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Chicago (retroactively known as Chicago II) is the second studio album by the American rock band Chicago, released on January 26, 1970, by Columbia Records. Like their debut album, Chicago Transit Authority , it is a double album.
The main characters from the original television series. From left to right: Tygra, Snarf, Panthro, Lion-O, WilyKit, Cheetara, and WilyKat. The following is a list of characters that appear in the American animated series ThunderCats, its 2011 reboot, ThunderCats Roar, and its related media.
2018: Chicago: Chicago II Live on Soundstage; 2018: Chicago: Greatest Hits Live; 2018: Chicago: Live at the Isle of Wight Festival; Compilation albums. 1983: If You Leave Me Now; 1984: The Ultimate Collection; 1985: Take Me Back to Chicago; 1991: Group Portrait; 1995: Overtime; 1995: 25 Years of Gold – AUS #30 [6] 1996: The Very Best of ...
List of other charted songs, with selected chart positions, showing year released and album name Title Year Peak chart positions Album US [15] US Dance [33] US R&B/ HH [16] BEL Tip [3] IRL [6] NL Tip [34] SWE Heat [35] UK [10] UK R&B [23] "Wesley's Theory" (Kendrick Lamar featuring George Clinton and Thundercat) 2015 91 — 33 — 99: 14: 16 ...
This sequel, Volume II, featured bare-bones album artwork consisting of a collage of photos from around the city of Chicago. The album lacked liner notes and was the only Chicago album not to have its own rendition of the band's distinctive logo; a small picture of the logo from the band's second album appears in the center of the collage.
After the release of a self-titled debut album in April 1969, the band shortened its name to simply Chicago after receiving a threat of legal action from the Chicago Transit Authority. [1] The group's lineup remained stable for over ten years and released a series commercially and critically successful albums.
Among the other tracks on the album: Lamm's dynamic but cryptic "25 or 6 to 4" (Chicago's first Top 5 hit), [20] which is a reference to a songwriter trying to write at 25 or 26 minutes before 4 o'clock in the morning, [39] [29]: 109 [40] and was sung by Cetera with Terry Kath on guitar; the lengthy war-protest song "It Better End Soon"; and ...
The Heart of Chicago 1967–1998 Volume II; I. ... Love Songs (Chicago album) T. Take Me Back to Chicago (album) V. The Very Best of Chicago: Only the Beginning