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Chicago And Earth, Wind & Fire: Heart & Soul Tour 2024

Live Nation Presale (11/16): BACKSTAGE

MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre

4802 US-301 Tampa, FL 33610 Get Directions

813-740-2446 Event Website | Email

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Chicago And Earth, Wind & Fire: Heart & Soul Tour 2024

Chicago was one of the most successful bands of the rock era, racking up 21 Billboard Top Ten hits between 1970 and 1990, a period where they survived the departure of key band members while also subtly adapting to changing times. That’s not an easy task for any rock band and it’s especially difficult for a group like Chicago, a band that placed equal (if not greater) emphasis on horns as guitar. Picking up where Blood, Sweat & Tears left off, Chicago initially specialized in jazz-inflected prog-rock, using the sides of a vinyl record as canvasses for sprawling, adventurous rock. Chicago quickly learned how to channel this expansive sound into concise pop songs, scoring hits in the early 1970s with such punchy tunes as “25 or 6 to 4” and “Beginnings,” while also showing facility with sweeter melodies on “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?” and “Saturday in the Park.”

As the decade progressed, the band began to emphasize their softer side with bassist Peter Cetera singing such mellow standards as “If You Leave Me Now,” “Baby, What a Big Surprise” and “Hard to Say I’m Sorry.” The band stayed in this lane after Cetera’s departure in the mid-1980s, not missing a beat with new lead vocalist BIll Champlin; he sang the number one hit “Look Away,” as well as “I Don’t Wanna Live Without Your Love” and “Look Away.” Hits dried up in the 1990s but Chicago remained a pop/rock institution, with original members keyboardist Robert Lamm, trumpeter Lee Loughnane and trombonist James Pankow leading a rotating cast of supporting members through regular tours and albums.

Earth Wind and Fire

Earth, Wind & Fire were one of the most musically accomplished, critically acclaimed, and commercially popular funk bands of the ’70s. Conceived by drummer, bandleader, songwriter, kalimba player, and occasional vocalist Maurice White, EWF’s all-encompassing musical vision used funk as its foundation, but also incorporated jazz, smooth soul, gospel, pop, rock & roll, psychedelia, blues, folk, African music, and, later on, disco. Lead singer Philip Bailey gave EWF an extra dimension with his talent for crooning sentimental ballads in addition to funk workouts; behind him, the band could harmonize like a smooth Motown group, work a simmering groove like the J.B.’s, and improvise like a jazz fusion outfit.

Their stage shows were often as elaborate and dynamic as George Clinton’s P-Funk empire. More than just versatility for its own sake, EWF’s eclecticism was part of a broader concept informed by a cosmic, mystical spirituality and an uplifting positivity the likes of which hadn’t been seen since the early days of Sly & the Family Stone. Tying it all together was the accomplished songwriting of Maurice White, whose intricate, unpredictable arrangements and firm grasp of hooks and structure made EWF one of the tightest bands in funk. Not everything they tried worked, but at their best, Earth, Wind & Fire seemingly took all that came before them and wrapped it up into one dizzying, spectacular package.