Chicago - 25 or 6 to 4 (Live from Carnegie Hall Complete)

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
  • Watch the official visualizer for Chicago - "25 or 6 to 4 (Live from Carnegie Hall Complete)" Previously unreleased, this recording is included on 'Chicago At Carnegie Hall Complete', which features all eight Carnegie Hall shows in their entirety for the first time in a new 16-CD deluxe boxed set. Get your copy here: Rhino.lnk.to/C...
    Chicago became the first non-classical group to perform six nights in a row at Carnegie Hall, playing eight shows at the celebrated venue between April 5 and 10, 1971. To honor the 50th anniversary of Chicago’s historic concerts, the band will release all eight Carnegie Hall shows in their entirety for the first time in a new 16-CD deluxe boxed set. Get your copy here: Rhino.lnk.to/C...
    Subscribe to the Chicago channel Rhino.lnk.to/C...
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    Listen to all of Chicago’s greatest hits here bit.ly/ChicagoG...
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    *******************
    Welcome to the official CZcams channel for the band Chicago - the CZcams home of Chicago’s numerous 70s and 80s hits like “If You Leave Me Now,” “You're the Inspiration,” and “Hard To Say I’m Sorry / Get Away,” among many others. Subscribe to the channel for official music videos, live performances, Chicago-certified playlists, interviews with the band, and the latest announcements.
    Chicago is one of the longest-running and best-selling groups of all time. Lifetime achievements of the legendary “rock band with horns” include being inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, two Grammy Awards® and two American Music Awards. Record sales top 100M, including five #1 albums and 11 #1 singles.

Komentáře • 89

  • @bobbroadwell8031
    @bobbroadwell8031 Před 7 měsíci +5

    This was the first album that I ever bought. I was a freshman in HS and in marching band. We had a cool, hip band director and we played many of these songs for our half-time shows. "Free" was our pep song. I bought this a JC Penny for $10. I'd come home after school when no one was home and listen to it over and over again along with KLOS and KMET-FM was just getting its start. I remember "Dave's Not Here" by Cheech & Chong on the radio. Great time to grow up and even greater music.

  • @TheElsbridgeEngineArchive
    @TheElsbridgeEngineArchive Před 3 lety +32

    Dang, this really shows the true magic of Terry Kath's Guitar playing.

    • @michaelpatrick6950
      @michaelpatrick6950 Před 3 lety +6

      Yup. Go back and dig out your copy of Chicago III. I think it's the band's strongest album and Kath drives nearly the whole damn thing. Sing a mean tune kid!

    • @TheElsbridgeEngineArchive
      @TheElsbridgeEngineArchive Před 3 lety +3

      @@michaelpatrick6950 Totally agree that their 3rd album is the best.

  • @lisacrance2082
    @lisacrance2082 Před 3 lety +23

    Kath had such an amazing "sound", it was truly his. The melodic runs and riffs are amazing and I love that every version of this song live with him was just a little different, showing what a beautifully musical mind he had!!!

  • @donnamarie1967
    @donnamarie1967 Před 3 lety +17

    The song that started.my love for this band.

  • @jamesmonroe7903
    @jamesmonroe7903 Před 3 lety +9

    WOW-this the legendary band in there ABSOLUTE PRIME-raw,pure and MIGHTY powerful-with that AWESOME brass,Danny Seraphine’s trademark drum solo throughout the song-Peter Cetera’s masterful bass /vocal skills, and LAST but DEFINETELY NOT least the MASTER CLASS guitar 🎸 work by the LATE,GREAT and SORELY missed-Terry Kath! He was the DRIVING FORCE here!!

  • @craigw1911
    @craigw1911 Před 3 lety +9

    Terry Kath and Danny Seraphine SMOKED that! 😮

  • @elchinator
    @elchinator Před 3 lety +10

    Man... Those were the times!

  • @joego7924
    @joego7924 Před 3 lety +19

    Nothing beats live at Tanglewood!

    • @miguelmendoza2903
      @miguelmendoza2903 Před 3 lety +3

      Nothing!!!!

    • @lisacrance2082
      @lisacrance2082 Před 3 lety +9

      Danny Seraphine did an interview about their Carnigie Hall Performances. He said the hall itself was horrible for acoustics. Said they could not hear each other in "time" instead they were hearing the echo bouncing off of the walls.. So, basically this was each member playing/singing blindly and alone. Part of the reason Tanglewood is a cleaner performance is the acoustic setting. However, considering the acoustic nightmare of playing as a rock band in a classical concert hall, they sound damn amazing!!

    • @pam-gw6uk
      @pam-gw6uk Před 3 lety +1

      And nothing ever will.

    • @Seej1982
      @Seej1982 Před 3 lety +3

      Indeed. I want to like this version. I really do, but absolutely nothing compares to Tanglewood. It's become my favourite concert of theirs.

