is WICKED on that keyboard !!!!
Peter thoroughly walks the bass.
So unbelievably Great!
I love this. ,, Terry so good as he always is, but this is an exceptional song,great song ,, the real Chicago.
Jesus, in 3, at that! Terry’s voice strong and fierce.
A Real Rock and Roll band with horns, thanks God to let me listen to this master piece.
Peter Cetera was a fantastic bassist, but never got any recognition for that. This song is a real showpiece for his playing.
+spin979 Thanks for the heads up. Put in my earphones and I can hear it now. Cetera is *killin' it*.
you're exactly correct about cetera on the bass. just about ANYTHING on chicago v (5) will verify that.
Exquisito🔥💕👌🏻
Him becoming "front man" in later years overshadows the phenomenal bassist he was. All you have to do is give "Introduction" from Transit Authority a listen and you'll hear his chops
@@leonguisburg413 "Dialogue"!>>>ua-cam.com/video/uWODczdgGDQ/v-deo.html !!!---the best of the 2, esp Cetera standing out for play and sing
tight as hell
wow - Terry is amazing
Chicago was one of the Best around. Such a great sound--horns, voices, all instruments!
One of Lam's many underrated songs
The Fourth CD that makes the collection finally COMPLETE!
Super jazzy !
Fantastic melodic and harmonic choices - I love that chorus!!!
These guys were just amazing!
They were TOO great!
A really hot tune! This was recorded (according to Wiki) in April of 1971. The Allman Brothers Band recorded Live At The Fillmore in March of the same year. I doubt, considering their differing styles, that the two bands would have been interacting much, but who's to say. But....listen to the rhythms, in either performance, for a striking resemblance. Considering that the Allman Brothers released their album in July it's kind of eerie that the sound is so similar.
Johnehm2 - Saw them together Aug 12, 1970 at the Spectrum in Philly. Allman Brothers opened for CTA. 3 or 4 encores. Memorable show!
LOVE the walking jazz bass on this song...
Me too!
What a great song....totally forgotten about this one! Thanks for posting. Love The walking bass and Kath's vocals.
great 6/8 tune, seems like "Take Five", I had to count it out.
Played the grooves off this four album set. Could do a pretty good job of keeping up with Danny Seraphine on drums. In fact I credit him with teaching me how to master the instrument over the early years though I was never lucky enough to meet him.
[Me, before hearing this recording]: I wonder why they called Terry Kath the "White Ray Charles."
[Me, after hearing this recording]: Oh...oh, that's why.
Listen to Movin' In from their second album. That song and Make Me Smile, Kath is at his best to me, and his most Ray Charles.
Magnificence!
Sublime
A B-side single, but a great song from a great album. So much going on here musically in under 3 minutes
Correction, the song was written by Robert Lamm.
Yes, you are right. I must have been falling asleep when I typed the wrong information on here! Thanks for pointing it out, and as you can now see, it has since been corrected.
FANtastic!!!
Jazzy cats
Pictures from the Posters that were included!
Слушаю сорок пять лет и не устаю
Oh my God! Cetera & Kath 😋😏🔥💕
Nice video. (y)
I just learned the bass to this song from "Chicago The Complete Scores Volume 1"
and committed it to memory, playing it over and over for several days. This version is very sloppy by comparison-embarrassingly so. I would never have been interested in learning the piece if this had been the only version I heard. The studio rendition just blows this away.
But there are other versions of songs on the Carnegie Hall album that are definitive, such as "In The Country" and "Introduction". All-in-all, I love The Carnegie Hall album.
Oh, I see I had commented on this 7 months ago. HA! I pretty much said the same thing then, but now I really know because I finally sat down and learned the thing.
cetera was a monster bassist before he became a modern day lounge singer
maxdingotm
He certainly was!
Couldn't disagree more, especially with the sloppy and embarrassing part. What specifically was sloppy and embarrassing? It's not in the bass, the guitar, the horns, the drums, the vocals or Bobby's rippin' B3 solo. What you're hearing is simply the difference in live vs studio production. I absolutely love this live version. It has an immediate groove and cool jazzy energy all its own. It's my boys live. To each their own, I guess.
@@randysteele6741 THANK YOU. Well said !
Great tune, love it. But Terry was obviously stoned here - he completely forgets half the lyrics. His attempt at ad lib is kinda funny, actually . Nevertheless it rocks live!
+Gregoryt700 It sounded pretty FUCKING GREAT!
Chicago Siempre lo mejor...y que bueno que me toco conocer su repertorio musical
Nice, but I like the studio version more. Jazz waltz heaven!
Is really that Cetera never is considered a great nada play however in this song show us your skills.