Chicago VI

Chicago VI
Studio album by Chicago
Released June 25, 1973
Recorded February 1973, Caribou Ranch, Nederland, CO
Genre Rock
Length 38:21
Label Columbia
Producer James William Guercio
Chicago chronology
Chicago V
(1972)
Chicago VI
(1973)
Chicago VII
(1974)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [1]
Robert Christgau (C)[2]
Rolling Stone (not rated)[3]

Chicago VI is the sixth album by American rock band Chicago and was released in 1973. Following the streamlined character of Chicago V, this successor would see the group follow more of a pop music approach, relying less on their trademark horns and exploring varied music forms.

After recording all of Chicago's first five albums in New York City, producer James William Guercio had his own Caribou Studios built in Nederland, Colorado during 1972, finished in time for the band to record their sixth album the following February. It would remain their recording base for the next four years.

While Robert Lamm maintains his songwriting prowess on Chicago VI (authoring half of the album's tracks, including his response to some of Chicago's negative reviewers in "Critics' Choice"), it is James Pankow who is responsible for the album's two hits, "Just You 'N' Me" (#4) and "Feelin' Stronger Every Day" (#10), the last of which was co-composed with Peter Cetera, who, himself landed another track on Chicago VI, the country-influenced "In Terms Of Two".

Released in June 1973, Chicago VI was another commercial success, spending five weeks at #1 in the US, while failing to chart in the UK at all, beginning a dry spell there that would last until 1976's Chicago X.

On August 23, 1989, just before 7:00pm local time, "Just You 'N' Me" was the last song played on WLS Chicago before switching to an all-talk format.

The original US CD release(Columbia CK #32400) was mastered for CD by Joe Gastwirt. In 2002, Chicago VI was remastered and reissued by Rhino Records, with two bonus tracks: a Terry Kath demo called "Beyond All Our Sorrows", and a recording of Al Green's "Tired Of Being Alone", taken from the 1973 TV special, "Chicago In The Rockies".

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Critics' Choice" (Robert Lamm) – 2:49
  2. "Just You 'n' Me" (James Pankow) – 3:42
  3. "Darlin' Dear" (Lamm) – 2:56
  4. "Jenny" (Terry Kath) – 3:31
  5. "What's This World Comin' To" (Pankow) – 4:58
  6. "Something in This City Changes People" (Lamm) – 3:42
  7. "Hollywood" (Lamm) – 3:52
  8. "In Terms of Two" (Peter Cetera) – 3:29
  9. "Rediscovery" (Lamm) – 4:47
  10. "Feelin' Stronger Every Day" (Cetera, Pankow) – 4:15

Personnel

The Band

Additional personnel

Charts

Album

Year Chart Position
1973 Billboard Pop Albums 1

Single

Year Single Chart Position
1973 "Feelin' Stronger Every Day" Billboard Pop Singles 10
1973 "Just You 'N' Me" Billboard Adult Contemporary 7
1973 "Just You 'N' Me" Billboard Pop Singles 4

Certifications

Organization Level Date
RIAA – USA Gold July 18, 1973
RIAA – USA Platinum November 21, 1986
RIAA – USA Double Platinum November 21, 1986

References

Preceded by
Living in the Material World by George Harrison
Billboard 200 number-one album
July 28 - August 17, 1973
August 25 - September 7, 1973
Succeeded by
A Passion Play by Jethro Tull