You need to hear Leonid & Friends 'Tribute/Cover'. They are as good, if not better, with all they bring to many 'Old' Chicago songs including this one.
@@jackarmstrong1838 People that think cover bands sound better than the original are just simply....idiots. Lets hear Leotard & douches own original Rock and Roll PLATINUM HITS? Didn't think so.
They are all Juilliard level musicians and vocalists. With regard to lead guitar, as well as everything extra they bring to the songs in their truly complex orchestra, even current members of Chicago are truly impressed by them, as well as the original Chicago drummer who says the Russian drummer Igor is beyond insanely good. The lead singer of Ides Of March heard their rendition of 'Vehicle' and thought it was 'The Ides' performing.
This is precisely why Terry Kath is regarded as one of the very best Guitarists of all time. In fact, the whole Band is full of Superstars! I know this was Terry`s song but props must also go to Peter Cetera with his Bass for keeping up with Terry...
@@1perfectpitch"NOT THE TRUTH " ??? Terry Kath is still a legend amongst those guitarists who heard him play. Hendrix was in awe of him. Maybe he was simply too good for YOU to appreciate what he was doing.
Jimi Hendrix saw Terry Kath and Chicago playing in a club and was so impressed by them he asked them to open up for him on tour. And when asked by a reporter how did it feel to be the greatest guitarist in the world, he replied, you would have to ask the guitarist in Chicago. Terry Kath was one the best ever.
All due respect to the amazing Kath, that Jimi Hendrix anecdote is a variety on an very old Urban Legend. " I don't know, why don't you ask.... (fill in the blank with your favorite guitarist from the 60s).
@@linjicakonikon7666 you’re absolutely incorrect it isn’t urban legend. The members of Chicago have told the story, as well many rock magazines even have Hendrix quoted saying Kath was the “best guitarist in the universe”.
IMO top 5 live guitar solos ever. People that think EVH Eruption live is the greatest guitar solo are cracked. With no context within an actual song, it's just playing unrelated bridges with no real structure. Technically great...but just gets tiresome. for me. SRV Texas Flood at Mocambo is, IMO, the greastest solo ever. And I'm a huge Steely fan.
Hey guys, let me give you some background on how that first thing with the drums happened. The roadies thought it was the last set and came out on stage and started to break the kit down when Terry Kath (the guitar player) came out and stopped them because they only exited to wait for the call for encore. They ran the roadies off and started to get the drums back into action. My oldest brother was at Tanglewood MA for that concert and told me about what they were doing. And yeah, I am on old, old rocker having just turned 70. I've attended north of 80 concerts in my life and saw Chicago four times, the first two with Terry as the guitar lead and twice after his death. I am here to tell you that you just watched one of the top 3 guitar solos in all of rock history. This was Chicago at their peak. Great reaction guys. I am glad you were able to feel that energy.
Shout out to Robert Lamm, who wote this song and many of their early hit songs. His contributions to the band are often under-rated and forgotten by even fans of CTA/Chicago.
Thank you so very much for playing music that was for real! Please do not try to compare this type of music with what they are playing today because you simply cannot. I really enjoyed listening to Chicago one more time. Have a Blessed Day Youse. Adios Amigos. Adios. Keep up the good work. They were fantastic.
The guitar solo is so epic it almost overshadows the rest of the song, which is damn good on its own. The studio version has a shorter solo but more guitar on the verses which is really bad ass too. You should hear that version, but you'll probably prefer this one.
Terry was a beast on guitar. One of the best ever. The original Chicago lineup was some of the greatest musical talent ever assembled. They were never the same after Terry's untimely passing in 1978. He was the heart and soul of the band.
You know Daniel, what pisses me off most is that today's music is all written on a friggin' laptop with drum machine loops and mostly copies or variations on music already written and recorded. A lot of these new musicians never learned or mastered a musical instrument at all. Sheesh. I know that sounds a lot like Get Off MY Lawn, but I'm 70, so there's that.
My favorite guitar solo from any era. I only stopped in because I saw 25 or 5 to 4 in your title. I will say that you seem like a really chill dude and seem like a fun guy to share a beer with. You won't ever go wrong with Chicago.
