Rate Your Music score: 1.83 out of 5!
This blog is not a place for catatonic worship of musical artists, no matter how many positive contributions they've made.
In my day, I adored Chicago's now-lost hit "Alive Again." By the mid-1980s, we poked fun at the band a lot because they had softened up so much, but they still occasionally put out an action-packed rocker. But I think it was pretty much downhill for them after that.
One of my high school teachers noted that Chicago was one of the few major bands in popular music that had lasted 20 years. But they weren't really the same band, as they had so many membership changes.
"Hearts In Trouble" wasn't a really soft ballad, but it's associated with the frustration that coincided with Chicago's decline. A reviewer on Rate Your Music noted, "Great band; lousy track." This record rubs a lot of people the wrong way, but they just can't figure out why. I have to admit that when I used to hear this song, it wasn't under the best circumstances. It was like the grand finale of a series of crises that had built up over the preceding few years.
When I first heard this song, I knew it had to be from a movie. What's more is that I knew it had to be from a film I had no plans to see. Sure enough, it turns out it's from a motion picture titled Days Of Thunder - a movie that I don't even remember existing. On the page for "Hearts In Trouble", another Rate Your Music critic said Chicago "could turn in some of the best jazz/rock on the planet but got reduced to supplying songs for lame, crappy big budget films."
Wikipedia says Billboard reported that this single - even though it went on to peak only at #75 - was one of the most added records to American radio station playlists during the week of July 21, 1990. Oh, I believe that. Memories are long. It also appears to be one of few singles to make the Hot 100 whose flip side was by a different act. Its flip was "Car Building" by German composer Hans Zimmer. Zimmer is known for the quote, "I'd much rather everyone made music as opposed to going and beating the shit out of each other."
But no music today represents the culmination of a crisis, because no crisis today is ever dealt with, and the crisis simply becomes permanent.