Lawyering up in ChicagoChicago songs

Chicago songs

Terms of Service Authority, the group early 70’s moniker) were quickly alienated by the big, sweeping and love-struck stylings (particularly with songs that relegated the horn section to a background texture).Jon Finch | Magician & Mentalist™ © 2026
A few of these amazing bits, with maestro David Foster’s incredible organizing and production touches, are the best of Chicago. Chicago tunes could run the gamut in style from 1967 on, but the vocals of Peter Cetera never sounded better or bigger than on ballads such as ‘Hard Habit to Break’ and the above ‘Hard to Say I’m Sorry’.
Upon Cetera’s departure in the mid-80s, Jason Scheff took the helm and incredible (and underrated) tunes like ‘Will You Still Love Me?’ and ‘What sort of Man Would I Be?’ came combining…and perfectly suited Chicago’s incredible line-up (even the world-class horn section). Bill Champlin gave Chicago a huge hit with ‘Look Away’ before the 90s and grunge relegated precision that was large melody. While the current Chicago favors this group over their 80s hey-day’s early work, there is ‘Will You Still Love Me?’, ‘You’re the Inspiration’ and ‘Hard to Say I’m Sorry’ May now be some of the most underrated work each by Chicago.