| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 8279 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $11.99 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | |
| Release Date: | 2002-07-02 |
| Label: | Rhino / Wea |
| UPC: | 081227617028 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Rhino / Wea |
| ASIN: | B000068ZVQ |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on The Very Best of Chicago: Only the Beginning by Rhino / Wea
- Make Me Smile
- 25 Or 6 To 4
- Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?
- Beginnings
- Questions 67 And 68
- I'm A Man
- Colour Of My World
- Free
- Lowdown
- Saturday In The Park
- Dialogue (Part I & II)
- Just You 'N' Me
- Feelin' Stronger Every Day
- (I've Been) Searchin' For So Long
- Wishing You Were Here
- Call On Me
- Happy Man
- Another Rainy Day In New York City
- If You Leave Me Now
- Old Days
- Baby, What A Big Surprise
- Take Me Back To Chicago
- Alive Again
- No Tell Lover
- Love Me Tomorrow
- Hard To Say I'm Sorry/Get Away
- Stay The Night
- Hard Habit To Break
- You're The Inspiration
- Along Comes A Woman
- Will You Still Love Me?
- If She Would Have Been Faithful...
- Look Away
- What Kind Of Man Would I Be?
- I Don't Wanna Live Without Your Love
- We Can Last Forever
- You're Not Alone
- Chasin' The Wind
- Sing, Sing, Sing (w/ The Gipsy Kings)
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Album Description
Subtitled - Only The Beginning. Double disc with 39 hit singles spanning Chicago's complete 35-year history. Including the #1 singles 'If You Leave Me Now,' 'Hard To Say I'm Sorry' and 'Look Away'. Booklet features detailed liner notes by Bill DeYoung. Rhino Records. Slipcase. 2002.
Amazon.com
From the perspective of 15 subsequent platinum albums and 20 top-10 hits, it's hard to imagine that Chicago began their career as a bona fide prog-fusion act, an early FM radio favorite whose jazz-tinged, album-length suites found them a hip cult following even as they confounded label execs. Ironically, when the pioneering horn band (a contemporary of Blood, Sweat & Tears and inspiration for one-hit wonders like Lighthouse, Ides of March, and Ten Wheel Drive) relented and allowed their music to be edited down to single length, their success was explosive. Most of the "single edits" on disc 1 of this 39-track anthology provide ample evidence of that de facto formula: a catchy riff ("25 or 6 to 4," "Saturday in the Park," "Color My World") develops into a hook-filled, pop-savvy production rife with the band's trademark horn perfection. One could argue that that sensibility--and a midcareer tilt toward producer David Foster, songwriter Diane Warren, and the MOR ballads that became some of their biggest successes--degenerated into formula. Indeed, there's much on the second disc to support that notion. This set spans it all, showcasing newly refocused edits of some their biggest early hits and lesser-known tracks like their lively '95 cross-cultural collaboration with the Gipsy Kings on a cover of Louis Prima's swing classic "Sing, Sing, Sing." --Jerry McCulley
Customer Reviews
Best of the Chicago Compilations - Reviewed on 2008-01-02
1 customer found this review helpful.
This is the best of the Chicago comps for a couple of reasons. Mostly that the bulk of the songs are album versions, and the other is the breadth. Thirty-nine songs over two discs, covering from 1967 to 1995. Disc one will likely tickle your nostalgia bone. When the band started, they were a power force between AM and FM radio, rocking with horns on "25 or 6 to Four" and with power ballads like "Searching for So Long." Heck, they even helped to resurrect the Beach Boys by having them sing backups on "Wishing You Were Here."
But from the albums Hot Streets to Chicago 16, the band went cold. The two albums between aren't even here. When Warners/Full Moon signed the band, it seemed like the height of folly. But the band veered sharply into Adult Contemporary land with wedding ballads like "Love Me Tomorrow" and "You're The Inspiration." Suddenly, with help of super-producers like David Foster and hitmakers like Diane Warren, the band was bigger than ever. They just jettisoned the progressive rock and horns for Peter Cetera's blue-eyed soul ballads. (Who eventually bolted for a solo career.) The band continues to soldier on, making ok albums and touring with original members Robert Lamm and James Pankow.
Still, this is good stuff. Missing is "Harry Truman" (could have easily replaced "Take Me back" or "Happy Man"). Even the 80's stuff - if you check the chart positions - often topped the charts. If that is what you're looking for, "Only The Beginning" will satisfy.
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Book Subjects
- Adult Contemporary
- Jazz-Rock
- Pop
- Pop/Rock
- Pop/Rock Music
- Popular Music
- Rock
- Rock/Pop
- Soft Rock