Chicago & David Foster - Good For Nothing video free download


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Duration: 03:37
Uploaded: 2014/01/21

Chicago "Good For Nothing" from the album "We Are the World" (1985).

"Good For Nothing," a song recorded during the Chicago 17 sessions that was co-written by Foster and Robert Lamm with famous singer/sonwriter Richard Marx.

This tune was originally part of the 1985 multi-artist charity album, "We Are The World" and was never included on a Chicago album. "Good For Nothing" is

also the last song that Peter Cetera recorded with the band before going solo. It is a solid pop up-tempo thing with a light funk groove that features Lamm on lead vocal. The trademark Chicago horns have some room to shine together with prominent guitar licks courtesy of session ace Paul Jackson plus the usual Foster show on various keyboards and synthesizers. Like all his works with the band, Foster's production on this one is elegant and high tech.

"We Are the World was" a 1985 album that contained USA for Africa's "We Are the World" superstar charity recording for famine relief efforts in Ethiopia.

In addition to the title track, the album included nine previously unreleased songs by donating artists, including Prince, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band (a rendition of Jimmy Cliff's obscure "Trapped" recorded live at Meadowlands Arena on their Born in the U.S.A. Tour, which achieved considerable album-oriented rock radio airplay and topped the Mainstream Rock chart), Tina Turner and others.

The album also included another famine relief fundraising song, "Tears Are Not Enough," which was performed by Canadian supergroup Northern Lights.

Prince and The Revolution recorded "4 the Tears in Your Eyes" for the album. A rare live version of the song was included on Prince's The Hits/The B-Sides.

Track listing

Side one

USA for Africa - "We Are the World" (Michael Jackson, Lionel Richie) -- 7:02

Steve Perry - "If Only for the Moment, Girl" (Randy Goodrum, Steve Perry) -- 3:44

The Pointer Sisters - "Just a Little Closer" (Robbie Nevil, Mark Mueller) -- 3:53

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band - "Trapped" (Live Version) (Jimmy Cliff) -- 5:11

Side two

Northern Lights - "Tears Are Not Enough" (David Foster, Bryan Adams, Jim Vallance) -- 4:21

Prince & The Revolution - "4 the Tears in Your Eyes" (Prince) -- 2:45

Chicago - "Good for Nothing" (Richard Marx, Robert Lamm, David Foster) -- 3:35

Tina Turner - "Total Control" (Martha Davis, Jeff Jourard) -- 3:38

Kenny Rogers - "A Little More Love" (Thom Schuyler, Fred Knobloch) -- 2:54

Huey Lewis and the News - "Trouble in Paradise" (Live Version) (Johnny Colla, Bill Gibson, Chris Hayes, Sean Hopper, Huey Lewis, Mario Cipollina) -- 4:34

Lyrics

I helped my good friend's brother

Out of trouble when he was in jail

I was rushed 'cause I got lucky

Paid his lawyer and I paid his bail

Glad to be able just to pay the price

The price it took to set him free

I never heard a single "thank you" at all

You'd think by now I could see

All the good that I did was for nothing, aah

All the good that I did was for nothing

Why don't I just let it be?

I fought for two young lovers

New York artists they were on the run

Got them out to California

One was gifted and the other was fun

Merchants will always be merchants, of course

But an artist's is a fragile life

And it's something I have always believed

The memory cuts like a knife

All the good that I did was for nothing, aah

All the good that I did was for nothing, aah

All the good that I did was for nothing

All the good that I did

(All the good that I did)

Why can't I just let it be?

All the good that I did was for nothing, aah

All the good that I did

All the good that I did was for nothing

All the good I did

All the good I did

All the good I did was for nothing

Comments

8 years ago

ShreadTheWeapon

The first Chicago song I ever heard in life (before I even hear the group's name or knew what they were all about). I was five years old when USA for Africa began and I heard the We Are the World album.It amazes me today that, of all the first Chicago songs I could've heard, I was fortunate that it was an obscure number fronted by Robert Lamm. It came out when they were in the midst of their biggest commercial blitz, and I don't remember hearing anything else of theirs until "Will You Still Love Me" was new. While I've enjoyed the Cetera-fronted hits, there's something about this song which transcends "just being commercial." Why it was never slated for album or single release, I don't know.

9 years ago

jonv16

That's a good song. It's also probably the highest I've ever heard Robert Lamm sing, especially on the fade out.

10 years ago

Michael Chrush

I sure do miss the 80s.

10 years ago

SparksfromtheAnvil

I've always liked this song for the simple fact that I could not get enough of the Chicago 17-era sound (David Foster produced). I like classic 70s Chicago; but also 16 + 17.Neither Cetera nor the band ever sounded as good once they split their separate ways.....in my humble opinion, of course.

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