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Lake Shore Drive is the third album by Chicago-based rock group Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah, released in 1973 on the Big Foot Records label. The title track of the same name pays homage to the Chicago boulevard Lake Shore Drive , which extends along Lake Michigan north and south of the downtown area of Chicago for approximately 16 miles.
"Lake Shore Drive" is a song written by Skip Haynes of the Chicago-based rock group Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah, initially recorded on December 31, 1971, and released on their 1973 Lake Shore Drive album on Big Foot Records. The song is an homage to the famed lakefront highway in Chicago.
As Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah, their 1971 eponymous album was their last for the Ampex label. The band scored a popular regional hit in the Chicago, Illinois area in 1972 with the title track of their follow-up 1973 album, Lake Shore Drive, a tribute to the lakefront highway in Chicago.
"Lake Shore Drive" – Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah, 1971 "Lake Shore Drive" – Art Porter Jr. "Lake Shore Drive" – E-Smoove (Eric Miller) "Lake Shore Drive" – Gerald Wilson Orchestra "Lake Shore Drive" – The Innocence Mission "Lake Shore Drive" – Theo Parrish "Lake Shore Drive Boogie" – Lefty Dizz "Lake Shore Drive (Chicago Concerto ...
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His second album, Existentialism on Lake Shore Drive, loosely themed around a series of fictional voicemail messages from friends, saw him expand his style into new genres, such as the electronic hip house track "Can't See Clear" which the Chicago Reader compared to Vic Mensa’s "Down on My Luck".