Terry Kath, one of the founding members of Chicago. One of the best solos. Almost criminal that the cameraman stayed paned out. After Terry died, Chicago turned to soft rock and ballad rock.
Eric, I was blown away by the studio version until my brother (who was at that concert) told me about Terry's legendary solo. I just can't hear the studio version now without being a bit disappointed.
It was 1970 'Goose Lake pop fest. in Michigan. (about 350,000 people) I'm on 3 hits of 'brotherhood sunshine' LSD, out walks Chicago and opened with this. I stumbled upon this channel, thought I had a 'flashback'. Lol. your fun, so I'll subscribe. Man, I loved the 60's. Magic moment in time.
A very talented band and very underrated. The lead guitarist Terry Kath was a monster guitarist and songwriter yet almost no one out of musician circles here in the US know who he is and that's almost criminal. He was amazing. BTW, Peter Cetera the bass player and singer in this song went on to have huge solo success.
Thanks so much for not pausing the song, like lots of reactors do. I few points that others may or may not have covered........(Tanglewood) was the place they were playing. Several live albums by several groups were recorded there. The title refers to the time of the morning that the song was written. It was either 25, or 26 until 4. Hendrix called guitar player Terry Kath the BEST guitar player out there. I believe that Terry died tragically in an accidental suicide episode while playing Russian Roulette. Their 1st two albums are completely killer!
Terry Kath's right hand was a marvel. Unreal picking. This footage is of a band, all in their very early 20's. And this is how they start their gig? Crazy talent.
It was fun watching watching your reaction to this Chicago vid. Thank you for not stopping periodically for commentary. You let the whole song and then gave you reaction. Superior production of this type of RUclips vid
I totally agree. There are "reactors" out there that I just cannot watch because of exactly this reason. And besides just interrupting the song, they seem to do it at the most crucial point in the song, maybe just as it's transitioning to another segment. Nothing these people are going to say is more important to hearing the full context of the song. Comments can wait. And I think they're more thoughtful and interesting that way. Don't tell me what you think of a song if you've only heard half of it. Great point Keith Brown1915.
you are listening to Chicago for the first time, you've been given a gift. this is the their best song with a remarkable overall performance and an unbelievable alternative version of the guitar solo on the album! congrats!
Props to the horn section (Loughnane, Pankow, & Parazaider) with the call and response to Cetera's vocals. Also Seraphine on drums. I feel like they don't always get the credit they deserve. Their sound is as much Chicago as the others.
Paznkow had way too much fun in this video. I love the Chicago horns. They are still the original horn section that tours with them. I saw Chicago 4 times,, twice before Terry died and twice after. It just wasn't the same band without Terry leading them.
You're absolutely correct. 60s and 70s the 2 best decades bar none for music. If you take music produced in the 80s-2023, add it all together it still cant touch collectively what was done in the 60s and 70s. That is a fact! Yes there was alot of good music made In the 80s-2023 but the quality,quantity, variety,diversity, musicianship,lyrical content,stage presence and just pure talent from the 60s and 70s is unmatched. Look at how many groups and singers from those 2 decades that still sell massive quantities of records to this day! The Beatles are #1 today on the charts 53 years after they broke up and 60 years after they first had a song on the music charts! Tell me one jerk off rapper or crap rock band from today could pull that off!! No one! P.S. Also 61 years after they formed The Stones are also in the top 10 on the record charts! I rest my case!
@@edwardcapobianco2975 OK, but there a few 80s bands and artists (ACDC-70s/80s, G&R, and of course Micheal Jackson!!) that still compete. But after the 80s.....yea, almost none. Todays kids really have no idea what REAL musical talent is. Taylor Swift....😝You'd have to pay me to go see her.