    • @joego7924
      @joego7924 Před 3 lety

      @@lisacrance2082 I know the producer's of live albums clean the sound up, but Peter and Terry's sound a little sloppy, maybe too many drugs and alcohol, but what do I know, I don't play , I don't sing, and I don't dance, but I know go music when I hear it,

  • @janeporter818
    @janeporter818 Před 3 lety +6

    I love Chicago ❤️❤️❤️

  • @WolfCat5102
    @WolfCat5102 Před 3 lety +16

    Terry Kath. Simply The Best. Ever.

  • @petertavella4752
    @petertavella4752 Před 2 lety +9

    Thank you David Foster for F’n with the head of the best damn bass player of the 70’s in favor of synthesized crap! Peter Cetera had serious chops

    • @derekbaker3279
      @derekbaker3279 Před 2 lety +6

      In defence of David Foster & Chicago (who asked Foster to produce their album), the band truly missed Terry Kath's style of leadership, the entire band was deep into drug/alcohol addictions. Not only did the drugs destroy any creative output from Lamm & the rest of the band, but every band member had huge bills to pay (divorces, drugs, etc). And the entire band recognized that they did not fit into 'the 80s sound', so they were desperate & reached out to David Foster (who also was a big fan of the band). It was Foster who kept the band organized, motivated, and able to record/perform, it was Foster who basically wrote or co-wrote everything, and Lamm's drug problems were so bad that Foster played all the keyboard parts on the album. Finally, it was Foster who recognized that Peter Cetera's voice & good looks were by far the most marketable aspect of Chicago, especially in light of the direction of radio/video music had taken, so everything was written with Cetera being the lead vocalist. So, while I agree 100% with your feelings regarding Chicago's music in the 80s, I also understand why the band ended up going in that direction, and I do not blame David Foster for it. Foster was doing what he did best, and Chicago needed that 'David Foster' sound for the band to survive & the members to - perhaps - avoid bankruptcy.

    • @Yausbro
      @Yausbro Před rokem

      the best player of the 70s your kidding right? ever hear of Entwhistle?

    • @noneofuourbusiness
      @noneofuourbusiness Před 10 dny

      ​@@Yausbrohe ain't no peter cetera pal

  • @franciscautain7028
    @franciscautain7028 Před 3 lety +6

    I am remember that seventies year that is very difficult to found this album and very very expansive . I found it only in " champs disc " in Paris .
    So very good and génial album 😀😀
    I have a boat and i leave on it ...and it s call ....Chicago. !! 😁😁😁😁

  • @romaynecarlin1249
    @romaynecarlin1249 Před rokem

    the best band in the world. the closest to my heart. forever in love...54 yrs and counting. xoxo

  • @luciofernandezsantoyo2601

    Chulada de Canción, Interpretación y Excelente Sonido.... Limpio...! Saludos Chicago desde la CDMX !! ❤️

  • @marksalyer5512
    @marksalyer5512 Před 2 lety +1

    Love Chicago my favorite band

  • @josephybarra7306
    @josephybarra7306 Před 3 lety +2

    Awesome performance from an awesome band!

  • @karol7716
    @karol7716 Před 3 lety +2

    El solo de Terry, y la voz de Peter mi vida💋 qué barbaridad, insuperable este álbum, una auténtica joya 💎 la plenitud de Chicago en vivo. Gracias 🙏.

    • @g.e.m.gbrown8151
      @g.e.m.gbrown8151 Před 3 lety +2

      Terry es Terry... Un tremendo guitarrista del Rock y Jazz muy inflavalorado (principalmente del Rock). Ya estoy ansioso por esta caja tan magnífica, saludos desde Venezuela ✌️.

    • @karol7716
      @karol7716 Před 3 lety +1

      @@g.e.m.gbrown8151 sí, así es, Terry era alguien fuera de serie y su voz ¡Ay! Única y eso que nunca estudio canto propiamente, lo hacía desde el alma, saludos desde México y un gran abrazo para ti.

    • @g.e.m.gbrown8151
      @g.e.m.gbrown8151 Před 3 lety +1

      @@karol7716 tal cual, esa voz de Terry era bastante potente, no por nada le decían "el Ray Charles blanco", igualmente ese abrazo te lo regreso ^^ , espero que esté bien.

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank-you

  • @jamesbarriere7625
    @jamesbarriere7625 Před 3 lety +2

    Love all people who like rock like the other one too

  • @antwanscott168
    @antwanscott168 Před rokem

    that drummer 👏👏👏👏👏

  • @jamescpotter
    @jamescpotter Před 3 lety +9

    This smokes the original live 1971 release! Kudos to Tim Jessup and Lee Loughnane for bringing to light!

