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Remaster Class: Chicago Transit Authority
Naturally, I had to have CTA on CD, and the 1988 Columbia Redbook CD was adequate enough—and don't get me started on the inferior Chicago Records CD. When Rhino took over the band's catalog, their 2002 CTA CD appeared in sleeved digipak form that never stays square—no matter what, it always buckles to resemble a parallelogram. Good thing the rise of quad was in sync with the band's brassy improv vibe, as Chicago took full advantage of the format during their '70s heyday. That said, I didn't get my hands on the 1974 quad CTA Columbia LP until years later—but I remain nonplussed by the Dolby quad 8-track attempt. As soon as the Rhino Handmade Quadradisc DVD-A came into existence as a 40th anniversary limited edition in 2009, I was all over it. Even better, Rhino dropped the cleverly dubbed nine-disc Quadio Blu-ray box set in 2016, a collection of Chicago's first eight studio albums from 1969-76 plus their initial greatest hits compilation, all of them appearing as (wait for it) DTS-HD Master Quadio 4.0 mixes in 24-bit/192kHz. And, yep, you guessed it—the 4.0 BD is my favorite of the CTA lot.
Co-founding trumpeter Lee Loughnane readily confirmed to me just how much quad suited the progressive, compositional nature of Chicago music. "I like to have it so when the listener is immersed in the song, it feels as if you're almost a part of the band. That's the most satisfying for me," he admitted. "The album was originally designed sonically as though you were listening to us live, and this is what we do for audiophiles. That's the whole point of our music—to make it sound like you're right there with us."
True, we could probably use more bass content overall—though it's not really lacking here, tbh—but CTA on BD maximizes the quad format to a Q, er, T. Clarified Loughnane, "When quad came to be, the CTA mix had to be redesigned sonically, because it was initially set up to be stereo, which was what was available at the time we recorded it," he explained. "We did it on an 8-track machine, so there was some bouncing to be done too."
The CTA quad table is set perfectly with "Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?" and the harmonic pendulum swing of its intuitive piano lines and horn accents. Plus, the percussion-fueled hooting and hollering section at the end of "Beginnings," Peter Cetera's clockwise vocal responses all throughout "Poem 58," the drum-and-organ-driven rolling and tumbling boastings of "I'm a Man," and the all-out free-form jamming of "Liberation" (I continue to marvel at how Chicago wriggles their way out of each false ending) all serve the intended purpose of putting listeners right in the room with the band.
Of course, I'd be all-in on having CTA delivered in a full 5.1 presentation someday, if not Dolby Atmos. At least for now, all you got to do is listen to CTA on BD to get all the right 4.0 answers to Questions 67 and 68.
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