Peter Cetera - Solitude / Solitaire (Columbia House) [Warner Bros Records W1 25474] (23 June 1986)

Released: 23 June 1986
Country: US
Label: Warner Bros Records
Catalog: W1 25474
Genre: Pop / Rock

Item# SR-WAW125474
Ratings: C=VG+; LP=NM-
Note: Manufactured by Columbia House under license

T R A C K L I S T:
01 Big Mistake
02 They Don't Make 'Em Like They Used To
03 Glory Of Love (Theme From The Karate Kid Part II)
04 Queen Of The Masquerade Ball
05 Daddy's Girl
06 The Next Time I Fall
07 Wake Up To Love
08 Solitude / Solitaire
09 Only Love Knows Why




Solitude / Solitaire
Peter Cetera


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Album Review

Dan LeRoy [allmusic.com]

Chicago's early-'80s return from the scrapheap did more than bring the group its biggest chart successes: it finally shattered the carefully maintained ''faceless'' image that had prevented any member from becoming an individual star. In the dawning age of video, the band needed a focal point, and bassist Peter Cetera -- already the voice behind Chicago's soft rock smashes like ''If You Leave Me Now,'' which had made significant inroads with the MOR audience -- was the logical choice. So it wasn't a huge surprise that, following Chicago XVII, Cetera decided to use his new celebrity to strike out on his own. He'd already come close to leaving a few years earlier, making his first solo album when Chicago was at a commercial low point; this time he had plenty of momentum, reinforced with a little cross-marketing for the movie The Karate Kid, Part II. Cetera's gallant ''The Glory of Love'' served as the film's theme and became a major hit as well as defined his post-Chicago sound -- essentially XVII without the horns, with one ultra-slick L.A. producer (Michael Omartian) replacing another (David Foster). The loss of brass, even in the subservient role it had come to play in post-resurrection Chicago, leaves Solitude/Solitaire bland around the edges, and since Omartian went for more trendy embellishments than Foster (especially on up-tempo tracks like ''Big Mistake'') the album doesn't have the timeless sound of Cetera's former work. However, his familiar tenor and gift for melody insure a pleasant listen even today, the well-crafted balladry making the lack of bite bearable.