@@USGrant-rr2by thank you and I agree with you about the 80s. I am not discounting groups like black crowes ,Lenny Kravitz, Sheryl crow or Chris Stapleton. All really good but they are throwbacks and play real music. I don't know what's happened with today's music. Like you said the only way I would see Taylor swift is if she made a bukakke video! 😆
I freakin' WORE OUT ALL my Chicago Albums in high school! I LOVED their brass section! But look up the COVER version of 25 or 6 to 4 as performed by "Leonid and Friends" Their reproduction of this song is MASTERFUL! And the LEAD GUITARIST just KILLS IT!!!! I could watch that song ALL day! And they have SO MANY MORE! Its SO COOL they have done these songs as a "TRIBUTE" to "Chicago's original works! 😎
Saw them in 1978 on tour and it is STILL one of the best concerts I ever saw. 3rd row at the New Haven Coliseum with a bucn of friends from high school. We slept out for 2 days for tickets (it was a thing back in the day). Just an incredible band...
Live! No auto-tune! One of the greatest guitar solos by one of the greatest guitarists ever. Rolling Stone's recent "The Greatest 250 Guitarists..." list did not have Terry on it, As the gentleman below said - "criminally underrated."
I saw Chicago live in 1971. I was 13, my older brother took me to the concert. They were great, however, I still prefer the studio version of this great song.
Thank you twos. That's the way these videos should be done. You ran the whole thing and enjoyed it instead of stopping, asking goofy questions like you've never heard music before.
This was the era of music that was so diverse and engaging! There were so many "jam" bands back in those years. They would jam night after night! Such talent!!
The Tanglewood gig was in 1970. No computers. No drum machines. No Autotune. Seven dudes just blowing hard, playing their asses off, grooving extremely tight. Early 70s Chicago was amazing and Kath a Top 10 player, criminally underrated and unknown.
One thing that comes through better in the studio recording is Danny Serafine's drumming....just like Terry Kath, an absolute monster with his instrument!
I played trombone in my grade school band, it was a lot to carry to school every day. I wasn't very enthused about the idea. Then came bands like Chicago with James Pankow on trombone. It energized me and I kept playing. I love early Chicago!
When Hendrix was asked how to felt to be the best guitarist in the world he said "Well I don't know about best but I'm certainly better than than no talent hack Terry Kath"
I LOVE hip hop but man, they don’t make music like the used to. When you think of the sheer volume of absolute classics that came out in the 70’s for example and compare to the last 20 years and it’s night and day.
Love this...besides one of my favorite Chicago tunes, the first minute of this video is fill waiting for the drummer to repair his cymbal stand...and then rolling right into 25 OR 6 TO 4. Great Stuff
Terry Kath could knock your socks off with his guitar and he did it without 15 different effects pedals. Just one box on the floor that was probably distortion and gain. The man could play with anyone.
Two of the most Underrated guitarists Terry Kath , Chicago . The other is Michael Schenker, UFO . Their live version of Rock Bottom on the Strangers in the Night LP is amazing !
Saw these guys a couple of months ago; the 56th anniversary of the band. And they can still rock the house down! Robert Lamm (keyboards), Lee Loughnane (trumpet), and James Pankow (trombone) are the original members still with the group. I first saw them when I was in high school (1973 or 1974).
Off their first album, one of the truly great debut albums. Musicianship from the top shelf. The term " monstering the guitar" surely comes from watching Terry Kath.
Next 2 Chicago tracks in this order, both studio versions, please. “Make Me Smile”. Then the first song from their debut album, name of the song, “Introduction “. Also “Dialogue Parts 1&2” and “ Im a Man”. Keep Rockin’!👍
'Make me smile' probably in my top 5 fav songs. Wait till you hear Kath sing!! Song always reminds me of late husband, and I cry but listen when I feel strong enough. You just have to hear it.
Saw them do this in person in 1969. It was an outdoor concert in a small stadium. The lead act was Poco and they were a nice little folk/rock band. Then Chicago came on with the energy and the brass and blew the place away. They were known then as "Chicago Transit Authoriy" then. Try "Beginnings" or "I'm a Man" off the first album named after the band.
I saw them in 1970 when they were the headliners - Grand Funk Railroad, James Cotton blues band and Norman Greenbaum were on the bill. Sad to say Grand Funk Railroad blew them away that night. And I was there for CTA. Just being real.
