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Videos Album: Along Comes a Woman**1985

"Along Comes a Woman"
Single by Chicago
from the album Chicago 17
B-side"We Can Stop the Hurtin`"[2]
ReleasedFebruary 11, 1985[1]
GenrePop rock
Length
  • 4:14 (album version)[3]
  • 3:47 (single version)[4]
LabelFull Moon/Warner Bros.[4]
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)David Foster[4]
Chicago singles chronology
"You`re the Inspiration"
(1984)
"Along Comes a Woman"
(1985)
"25 or 6 to 4"
(1986)

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Along Comes a Woman**
Tags

Singles chronology

Along Comes a Woman**

Chicago

1985 Single
  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 11 Febrero 1985 · Fecha Grabación: 1985 -
    Discográfica: Full Moon/Warner Bros.[4] · · Productor: David Foster[4]

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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    1985 single by Chicago

    "Along Comes a Woman" is a song written by Peter Cetera and Mark Goldenberg[5] for the group Chicago and recorded for their album Chicago 17 (1984), with Cetera singing lead vocals. The fourth single released from that album,[6] it is the last Chicago single released with original singer/bassist Cetera, who left the band in the summer of 1985.[7][8]

    Upon its release in 1985, Billboard magazine highlighted the single in its "Singles: Pop: Picks" section, as a "new release with the greatest chart potential," and called it a "hard rocker."[4] At the end of the year, Billboard magazine music critic, Linda Moleski, listed the single among her top ten highlights of the year as, “An excellent funk-pop sound that’s reflective of 1985.”[9]

    The original album version was 4:14 in length.[3] It was remixed to a more high-tech mid-80`s sound for the single release which runs 3:47 in length.[4]

    Music video

    The music video, shot in black and white, combined themes from the films Raiders of the Lost Ark and Casablanca[10][11] and featured Peter Cetera, the lead vocalist on the song, in the Indiana Jones/Rick Blaine-type role.[7] It was produced by Jon Small of Picture Vision, Inc., and was directed by Jay Dubin,[10] who also directed the syndicated TV series The Wombles in the 1980s.[12][13] The video was released in 1985, during what some call the "golden era" of MTV.[14]

    Personnel

    • Peter Cetera – lead and backing vocals
    • Bill Champlin – keyboards, guitars, backing vocals
    • Robert Lamm – keyboards, backing vocals
    • Lee Loughnane – trumpet
    • James Pankow – trombone, horn arrangements
    • Walter Parazaider – woodwinds
    • Danny Seraphine – drums
    • Chris Pinnick — guitars

    Additional personnel

    • David Foster – keyboards, synth bass, synthesizer programming, rhythm and vocal arrangements
    • John Van Tongeren – synthesizer programming
    • Erich Bulling – synthesizer programming
    • Marcus Ryle – synthesizer programming
    • Michael Landau – guitars
    • Paul Jackson, Jr. – guitars
    • Mark Goldenberg – guitars, additional arrangements
    • Paulinho da Costa – percussion
    • Gary Grant – trumpet
    • Greg Adams – trumpet
    • Kenny Cetera – backing vocals

    Charts

    Weekly charts

    Chart (1985)

    Peak
    position

    Canada Top Singles (RPM)[15]

    17

    UK Singles (OCC)[16]

    96

    US Billboard Hot 100[17]

    14

    US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[18]

    25

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    1985 single by Chicago

    "Along Comes a Woman" is a song written by Peter Cetera and Mark Goldenberg[5] for the group Chicago and recorded for their album Chicago 17 (1984), with Cetera singing lead vocals. The fourth single released from that album,[6] it is the last Chicago single released with original singer/bassist Cetera, who left the band in the summer of 1985.[7][8]

    Upon its release in 1985, Billboard magazine highlighted the single in its "Singles: Pop: Picks" section, as a "new release with the greatest chart potential," and called it a "hard rocker."[4] At the end of the year, Billboard magazine music critic, Linda Moleski, listed the single among her top ten highlights of the year as, “An excellent funk-pop sound that’s reflective of 1985.”[9]

    The original album version was 4:14 in length.[3] It was remixed to a more high-tech mid-80`s sound for the single release which runs 3:47 in length.[4]

    Music video

    The music video, shot in black and white, combined themes from the films Raiders of the Lost Ark and Casablanca[10][11] and featured Peter Cetera, the lead vocalist on the song, in the Indiana Jones/Rick Blaine-type role.[7] It was produced by Jon Small of Picture Vision, Inc., and was directed by Jay Dubin,[10] who also directed the syndicated TV series The Wombles in the 1980s.[12][13] The video was released in 1985, during what some call the "golden era" of MTV.[14]

    Personnel

    • Peter Cetera – lead and backing vocals
    • Bill Champlin – keyboards, guitars, backing vocals
    • Robert Lamm – keyboards, backing vocals
    • Lee Loughnane – trumpet
    • James Pankow – trombone, horn arrangements
    • Walter Parazaider – woodwinds
    • Danny Seraphine – drums
    • Chris Pinnick — guitars

    Additional personnel

    • David Foster – keyboards, synth bass, synthesizer programming, rhythm and vocal arrangements
    • John Van Tongeren – synthesizer programming
    • Erich Bulling – synthesizer programming
    • Marcus Ryle – synthesizer programming
    • Michael Landau – guitars
    • Paul Jackson, Jr. – guitars
    • Mark Goldenberg – guitars, additional arrangements
    • Paulinho da Costa – percussion
    • Gary Grant – trumpet
    • Greg Adams – trumpet
    • Kenny Cetera – backing vocals

    Charts

    Weekly charts

    Chart (1985)

    Peak
    position

    Canada Top Singles (RPM)[15]

    17

    UK Singles (OCC)[16]

    96

    US Billboard Hot 100[17]

    14

    US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[18]

    25

    Albums