Although it was their tenth release
Chicago X (1976) was actually the band's eighth studio effort -- as
Chicago IV (1972) had been a live set from Carnegie Hall and Chicago IX (1975), which precedes this disc, was their first best-of collection. Musically, the combo had effectively abandoned their extended free-form jazz leanings for more succinct pop songs. That is not to say that the band couldn't rock, because they could as evidenced by the
Terry Kath (guitar/vocals) full-tilt rave-up "Once or Twice," which commences the album. The hot brass section bows deeply and respectfully to their Muscle Shoals counterparts as
Kath does his best funky
Otis Redding vocal. Showing his tremendous depth of field,
Kath bookends the LP with the empowering and positive "Hope for Love." In between those two extremes are some of
Chicago's best-known works -- such as
Peter Cetera's (bass/vocals) chart-topping light rock epic "If You Leave Me Now" and Robert Lamm's (keyboards/vocals) "Another Rainy Night in New York City." The latter side also reveals a minor motif, as it is a Latin-based song about the Big Apple. It follows in the footsteps of the improv-heavy "Italian from New York" from their previous studio effort, the fusion-filled
Chicago VII (1974). Lamm contributes a few other tucked-away classics to
Chicago X as well -- such as the aggressive and sexy "You Get It Up." There are also a pair from
James Pankow(trombone/vocals) in the form of the syncopated "You Are on My Mind" -- which crossed over onto both the adult contemporary as well as pop music charts. His other composition is the classy brass of "Skin Tight." The upfront horn interjections and overall augmentation are akin to the sound made famous by their West Coast
Tower of Power contemporaries. As a majority of their previous efforts had done -- all sans their debut --
Chicago X was a Top Ten album and "If You Leave Me Now" became a double Grammy winner, for both Best Pop Vocal Performance by a Duo Group or Chorus and Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s). The latter award was actually not given to the band, but rather to noted string arranger
Jimmie Haskell and the group's longtime producer,
James William Guercio. Another well-deserved Grammy was given to
John Berg for his visually enticing cover art -- depicting
Chicago's logo on the wrapper of what otherwise appears to be a Hershey chocolate bar. As the disc was released in the summer of the U.S. bicentennial (1976), the all-American image was undoubtedly and duly noted. ~ Lindsay Planer