Im going to be 75 in May and was around when Chicago introduced us to their magic. This and other tunes are beyond excellent. Its hysterical to me that the reviewers are just getting around to listen to them.
Early Chicago was untouchable. The late, great Terry Kath is so criminally underrated by the general public. What a great band in their prime.
You need to hear Leonid & Friends 'Tribute/Cover'. They are as good, if not
better, with all they bring to many 'Old' Chicago songs including this one.
@@ridgemanron Leonid and friends are kneeling at the alter. with love and reverence. God bless them
Trust me- no guitarist Leonid could trot out could play like Kath@@ridgemanron
@@jackarmstrong1838 People that think cover bands sound better than the original are just simply....idiots. Lets hear Leotard & douches own original Rock and Roll PLATINUM HITS? Didn't think so.
They are all Juilliard level musicians and vocalists. With regard to lead
guitar, as well as everything extra they bring to the songs in their truly
complex orchestra, even current members of Chicago are truly impressed
by them, as well as the original Chicago drummer who says the Russian
drummer Igor is beyond insanely good. The lead singer of Ides Of March
heard their rendition of 'Vehicle' and thought it was 'The Ides' performing.
This is precisely why Terry Kath is regarded as one of the very best Guitarists of all time. In fact, the whole Band is full of Superstars! I know this was Terry`s song but props must also go to Peter Cetera with his Bass for keeping up with Terry...
Terry Kath was Jimi Hendrix' favorite guitarist. true story.
The whole band is COOKIN'!!! Possibly one of my all favorite live performances of all time.
The Great Terry Kath
The Keyboard player, Robert Lamm actually wrote this song.
Chicago at their best brilliant
Terry Kath is one of the new guitarists that even Jimi Hendrix considered better. Legend.
legend indeed, i still remember where i was when he f.a. and found out.
Legend, Not the truth.
@@1perfectpitch"NOT THE TRUTH " ???
Terry Kath is still a legend amongst those guitarists who heard him play.
Hendrix was in awe of him.
Maybe he was simply too good for YOU to appreciate what he was doing.
@@1perfectpitch put the pipe down
Was great not as good as Jimmy
Ladys and gentlemen, Mr. Terry Kath . . . . . Jimi Hendrix's favorite guitarist . . .
Guys- you just witnessed one of the greatest guitarists, ever, just doin' his thing. Legendary.
Top 5 greatest guitar solos ever recorded
Jimi Hendrix saw Terry Kath and Chicago playing in a club and was so impressed by them he asked them to open up for him on tour. And when asked by a reporter how did it feel to be the greatest guitarist in the world, he replied, you would have to ask the guitarist in Chicago. Terry Kath was one the best ever.
Just said that in another comment.
All due respect to the amazing Kath, that Jimi Hendrix anecdote is a variety on an very old Urban Legend. " I don't know, why don't you ask.... (fill in the blank with your favorite guitarist from the 60s).
Chicago Transit Authority is one of the best albums of all time.
@@linjicakonikon7666 you’re absolutely incorrect it isn’t urban legend. The members of Chicago have told the story, as well many rock magazines even have Hendrix quoted saying Kath was the “best guitarist in the universe”.
@@rovs34 Jimmy Pankow has stated on a few interviews that is not what happened... JH did say that TK was one of the best guitarists he's ever seen.
One of the greatest performances in one of the greatest years of rock.
The late Terry Kath shredding the guitar. He’s been gone for so long people forget how great he really was
He and Pal Kossoff. I miss both of them.
@@robertthurman9866 I will never forget. And as long as people like you and me are here to share the greatness, Terry will live on.
Saw him 8 times and it was spiritual experience each time.@@jefff3886
Thanks for the presentation. RIP Terry.
One of the greatest guitargasm ever recorded...
One of the great live performances ever!
IMO top 5 live guitar solos ever. People that think EVH Eruption live is the greatest guitar solo are cracked. With no context within an actual song, it's just playing unrelated bridges with no real structure. Technically great...but just gets tiresome. for me. SRV Texas Flood at Mocambo is, IMO, the greastest solo ever. And I'm a huge Steely fan.