  • @manuelromero7407
    @manuelromero7407 Před 3 lety

    La banda Rockera más grande de las historia !!! Fabulosa!!!

  • @josephosheavideos3992
    @josephosheavideos3992 Před rokem +3

    As incredible as Terry Kath's solo guitar work was that evening, his rhythm playing elsewhere in this performance is just as amazing. Yet, list after list after list of the greatest rock guitarists omits his name. How can this be?

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety +2

    🥰😍🤩

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Hammer

  • @ramonsanchez7961
    @ramonsanchez7961 Před 3 lety +5

    Terry Kath The innate leader of this great and remembered Band ,after Terry's death was not the Same musically 🎸🎸🥁🎷🎹

    • @gvgv3515
      @gvgv3515 Před 3 lety +1

      I disagree the band evolved from a rock jazz influenced band to more rock and horns becoming less the forefront of the song and more of accents to the song; not the main melody. From 25 or 6, we hear songs like Does Anybody know what time it is, then slowly the songs have less horns, more piano/ early synth and less edgy songs. Saturday in the Park is where you notice the horns as fillers only. This pattern remained through the 70s. 1980 saw the David Foster influence on a dying band. Horns were"out" / not cool or dated. David wrote songs that reinvented Chicago 's sound, for a new generation,plus the fans of previous years. Starting with Chicago 16, then 17, Chicago was once again on top, but most of the hits were ballads and the horns were synthesizer, not real brass. The band hated playing all synths in the videos for songs like Hard Habit to Break. The horn players were all playing keys??? WTF? They wanted to be the "old Chicago ", but nobody wanted that sound anymore. Chicago made ay least 3 greatest hits records and were essentially the same songs on a new album. They were u happy with the position they were typecast into. Peter Cetera wanted to stay in this successful style, the rest of the band wanted to ROCK again. Peter quit and took this successful formula solo. Chicago got the first of many replacement singer/ bassists in Jason Scheff. He was the closest to Cetera's unique vocal quality. The crowd still wanted the 80s Chicago sound. The band was trying to break out of the David Foster ballad sound, but the crowd kept expecting both David's songs AND their now classic songs of the 70s era. The band fired the classic lineup members Cetera, Danny Seraphine. Next to be fired was Bill Champlin. The late 2000s saw Jason Scheff leave due to family medical issues. Then Walt Paramaribo the original sax player and founding member announced he would be retiring from tours due to health reasons but will stay on board with studio recordings. A little piece of the bands original style disappears with each loss of a member. Copies are NOT replacement for the original, and Chicago is now down to 3 remaining founding members; Robert Lamm ( keys),
      Lee Loughnane ..
      (trumpet), James Pankow(trombone).
      While I still love their music, the current lineup is more a karaoke or tribute version of the ORIGINAL band.

  • @norrismccraw7112
    @norrismccraw7112 Před 7 měsíci

    I would've put that version on the album. It was Great

  • @dianeobrien1293
    @dianeobrien1293 Před 3 lety +4

    Is there any video at Carnegie?

  • @mariaventura7381
    @mariaventura7381 Před 3 lety +1

    🎶🎵🎼📻🎧🎤🎹🎸🎷🇲🇽👍

  • @TrevorNortondrummer
    @TrevorNortondrummer Před 2 lety +2

    ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ TERRY KATH

  • @aaronj8574
    @aaronj8574 Před 3 lety +9

    Yuck! This remix is somehow even WORSE than the original. How does this Tim Jessup guy keep getting work after he completely destroyed the beautiful CTA album with his Godawful hatchet job of a remix??? Nothing sounds natural here. He's using every audio plug-in he has at his disposal whether he needs to or not. The EQ on the lead vocal here is just criminal. Chicago reissue team... I am BEGGING you... get STEVEN WILSON back on board to do any further remixing.

    • @thelunarlaugh2415
      @thelunarlaugh2415 Před 3 lety +1

      this.

    • @zachinky
      @zachinky Před 2 lety +2

      I have to agree on the editorial part. This is A HORRIBLE VERSION but of one of my favorite songs by Chicago.
      Tell me... How in the world do you take such a power driving song, that's being played live, at Carnegie Hall with it's world-class acoustics no less, and mute it this much?? It sounds like I have all my speakers under several SUPER heavy blankets...
      Gotta agree he's ruining great music. You can tell songs he's gotten ahold of because they all sound so.... Wrong

