Chicago 16

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Chicago 16
Chicago16cover.jpg
Studio album by Chicago
Released June 7, 1982 (1982-06-07)
Recorded January–April 1982
Genre Rock
Length 41:51
Label Full Moon/Warner Bros.
Producer David Foster
Chicago chronology
Greatest Hits, Volume II
(1981)Greatest Hits, Volume II1981
Chicago 16
(1982)
If You Leave Me Now
(1983)If You Leave Me Now1983
Singles from Chicago 16
  1. "Hard to Say I'm Sorry"
    Released: May 1982
  2. "Love Me Tomorrow"
    Released: September 1982
  3. "What You're Missing"
    Released: 1983
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars[1]

Chicago 16 is the thirteenth studio album by the American band Chicago, released on June 7, 1982. It is the first album in a decade-long association with new label Warner Bros. Records; the band's first project to be produced by David Foster; and their first hit album since 1978's Hot Streets. It is also the first album since Chicago V (1972) not to feature Laudir de Oliveira on percussion.

Background

The band brought in Sons of Champlin founder Bill Champlin as keyboard player and singer, to fill the past vocal parts of the late Terry Kath. The group also retained Chris Pinnick from the Chicago XIV sessions. Through the band's manager, Jeff Wald, and on suggestion of Danny Seraphine, producer David Foster would make contact with the band.[2] Once they agreed to Foster producing the album (the band had considered him for 1980's Chicago XIV), the producer radically redefined Chicago's sound for the 1980s, with all of the latest technologies and techniques and introducing the significant use of outside songwriters and studio players. Three members of Toto lent their expertise to the sessions.

The soft rock leanings of Peter Cetera and David Foster permeate much of Chicago 16. The band was moving to a new label after an entire career at Columbia. Robert Lamm was also unavailable for the majority of the album's production because of personal issues, and the once-prolific writer only shared a sole partial writing credit on the release. Percussionist Laudir de Oliveira was dismissed from the band after the Chicago XIV tour, as his Latin-American style would not fit with the new direction of the band.

Upon its June 1982 release, Chicago 16 proved a hit album, especially as "Hard to Say I'm Sorry" became the band's second #1 US single, and the album ultimately went platinum, reaching #9. The single would also be included in its lengthier form "Hard to Say I'm Sorry/Get Away" on the "Summer Lovers" movie soundtrack. "Love Me Tomorrow", the second single lifted off the album, featured a lengthy orchestration at the end. A third single, "What You're Missing", was released, but failed to chart.

The Rhino remaster does not include the full-length versions of "What You're Missing" and "Love Me Tomorrow." The former was replaced with its single edit, and the latter had one piece removed near the end. However, it does include a Bill Champlin demo, called "Daddy's Favorite Fool", as a bonus track.

The original UK LP release contains "Rescue You" before "What Can I Say," unlike subsequent releases of this album.

Track listing

Side One
No. Title Writer(s) Vocals Length
1. "What You're Missing"   Jay Gruska, Joseph Williams Cetera 4:10/3:29
2. "Waiting for You to Decide"   David Foster, Steve Lukather, David Paich Cetera, with Champlin 4:06
3. "Bad Advice"   Peter Cetera, Foster, James Pankow Champlin, with Cetera 2:58
4. "Chains"   Cetera, Ian Thomas Cetera 3:22
5. "Hard to Say I'm Sorry/Get Away"   Cetera, Foster, Robert Lamm Cetera 5:08
Side Two
No. Title Writer(s) Vocals Length
6. "Follow Me"   Foster, Pankow Champlin 4:53
7. "Sonny Think Twice"   Bill Champlin, Danny Seraphine Champlin 4:01
8. "What Can I Say"   Foster, Pankow Cetera 3:49
9. "Rescue You"   Cetera, Foster Cetera 3:57
10. "Love Me Tomorrow"   Cetera, Foster Cetera 5:06/4:58
Bonus track of Rhino re-release
No. Title Writer(s) Vocals Length
11. "Daddy's Favorite Fool"   Champlin Champlin 3:52

Outtakes

"Remember There's Someone Who Loves You" and "Come On Back" were recorded during from the sessions and remain unreleased.

Personnel

Chicago
Additional personnel

Production

  • Produced by David Foster
  • Engineered & Mixed by Humberto Gatica
  • "Hard To Say I'm Sorry/Get Away" mixed by Bill Schnee
  • Mixing assisted by Walter Parazaider, Lee Loughnane & Jack Goudie
  • Second Engineers – Chip Strader, Britt Bacon, Don Levy, Bobby Gerber, Phil Jamtaas, Ernie Sheesely, Jeff Borgeson, Steve Cohen & David Schober
  • Photography by Aaron Rapoport
  • Original art design & direction by Kosh & Ron Larson
Reissue
  • A&R/Project Supervisors – Lee Loughnane, Jeff Magid & Mike Engstrom
  • Bonus Selections mixed by David Donnelly & Jeff Magid
  • Remastering – David Donnelly
  • Editorial Supervision – Cory Frye
  • Art Direction & Design – Greg Allen
  • Project Assistance – Steve Woolard & Karen LeBlanc

Charts

Album

Chart (1982) Peak
position
Austrian Albums Chart[3] 19
Canadian Albums Chart[4] 17
Dutch Albums Chart[5] 33
German Albums Chart[6] 11
New Zealand Albums Chart[7] 24
UK Albums Chart[8] 44
US Billboard 200[9] 9

Singles

Year Single Chart Position
1982 "Hard to Say I'm Sorry" US Billboard Hot 100[9] 1
US Adult Contemporary[9] 1
UK Singles Chart[8] 4
1982 Love Me Tomorrow US Billboard Hot 100[9] 22
US Adult Contemporary[9] 8
1983 What You're Missing US Billboard Hot 100[9] 81

Certifications

Region Certification Sales/shipments
Canada (Music Canada)[10] Gold 50,000
Germany (BVMI)[11] Gold 250,000
United States (RIAA)[12] Platinum 1,000,000

^shipments figures based on certification alone

References

  1. Chicago 16 at AllMusic. Retrieved January 12, 2015.
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