Chicago and the Eagles had the best live performances ever and did it without all the electronics or a net, so to speak.
AGREED ❗ Great song but watching this LIVE🔥 What a treat. This guy Reacting is going nuts. Love this 🎵🎵🎵
Terry Kath is insane. This whole "live at Tanglewood " is insane.
Hey guys, let me give you some background on how that first thing with the drums happened. The roadies thought it was the last set and came out on stage and started to break the kit down when Terry Kath (the guitar player) came out and stopped them because they only exited to wait for the call for encore. They ran the roadies off and started to get the drums back into action. My oldest brother was at Tanglewood MA for that concert and told me about what they were doing.
And yeah, I am on old, old rocker having just turned 70. I've attended north of 80 concerts in my life and saw Chicago four times, the first two with Terry as the guitar lead and twice after his death. I am here to tell you that you just watched one of the top 3 guitar solos in all of rock history. This was Chicago at their peak.
Great reaction guys. I am glad you were able to feel that energy.
I saw them at Fillmore East a few weeks before the Tanglewood show. Terry Kath was on fire that night too.
Shout out to Robert Lamm, who wote this song and many of their early hit songs. His contributions to the band are often under-rated and forgotten by even fans of CTA/Chicago.
Classy to play some early chicago...wow...Tanglewood is one of my favorite RUclips vids...props to you guys...
Thank you so very much for playing music that was for real! Please do not try to compare this type of music with what they are playing today because you simply cannot. I really enjoyed listening to Chicago one more time. Have a Blessed Day Youse. Adios Amigos. Adios. Keep up the good work. They were fantastic.
The guitar solo is so epic it almost overshadows the rest of the song, which is damn good on its own. The studio version has a shorter solo but more guitar on the verses which is really bad ass too. You should hear that version, but you'll probably prefer this one.
Terry Kath, ladies and gentlemen. Fucking legend. RIP.
What a vocal!!
Terry was a beast on guitar. One of the best ever.
The original Chicago lineup was some of the greatest musical talent ever assembled. They were never the same after Terry's untimely passing in 1978. He was the heart and soul of the band.
You know Daniel, what pisses me off most is that today's music is all written on a friggin' laptop with drum machine loops and mostly copies or variations on music already written and recorded. A lot of these new musicians never learned or mastered a musical instrument at all. Sheesh.
I know that sounds a lot like Get Off MY Lawn, but I'm 70, so there's that.
Seems I read somewhen that Cetera had recently recovered from a broken jaw just before Tanglewood... 🤔♥️♥️
Your next Chicago song should be from the same concert, "I'm a Man".
the drum solo will blow them away
@@paulw1010 followed by Begginings!
Bob Lamm slays that song.
What, are you trying to kill these poor guys? lol
@@paulw1010 Not to mention trombonist Jim Pankow's working over the cowbell
My favorite guitar solo from any era. I only stopped in because I saw 25 or 5 to 4 in your title. I will say that you seem like a really chill dude and seem like a fun guy to share a beer with. You won't ever go wrong with Chicago.
Welcome to my misspent youth! C born & raised...Sooo lucky
Sweet react, keep em coming.
Cheers
rl
🤘👹🤘
Terry Kath, one of the founding members of Chicago. One of the best solos. Almost criminal that the cameraman stayed paned out. After Terry died, Chicago turned to soft rock and ballad rock.
Rest In Peace Terry. Thank you for your gift of music
My absolute favorite Chicago song. The driving beat,the horns,the lyrics. Just fantastic and takes me back to my youth.
Eric, I was blown away by the studio version until my brother (who was at that concert) told me about Terry's legendary solo. I just can't hear the studio version now without being a bit disappointed.
Have a look at Leonid & Friends doing this song, right here on YT. I think you will be impressed, as I was.
@@jefff3886 Eow,they’re excellent. Thanks for sharing.
It was 1970 'Goose Lake pop fest. in Michigan. (about 350,000 people) I'm on 3 hits of 'brotherhood sunshine' LSD, out walks Chicago and opened with this. I stumbled upon this channel, thought I had a 'flashback'. Lol. your fun, so I'll subscribe. Man, I loved the 60's. Magic moment in time.
