Greatest Hits, Volume II | |
Type: | compilation |
Artist: | Chicago |
Cover: | ChicagoGH2.jpg |
Released: | November 23, 1981 |
Recorded: | January 1969 – June 1978 |
Genre: | Rock |
Length: | 35:49 |
Label: | Columbia |
Producer: | James William Guercio, Phil Ramone and Chicago |
Prev Title: | Chicago XIV |
Prev Year: | 1980 |
Next Title: | Chicago 16 |
Next Year: | 1982 |
Greatest Hits, Volume II is the second greatest hits album by American rock band Chicago, released on November 23, 1981 by Columbia Records.
Following the poor reception of 1980's Chicago XIV, Columbia Records dropped Chicago from its roster and cancelled a lucrative contract that had recently been signed. While the band had begun its association with David Foster and was in the process of building a new identity, Columbia had contractual obligations for a new release. Therefore, the label wanted a sequel to the band's first, and highly successful, hits package which had been 1975's . This sequel, Volume II, featured bare-bones album artwork consisting of a collage of photos from around the city of Chicago. The album lacked liner notes and was the only Chicago album not to have its own rendition of the band's distinctive logo; a small picture of the logo from the band's second album appears in the center of the collage.
Released in November 1981, Greatest Hits, Volume II primarily sampled material from Chicago VIII through 1978's Hot Streets, after which the hits stopped coming, though it also stretches back to pick up overlooked hits from the era first covered by the original compilation album. Appearing just before Chicago's unexpected career revival with Chicago 16, reached #171 in the US. Curiously, though "Dialogue Part I & II" is part of the track listing, Part I of the song is left off, leaving only the Part II outro.
Like its predecessor, Greatest Hits, Volume II has since been superseded by 2002's . Unlike the first volume, it is out of print.
Greatest Hits, Volume II (Columbia 37682) reached #171 in the US during a chart stay of 5 weeks. It did not chart in the UK.