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Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?

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Wikipedia article




"'Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?'" is a song written and sung by Robert Lamm and recorded by the group Chicago. It was included on their 1969 debut album 'Chicago Transit Authority' and released as a single in 1970.

Background



According to Robert Lamm, "Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?" was the first song recorded for their debut album. The song was not released as a single until two tracks from the band's second album, "Make Me Smile" and "25 or 6 to 4", had become hits. It became the band's third straight Top 10 single, peaking at in the U.S. and No. 2 in Canada. Because the song straddled years in its chart run, it is not ranked on the major U.S. year-end charts. However, in Canada, where it charted higher, it is ranked as both the 59th biggest hit of 1970 and the 37th biggest hit of 1971.

Lamm said of the song:



"[It's] not a complicated song, but its certainly a quirky song. But that was my intent. I wanted to write something that wasnt ordinary, that wasnt blues-based, that didnt have ice cream changes, and would allow the horns to shine and give Lee Loughnane a solo. So all that was the intent."[https://www.songwriteruniverse.com/robert-lamm-chicago-2017.htm Special Interview with Robert Lamm, Co-Founder of Legendary Band Chicago, and Songwriters Hall of Fame Inductee] Accessed April 25, 2019



The original uncut album version opens with a brief free form piano solo performed by Lamm. A spoken verse by Lamm is mixed into the sung final verse of the album version. The single version does not include the free form intro, and was originally mixed and issued in mono. A stereo re-edit (beginning from the point where the free form intro leaves off) was issued on the group's 'Only the Beginning' greatest hits CD set.

A 2:54 shorter edit (omitting not only the opening free-form piano solo but also the subsequent varying-time-signature horn/piano dialogtherefore starting at the trumpet solo which begins the main movementand without the spoken part) was included on the original vinyl version of 'Chicago's Greatest Hits', but was not included on the CD version. This shorter edit was included on the CD version of the compilation album 'If You Leave Me Now.' This version was used as a radio edit version. A shorter version at 2:46 (starting midway through the trumpet solo) was issued as a promotional single, which finally appeared on 2007's 'The Best of Chicago: 40th Anniversary Edition'.

A live version on the 'Chicago at Carnegie Hall' box set presents an expanded version of the "free form" intro, which itself is given its own track.

Various versions of the song receive airplay; the promotional single edit is the version played on certain 'Classic Hits' stations and 1970s radio shows. For example, radio station KKMJ plays the promo edit version on its 'Super Songs' of the 70s weekend, as does Classic Hits KXBT. By contrast, the True Oldies Channel plays the 3:20 single version. An AM radio station in Boston (WJIB 740 which also simulcasts in Maine as WJTO 730) plays the original vinyl 'Chicago IX' edit.

When, in 1969, a lawsuit by the actual Chicago Transit Authority forced the band to drop the Transit Authority part of its name, theyas they later remarked in the liner notes of their greatest-hits boxed set 'Group Portrait'almost sued the CTA for using this very song (to advertise their bus services) without prior permission!

Composition



Right after the free form piano solo, the time signature of the fanfare preceding the trumpet solo is, per bar, \tfrac, \tfrac, \tfrac, \tfrac, \tfrac and \tfrac, then transitions to a section in \tfrac for 6 bars, then goes into \tfrac for one bar. The song stays in \tfrac after that.

Reception



'Cash Box' said of the song that Chicago's "exciting arrangements and superb material add up to an aural outburst that should blossom as a flowering chart entry."

Personnel



* Robert Lamm - lead vocals, acoustic piano, spoken dialogue

* Terry Kath - electric guitar, backing vocals

* Peter Cetera - bass guitar, backing vocals

* Danny Seraphine - drums

* Lee Loughnane - trumpet

* James Pankow - trombone

* Walter Parazaider - tenor saxophone

Chart performance



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



References




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