I saw Chicago in 1970 in Neshaminy high school gym. Langhorne PA outside Philly. I was on the second row in front of Terry Kath. Blew my mind 🙏♥️😎👍
Welcome to my world. Glad you made it here.😊
First time heard them is from the album Chicago Transit Authority
A very talented band and very underrated. The lead guitarist Terry Kath was a monster guitarist and songwriter yet almost no one out of musician circles here in the US know who he is and that's almost criminal. He was amazing.
BTW, Peter Cetera the bass player and singer in this song went on to have huge solo success.
You don't say?😝
I saw them twice in concert.
Man I love my era!
Next song will showcase Terry Kath's vocals, try Colour My World/Make Me Smile from the same concert
That's the "Ballet for a Girl in Buchanon" suite. The Steven Wilson remix breathes new life into Chicago II.
BANGER, indeed!!! 😂 Deep dive on Chicago is a gift! Lol.
Thank you both for this one.
Don't forget this is over 50 years old. Thanks for not interrupting like some folks reacting.
The Legend of the the late Terry Kath on guitar. Awesome 👌 👏
Our band Pace did this in 1970-71, our lead man was a killer on everything we did. RIP Slick and Terry. Jim
Heroin kills
The other single released at at that tome was a cover of Steve Winwood's I'm A Man. Spectacular.
Great reaction!
In HS, I was in the symphony and played the trumpet. We played this song. I loved the trumpet part.
Thanks so much for not pausing the song, like lots of reactors do. I few points that others may or may not have covered........(Tanglewood) was the place they were playing. Several live albums by several groups were recorded there. The title refers to the time of the morning that the song was written. It was either 25, or 26 until 4. Hendrix called guitar player Terry Kath the BEST guitar player out there. I believe that Terry died tragically in an accidental suicide episode while playing Russian Roulette. Their 1st two albums are completely killer!
My favorite guitar solos ever
This song was so good that the rapper Pete Pablo had a remixed beat of this in his album in the late 90s. ...Pure classic
Terry Kath's right hand was a marvel. Unreal picking.
This footage is of a band, all in their very early 20's.
And this is how they start their gig?
Crazy talent.
When music was real!😲😲😲 listening to the music on FM radio.
The late great Terry Kath, along with the equally excellent Danny Seraphine on drums.
Kath on a guitar always amazes me !
Too good! Saw so many good concerts at Tanglewood back in the 80's as well. I worked there for 8 years so got the free view :)
It was fun watching watching your reaction to this Chicago vid. Thank you for not stopping periodically for commentary. You let the whole song and then gave you reaction. Superior production of this type of RUclips vid
I totally agree. There are "reactors" out there that I just cannot watch because of exactly this reason. And besides just interrupting the song, they seem to do it at the most crucial point in the song, maybe just as it's transitioning to another segment. Nothing these people are going to say is more important to hearing the full context of the song. Comments can wait. And I think they're more thoughtful and interesting that way. Don't tell me what you think of a song if you've only heard half of it. Great point Keith Brown1915.
you are listening to Chicago for the first time, you've been given a gift. this is the their best song with a remarkable overall performance and an unbelievable alternative version of the guitar solo on the album! congrats!
Props to the horn section (Loughnane, Pankow, & Parazaider) with the call and response to Cetera's vocals. Also Seraphine on drums. I feel like they don't always get the credit they deserve. Their sound is as much Chicago as the others.
Paznkow had way too much fun in this video. I love the Chicago horns. They are still the original horn section that tours with them. I saw Chicago 4 times,, twice before Terry died and twice after. It just wasn't the same band without Terry leading them.
