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''Chicago 18'' is the fifteenth studio album by the American band Chicago, released on September 29, 1986. As the successor to 1984's multiplatinum hit ''Chicago 17'', this album is the first without cofounding member Peter Cetera. With Cetera having quit the band in 1985 in favor of a solo career, Chicago eventually hired Jason Scheff to fill Cetera's position as vocalist and bassist. The most used voices in Chicago now belonged to its two newest recruits, Scheff and Bill Champlin, who had joined the band in 1981. Chicago again hired producer David Foster to create a soft rock followup to ''Chicago 17''. The band recorded an updated high-tech remake of their hit classic "25 or 6 to 4" (#48). Then, "Will You Still Love Me?" (#3) and "If She Would Have Been Faithful..." (#17) became hits. Scheff is lead vocalist on all three releases. The album features a brief, ''a cappella'' horn riff, Pankow's "Free Flight." ''Chicago 18'' ultimately went gold, peaking at #35. ==Track listing== A re-recorded version of "When Will the World Be Like Lovers?" (Robert Lamm/Tom Keane/David Foster) appears on Robert Lamm's 1995 solo album ''Life Is Good In My Neighborhood''. The original recorded version from the ''Chicago 18'' sessions also appears online. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Chicago 18」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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