    • @derekbaker3279
      @derekbaker3279 Před 2 lety +1

      @@zachinky Regarding Carnegie Hall, it was designed with acoustics that are complementary to classical music, just as great churches & opera houses are designed with acoustics that complement choirs & solo voices. In all those cases, the acoustics are much more reverberant, because amplification & P.A. systems didn't exist or weren't used in those sorts of performances. Furthermore, the acoustics in some halls are tweaked to ensure that voices retain clarity in the frequency range where consonants & vowels are produced, which means that the sound heard in the hall has an irreversible 'baked-in' EQ'ed that's only appropriate for the human voice (the 'nasal' sound of the horns on the original release of this show would be consistent with such an EQ-ing).
      Unfortunately for the band, all of these issues made their sound muddy as heck, the band members couldn't hear themselves or bandmates, and the recordings were a mess. (contrast this with some relatively low-tech recordings of early Chicago playing at an outdoor venue, which often sounded better).
      Last, I will not comment on Jessop's mixing/mastering style, because I haven't heard enough of it to tell if these Carnegie Hall recordings represent the only way that Jessop could retrieve some clarity from the muddy/messy master tape recording, and/or hide flaws in the recording, and/or hide artifacts from the processing he had to do to get that clarity...versus revealing Jessop's stylistic stamp on the final remastered version we hear.

    • @duece5976
      @duece5976 Před 2 lety +2

      I don't think it's that awful but the vocals are buried a little. I agree if Steven Wilson was producer it would have been exciting to hear what he would have done.

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Played this touring Europe after HS

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Pop

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Kick up

  • @tonydimeo1882
    @tonydimeo1882 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome song but why can’t I see the band at all in this video??

  • @markhuber8345
    @markhuber8345 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent mix and great sound quality…

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Draw em out

  • @dakotaescher1
    @dakotaescher1 Před 3 lety

    My issue with this tune in the early years was the way Cetera would sing this song in concert, to me he always sounded like he was on acid or dope haze trip. Phenomenal tune by the master Bobby Lamm and Guitar work by the incomparable Terry Kath.

    • @upyanuts
      @upyanuts Před 3 lety +2

      Wasn’t everybody?

    • @dakotaescher1
      @dakotaescher1 Před 3 lety

      It is specific to this song.

    • @tod3msn
      @tod3msn Před 3 lety +3

      Peter Cetera was trying to not overwhelm the song with his vocals. Too many singers over sing the tune and start competing with the musicians. Peter is actually trying to compliment the song and work with the band. He pulls it off. Masterful performance by Peter and the Chicago.

    • @2564mandy
      @2564mandy Před 3 lety +1

      He was

    • @rickdaniel1707
      @rickdaniel1707 Před 3 lety

      Most likely was! I remember the 70's. Sorta.

  • @weksheddweller
    @weksheddweller Před 2 lety

    Chicago seemed to slow the temp of this song whenever they played live post-Tanglewood. If you listen this at 1.05x speed using CZcams custom playback speed, that's how it's supposed to sound.

  • @mstewart109
    @mstewart109 Před 3 lety +5

    $180 dollars I don't have...I will just listen to utube

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Staccato

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Roll up

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety +1

    What have you summoned

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Sword down

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Dance

  • @michaelpatrick6950
    @michaelpatrick6950 Před 3 lety

    At least the horns no longer sound like kazoos, but it's still muddy. Given that Chicago always touted their sound system when touring back then, how did they screw this up? Compare it to Live at Fillmore East. Many say they over powered the venue but it should have been caught in rehearsal.

    • @jsrecords2023
      @jsrecords2023 Před 3 lety +1

      I think this could have sounded better a lot better. I don't trust any of Tim Jessup's remix/remaster work after the horrendous CTA 50 mixes.

    • @Malkmusianful
      @Malkmusianful Před 2 lety +2

      I blame Tim Jessup using almost 180 plugins (plus gating Danny's drums so he can separate tom fills and cymbals) on any given song. The original Carnegie Hall box set is way crisper and hi-fi, even if the horns have this brittleness to them that can get annoying.

    • @TheSirenSeeker
      @TheSirenSeeker Před 7 měsíci

      Filmore East? I can’t find that show. I see Filmore West from 1969, is that what you’re referring to?

  • @Rylan101
    @Rylan101 Před 3 lety +2

    Almost didn't even sound like Peter at the beginning

    • @CloverPhotoandVideo
      @CloverPhotoandVideo Před 3 lety +1

      That was my exact thought the first time I listened to this remix.

    • @Rylan101
      @Rylan101 Před 3 lety

      @@CloverPhotoandVideo Unfortunate

  • @miguelmendoza2903
    @miguelmendoza2903 Před 3 lety

    For me this versión sounds better than the original released one

  • @tonyezar7547
    @tonyezar7547 Před 3 lety

    Still waiting for the smoke to clear.

  • @Kevember
    @Kevember Před 3 lety +1

    Call me when they release full concerts from the Chicago 16-17 era. We've all seen enough of this show already.

  • @jmk527
    @jmk527 Před 3 lety

    Horns yawn