On 50th anniversary, Chicago still touring, rocking

Chicago will perform with the Doobie Brothers on June 23, 2017, at Verizon Amphitheatre in Alpharetta. CONTRIBUTED BY WWW.DME-PHOTOS.COM

Chicago will perform with the Doobie Brothers on June 23, 2017, at Verizon Amphitheatre in Alpharetta. CONTRIBUTED BY WWW.DME-PHOTOS.COM

In February, the members of Chicago had a celebratory dinner to mark their 50th anniversary as an active touring band. Trombonist James Pankow, one of the three remaining original band members who still tour and record with the band, has clearly taken time to absorb how rare that kind of longevity and success is.

“We wined and dined and made the toast to 50 years,” Pankow related during a phone interview last month. “You know, where did it go? Fifty years. I went from high school to Medicare, and I’m still trying to figure this out.”

Chicago has not only endured for 50 years, the group has mostly thrived, remaining a highly successful touring act. Between headlining shows and a summer tour with the Doobie Brothers — which swings by Verizon Amphitheatre on Friday — the band is having one of its busiest years on the road.

But Pankow also realizes that at this stage, there’s no telling how much longer he — or Chicago as a band, for that matter — will get to continue this remarkable run. And he hasn’t had to look far for a reminder that the end of the road could come at any point.

Every night on stage, he can look at his fellow horn players and notice that he and fellow original member Lee Loughnane (trumpet) are now joined by Ray Herrmann on saxophone and flute. After years of subbing for original member Walt Parazaider as needed on tours, Herrmann is now a full-time touring member of Chicago. (Parazaider is still a member of Chicago and performs on occasion with the band for TV performances and other special occasions.)

“Walt’s got heart issues,” Pankow said. “He’s got arteries he’s inherited from his mother’s side of the family, I guess, and it got to a point where the intensity of these shows became a health risk, just pumping the air through those horns for two and a half or three hours. It just became a dangerous thing for him because of his condition.”

So Pankow is savoring the fact that he can still perform with Chicago.

“I’m grateful for it. I just pinch myself,” he said. “So we’re going to enjoy every minute of this because it ain’t going to last that much longer. Who knows?”

In addition to this special anniversary, there have been other reasons for Chicago to celebrate recently.

On New Year's Day this year, an award-winning documentary on the group, "Now More Than Ever: The History of Chicago," aired on CNN. Pankow feels the film has raised the band's visibility and given their career a significant shot in the arm.

Last year, the original lineup was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in the first year of being nominated — even though Chicago had been eligible for the Hall since 1994.

Over the years, as Chicago continued to get passed over, Pankow had made no secret about what he saw as shortcomings of the Hall and the politics behind determining which acts get nominated and voted in.

Pankow credits support from millions of Chicago fans with spurring Hall voters to finally give the band the nod, and he now admits that getting into the Hall was indeed special.

“All of the hot air aside, yeah, there are inconsistencies, no doubt,” Pankow said. “There are qualified veteran acts that have yet to be inducted and are long overdue, just like we were. And then there are lesser acts that have been in for quite some time that don’t have nearly the legacy or the body of work that acts that have not been inducted have. But once it happened, I mean, it was a thrill.”

And on June 15, Pankow and Chicago singer/keyboardist Robert Lamm (the other founding member still with the band) were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.

“It’s an award, not for Chicago, but for us as songwriters,” said Pankow, who wrote or co-wrote tunes such as “Feelin’ Stronger Every Day,” “25 or 6 to 4” and the suite “Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon” (which included the hits “Make Me Smile” and “Colour My World). “It’s really special to me because I am humbled by the company I will now be in.”

In the meantime, there are shows to play. Along with Pankow, Lamm, Loughnane and Herrmann, today’s band includes Keith Howland (guitar, vocals), Lou Pardini (keyboards, vocals), Tris Imboden (drums), Walfredo Reyes Jr. (percussion) and the newest band member, Jeff Coffey (bass, vocals).

Fans who see Chicago on tour with the Doobie Brothers will see each band do its own set before finishing the evening together for a hit-filled encore. Pankow said the joint encore is a highlight for both bands and the fans.

“We come out and man, we slam it,” he said. “You know, ‘Takin’ It to the Streets’ and ‘Rockin’ Down the Highway’ with a horn section, no less. And people really enjoy the collaboration. The biggest part for us is trying to stay out of each other’s way. But it’s a blast.”

CONCERT PREVIEW

Chicago and the Doobie Brothers

7:30 p.m. Friday. $25-$125. Verizon Amphitheatre at Encore Park, 2200 Encore Parkway, Alpharetta. 1-800-745-3000, www.ticketmaster.com.

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