Music back then was just soooo different!!!!! So good
You're absolutely correct. 60s and 70s the 2 best decades bar none for music. If you take music produced in the 80s-2023, add it all together it still cant touch collectively what was done in the 60s and 70s. That is a fact! Yes there was alot of good music made In the 80s-2023 but the quality,quantity, variety,diversity, musicianship,lyrical content,stage presence and just pure talent from the 60s and 70s is unmatched. Look at how many groups and singers from those 2 decades that still sell massive quantities of records to this day! The Beatles are #1 today on the charts 53 years after they broke up and 60 years after they first had a song on the music charts! Tell me one jerk off rapper or crap rock band from today could pull that off!! No one! P.S. Also 61 years after they formed The Stones are also in the top 10 on the record charts! I rest my case!
@@edwardcapobianco2975 OK, but there a few 80s bands and artists (ACDC-70s/80s, G&R, and of course Micheal Jackson!!) that still compete. But after the 80s.....yea, almost none. Todays kids really have no idea what REAL musical talent is. Taylor Swift....😝You'd have to pay me to go see her.
@@edwardcapobianco2975 By the way....GREAT SOLILLIQUAY!
@@USGrant-rr2by thank you and I agree with you about the 80s. I am not discounting groups like black crowes ,Lenny Kravitz, Sheryl crow or Chris Stapleton. All really good but they are throwbacks and play real music. I don't know what's happened with today's music. Like you said the only way I would see Taylor swift is if she made a bukakke video! 😆
I freakin' WORE OUT ALL my Chicago Albums in high school! I LOVED their brass section! But look up the COVER version of 25 or 6 to 4 as performed by "Leonid and Friends" Their reproduction of this song is MASTERFUL! And the LEAD GUITARIST just KILLS IT!!!! I could watch that song ALL day! And they have SO MANY MORE! Its SO COOL they have done these songs as a "TRIBUTE" to "Chicago's original works! 😎
I grew up on Chicago and you are spot on this was revolutionary at the time they played Chicago 24-7 on the radio it was awesome.
I really appreciate how you let the whole song play through without pausing or commenting. All I need to see is your faces as you react to it.
Me too. See my comments above on Keith Brown's post.
Saw them in 1978 on tour and it is STILL one of the best concerts I ever saw. 3rd row at the New Haven Coliseum with a bucn of friends from high school. We slept out for 2 days for tickets (it was a thing back in the day). Just an incredible band...
Live! No auto-tune! One of the greatest guitar solos by one of the greatest guitarists ever. Rolling Stone's recent "The Greatest 250 Guitarists..." list did not have Terry on it, As the gentleman below said - "criminally underrated."
Just sayin' David...just made that point myself in a reply. Good point man. And yeah, that Rolling Stone list was shit.
Half a century ago....and totally 🔥
Great reaction!
I saw Chicago live in 1971. I was 13, my older brother took me to the concert. They were great, however, I still prefer the studio version of this great song.
Thank you twos. That's the way these videos should be done. You ran the whole thing and enjoyed it instead of stopping, asking goofy questions like you've never heard music before.
I grew up playing this song in the 70s. Now I'm 68. It's this kind of music, from that period, that doesn't let me feel old.
Chicago was unreal! Still unreal! The best brass in the business! Seen them live too many times to count!
Amen
The power was flying through Terry Kath during that solo. At one point it looks like he's actually trying to get the band to play faster. Fire.
"I'm a Man" from same concert is a rocker too. All 3 vocalists get to contribute on it.
This was the era of music that was so diverse and engaging! There were so many "jam" bands back in those years. They would jam night after night! Such talent!!
Terry Kath was a BEAST!! RIP to Terry and Walter
The Tanglewood gig was in 1970. No computers. No drum machines. No Autotune. Seven dudes just blowing hard, playing their asses off, grooving extremely tight.
Early 70s Chicago was amazing and Kath a Top 10 player, criminally underrated and unknown.
The guitar solo on the record is cool, but this...this is truly amazing! Been loving this song 40 years or better maybe as I'm 50
Yea, should have let him shred more on the record. I know....radio play time limits. That was BS!
One thing that comes through better in the studio recording is Danny Serafine's drumming....just like Terry Kath, an absolute monster with his instrument!
PSSST....it's not a solo. the bass, drums, and keys are kickin' it through the whole JAM!!!!
I'm 70 and right there with you Ace.
