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    • Source: Look Away
    • "Look Away" is a 1988 power ballad by American rock band Chicago. Written by Diane Warren, produced by Ron Nevison, and with Bill Champlin on lead vocals, it is the second single from the band's album Chicago 19. "Look Away" topped the Billboard Hot 100 for two weeks in December 1988, becoming the group's third and final number one hit, following "If You Leave Me Now" (1976) and "Hard to Say I'm Sorry" (1982). "Look Away" is Chicago's seventh song to have peaked at No. 1 on the Adult Contemporary chart, and it was also the No. 1 song on the 1989 year-end Billboard Hot 100 chart, even though it never held the No. 1 spot at all in 1989. This is because Billboard's year-end chart covers the charts as far back as late November of the previous year.
      The song is the band's only No. 1 single following the departure of Peter Cetera in 1985.


      Production


      According to drummer Danny Seraphine, Chicago's manager Howard Kaufman suggested that the band bring in outside songwriting help. Kaufman recommended Diane Warren, who also composed the band's single "I Don't Wanna Live Without Your Love," and producer Ron Nevison, who had worked with Heart on the number one hits "These Dreams" and "Alone."
      Warren wrote "Look Away" from the man's perspective and submitted a demo to Chicago's management company. "Diane's demos always sound really good," Nevison said. "Her demos are always very simple, but they always have great vocal performances." Bassist Jason Scheff remarked, "The songs that last for me are the ones I don't get at first," and added, "I remember hearing 'Look Away' and thinking it's okay, but not great. Thank God I'm not an A&R man."
      Before being submitted to Chicago, the song was one of two ballads offered by Epic Records to Cheap Trick, who chose "The Flame" instead. The track was also offered to Europe, but was turned down due to frontman Joey Tempest's refusal to record material written by outside writers.
      The song featured Bill Champlin on lead vocals and furthered Chicago's shift towards de-emphasizing the band's brass section compared to their earlier years. Scheff noted that with Peter Cetera having left the group and "making his own records, it was good for us to release some songs with a different sound (like) Bill's voice. Then we wouldn't be saturating radio with Chicago-sounding songs."


      Reception



      "Look Away" entered the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in September 1988 and reached No. 1, where it spent two weeks, in December. Champlin said he was unaware of the feat at the time. "Everybody said, 'I hear your song every day,'" he recalled. "I go, 'What song?' I was kind of oblivious to the whole thing, busy working on new stuff. That's what happens. As everybody else gets aware of what you're doing, you're usually about five or six tunes past it." The single was certified gold in January and ranked No. 1 on the 1989 Billboard Year-End singles chart. It also reached No. 1 on the Adult Contemporary chart.
      Outside the U.S., "Look Away" peaked at No. 1 in Canada, No. 10 in the Netherlands, No. 15 in Sweden, and No. 20 in Belgium.
      In 2018 a British man claimed he is the author of the song and launched legal proceedings.


      Track listing


      7" Vinyl; Cassette


      Charts and certifications




      See also


      List of Hot Adult Contemporary number ones of 1988


      References

    • Source: Look Away!
    • Look Away! is the title of a recording by Doc Watson and Merle Watson, released in 1978.
      Look Away! is out-of-print and was re-issued on CD in 2002 by Southern Music packaged with Lonesome Road!.


      Reception



      Writing for Allmusic, music critic Mark Allan wrote of the album "No album by this wonderful picker and his equally adept son could be without merit, although the material is not as consistently strong as they deserve."


      Track listing


      "Florida Blues" (Traditional) – 1:45
      "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" (Bob Dylan) – 2:47
      "My Love Come Rolling Down" (Eric Von Schmidt) – 3:29
      "Gypsy Davie" (Traditional) – 3:25
      "'Rangement Blues" (Traditional) – 2:51
      "You Two-Timed Me One Time Too Often" (Jenny Lou Carson) – 2:06
      "Blues in My Mind" (Fred Rose) – 2:27
      "It's a Crazy World" (Mac McAnally) – 2:41
      "Under the Double Eagle" (Traditional) – 2:26
      "God Holds the Future" (Traditional) – 2:53
      "Dixie" (Traditional) – 1:35
      Additional tracks on the Southern Music release:
      "New Born King" – 3:01
      "Peace in the Valley" (Thomas A. Dorsey) – 3:02


      Personnel


      Doc Watson – vocals, guitar, harmonica
      Merle Watson – guitar, dobro
      T. Michael Coleman – bass, background vocals
      Johnny Gimble – fiddle
      Gene Scrivenor – harmonica
      Jim Isbell – drums, percussion
      Marcia Routh – background vocals
      Lisa Silver – background vocals
      Pebble Daniel – background vocals


      References




      External links


      Doc Watson discography

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