No. The point is that a 4-disc set has been available since the last reissue (if a 4-disc set is what you want). But I guess you are anxious to be dazzled by all the technical advancements that have occurred between 2007 and 2021 remastering.
I am not a huge Chicago fan but do like their early stuff so I found a nice copy of Chicago IV LP box on ebay with a box in ex shape for cheap money and grabbed it. I listen to mostly live concerts and thought it sounded ok so this new complete run box set intrigues me as I am a sucker for complete concerts. A bit pricy and even though it does not say it is limited edition I might be tempted to grab one as these expensive box sets from Rhino tend to be limited print runs and once they sell out I doubt they will make more of them.
I hope Lee Loughnane, the original member who supervises Chicago's reissues, reads this forum so that he becomes aware that his favorite recording/remixing engineer receives lots of love from this forum.
The members of Chicago did, apparently. And they didn't like what Steven Wilson did with Chicago II. Make of that what you will.
Oh my god!! And by funny coincidence I dreamed about such set again yesterday! Totally gonna buy it... if the price is not so high hopefully.
The 32LP set with an added trumpet mouthpiece exclusive to that set for $817 sounds interesting to me.
I found the 4 disc remaster to sound too digitally compressed. The only decent digital mastering is the original Columbia 3 disc set IMO.
Sounds weird, I don't think it's 'remastered' at all while most of the material wasn't released before. Apart of the tracks that ended up on the original LP set the rest must've been mixed properly first. So '(re)mix' is more possible to say IMO.
I understand tweaking to some degree, if you're releasing a 1-volume idealized concert culled from the whole run. But when your package's mission is specifically to present the complete set of shows, make it warts and all. That tells the story of the performances better and more truthfully. Play with the mix if you want, but leave the music alone.
Hope there's coming one or two preview tracks before the set's release, so then we can judge the mixes/masters. [Edit:] Just watched that announcement video. From the snippets I heard (in case that's the sound we'll get) it sounds alright to me. But probably it's too early to judge already.
I would need to know the brand and size of the mouthpiece first... (yes, I played trumpet back in high school, and was pretty good, so I would know the difference).
Chicago was the first non-classical group to perform six nights in a row (plus two matinees!) at Carnegie Hall 50 years ago. To honor the 50th anniversary of Chicago’s historic concerts, the band will release all eight Carnegie Hall shows, in their entirety, for the first time in a new 16-CD deluxe boxed set. CHICAGO AT CARNEGIE HALL COMPLETE, available July 16, beautifully commemorates the event through memorabilia that includes replicas of the three posters that accompanied the original vinyl release and images of the original concert program, tickets, and more from the historic run. The collection also comes with a 28-page booklet illustrated with photos from the concerts, plus new liner notes with contributions by Lee Loughnane, archivist Jeff Magid, writer/producer David Wild, and comedy icon/Chicago fanatic Jimmy Pardo. Pre-order your copy now: Chicago At Carnegie Hall Complete
The Rhino link includes tracklisting and trailer: https://store.rhino.com/chicago-at-carnegie-hall-complete.html