I played trombone in my grade school band, it was a lot to carry to school every day. I wasn't very enthused about the idea. Then came bands like Chicago with James Pankow on trombone. It energized me and I kept playing. I love early Chicago!
When Hendrix was asked how to felt to be the best guitarist in the world he said "Well I don't know about best but I'm certainly better than than no talent hack Terry Kath"
I LOVE hip hop but man, they don’t make music like the used to. When you think of the sheer volume of absolute classics that came out in the 70’s for example and compare to the last 20 years and it’s night and day.
The longer Terry Kath played the faster the drummer played the backing beat. Both incredible.
Every kick drum beat he played was an eighth note. THAT is amazing in itself
The drumming on this is outstanding!
@@garygeorge9648 It most certainly was. The first two minutes of the song, every drum kick was an eighth note. That had to be exhausting.
One of the greatest groups of the 70s. Listen to does anybody know what time it is.
Terry Kath was Hendrix favorite guitarist. If you liked this try Im a man from the same concert. The drum solo will blow your mind
Love this...besides one of my favorite Chicago tunes, the first minute of this video is fill waiting for the drummer to repair his cymbal stand...and then rolling right into 25 OR 6 TO 4. Great Stuff
Always loved Chicago !
One of the greatest guitar players I’ve ever seen
Terry Kath could knock your socks off with his guitar and he did it without 15 different effects pedals. Just one box on the floor that was probably distortion and gain. The man could play with anyone.
Two of the most Underrated guitarists
Terry Kath , Chicago .
The other is Michael Schenker, UFO . Their live version of Rock Bottom on the Strangers in the Night LP is amazing !
RIP Terry! Great video guys welcome to the worlds of actual artist!
My folks brough their debut album home when I was 13. We were all blown away. This song and "Im a Man" were killers.
this was the first song I learned on the trumpet. they were called the Chicago transit authority at the time
Saw these guys a couple of months ago; the 56th anniversary of the band. And they can still rock the house down! Robert Lamm (keyboards), Lee Loughnane (trumpet), and James Pankow (trombone) are the original members still with the group. I first saw them when I was in high school (1973 or 1974).
Killer Guitar Solo! 😎🔥🤘🎸
yeah but the great Peter Cetera on bass and lead vocals, f'n priceless
Please react to Chicago's song "Colour My World." Terry Kath sang the lead. Beautiful.
Off their first album, one of the truly great debut albums. Musicianship from the top shelf. The term " monstering the guitar" surely comes from watching Terry Kath.
That guitar solo is insane... Sounds great for being live... The studio album recording is precise and spot on ... One of my favorites!
I saw Chicago in concert 3 times. Fanominal every time! I'm 67 now.
Next 2 Chicago tracks in this order, both studio versions, please. “Make Me Smile”. Then the first song from their debut album, name of the song, “Introduction “. Also “Dialogue Parts 1&2” and “ Im a Man”. Keep Rockin’!👍
'Make me smile' probably in my top 5 fav songs. Wait till you hear Kath sing!! Song always reminds me of late husband, and I cry but listen when I feel strong enough. You just have to hear it.
Was it perfect? No. Was it PERFECT? Yes.
This video never gets old
Saw them do this in person in 1969. It was an outdoor concert in a small stadium. The lead act was Poco and they were a nice little folk/rock band. Then Chicago came on with the energy and the brass and blew the place away. They were known then as "Chicago Transit Authoriy" then. Try "Beginnings" or "I'm a Man" off the first album named after the band.
I saw them live in 1970. Just freaking amazing.
The CTA forced them to change their name.
I saw them in 1970 when they were the headliners - Grand Funk Railroad, James Cotton blues band and Norman Greenbaum were on the bill. Sad to say Grand Funk Railroad blew them away that night. And I was there for CTA. Just being real.
one of the greatest guitar solos in history
Thanks for watching: Jimi loved Terry. ❤
Im going to be 75 in May and was around when Chicago introduced us to their magic. This and other tunes are beyond excellent. Its hysterical to me that the reviewers are just getting around to listen to them.
One of the most important live concert performances in Rock history. The guitarist had a magnificent singing voice too.