Thursday, May 28, 2020

Studio Album Review: Point of Know Return by Kansas

Point of Know Return was the follow-up to Leftoverture and released just the next year. Steve Walsh had gotten over his writer's block and contributed to more of the writing on this album. Just about everyone knows their song Carry On Wayward Son. But this album contains the two other songs that even non-fans will be familiar with. Everyone knows Dust in the Wind (it's even become fairly popular in pop culture), and to a lesser extent, the opening title track of the album, Point of Know Return. Point of Know Return is a play on "point of no return". Like Leftoverture, it is a tongue-in-cheek album title, though the album's songs are more serious than the album title might let on. At 10 songs, it's also the album with the largest number of songs so far. Even so, I would say there's not a bad song in the bunch.

The album starts off with Point of Know Return, a strong opener that begins with the entire band full-bore. The cover art for the album is a ship falling off the edge of the earth (which is sort of a myth that people used to believe this; even in the time of the ancient Greeks, it was widely accepted the earth is spherical. In fact, Eratosthenes was able to accurately calculate the circumference of the earth over 2,000 years ago). The song plays into this theme, being about a sailing crew and all the dangers associated with sailing the ocean including the possible danger of sailing off the edge of the world and passing the "point of no return" to where you won't be able to turn back. According to the liner notes of the remastered edition, there was no real reason the band spelled the title "know" instead of "no". It was simply at the suggestion of their manager, Budd Carr. The band thought it was funny and would mess with people's minds.

Next is Paradox, a song that keeps up the momentum established by Point of Know Return with a blazing organ intro. The song itself returns to the familiar Kansas theme of searching, a paradox being a seemingly absurd or self-contradictory statement or proposition that when investigated or explained may prove to be well-founded or true. This song explores the paradox of having "seen it all", and yet believing there must be more. Of course, Livgren's conversion was still a couple of years away, but this is reminiscent of C.S. Lewis' well-known argument from desire, that since all natural desires have fulfillments, if we have a desire which nothing in this world can satisfy, it follows we were made for another world. Livgren seems to have found the fulfillment of that desire now.

Coming up third we have The Spider, a short instrumental tune. It's really more of a keyboard feature between Walsh and Livgren, with changing time signatures and virtuosic playing. The piece is in constant movement, evoking mental images of a spider moving around on its eight legs, movement which has always been kind of creepy to many people, myself included.

After that, we have Portrait (He Knew), a song written about Albert Einstein. The song is not just about how brilliant Einstein was, but the fact that his intellect had reached a higher plane than anyone else's, a true visionary who could see into the future. After Livgren became a Christian and Kansas split up for the first time in the 80s, Livgren would go on to form another band called AD. In 1988, for that band's Prime Mover album, Livgren updated this song and called it Portrait II, adapting the words to be about Christ.

Next is Closet Chronicles, the first of only two songs on the album to run over five minutes. The song in an allegory of Howard Hughes, an aviator, manufacturer, and movie producer. The song makes allusions to certain facts about his life, such as the singer gazing out the window of the 42nd floor, a reference to the Las Vegas Desert Inn hotel he purchased, and the fact he was a reclusive loner. The music for this song sounds a lot more regal than the other tracks, and is the most progressive-sounding track on the album so far, with the possible exception of The Spider.

The sixth song on the album is Lightning's Hand. This is more of a deep cut, but at least in 2001 for their Device-Voice-Drum live DVD, they performed a portion of it combined with Belexes (from their first album). This song probably rocks the hardest on this album, including a chaotic solo from the electric guitar and synth to reference the chaotic nature of lightning. Lightning's Hand is about the destructive power of lightning and an entity, possibly Thor, who is able to control it. It would make sense for the song to be about Thor, as Thor is a Norse god and the Norse vikings were sailing men who explored other areas by sea. So not only do we have the destructive power of lightning after the dangers of the ocean, but we also have sailing men who fear this god as they respect the ocean.

Now we arrive at Dust in the Wind, probably the most well-known Kansas song. It's driven by acoustic guitar and features a violin solo by Steinhardt after the second verse and chorus. The song was originally written by Kerry Livgren as a picking exercise to learn fingerpicking on the guitar, but his wife liked the melody so much she encouraged Livgren to write lyrics for it and take it to the band. They accepted it and it was recorded on the album. The lyrics were inspired by Livgren's reading of Indian poetry and convey a sense of the emptiness of life, how humans are insignificant considering the surrounding universe and the fact that we live only a brief time compared to "the earth and sky".

Sparks of the Tempest comes in next. This one is another heavy rocker, being driven by crunchy electric guitar. This is a song about totalitarianism, broadly, or communism, more narrowly. It was written after Livgren read George Orwell's 1984, which you can tell from such lines as "Big Brother is watching and he likes what he sees/A world for the taking when he's ready to squeeze". Other lines, such as "they mold you and shape you", and "the less that you know the more you fall into place" evoke their warning about communism.

Nobody's Home comes in as the penultimate song, and the music is kind of deceiving. The music fits the theme of the song but the lyrics are probably the most progressive-y lyrics Livgren has written, as progressive rock songs usually contain science fiction lyrics. This song is about a friendly extraterrestrial who visits earth, only to find mankind extinct because of being devastated by nuclear war. So literally "nobody's home". I say the music is kind of deceptive because in songs with a science fiction theme, you usually expect a lot of weird synth sound effects and things like that, but this one is basically a straight ahead dirge for mankind from the perspective of this extraterrestrial, complete with piano in the high register to underscore the somber third verse: "No requiem was ever sung, no elegy was read/No monument was carved in stone in memory of the dead".

The last song on the album is Hopelessly Human, the longest song on the album which closes the album with a fantastic progressive rock tune. The meaning of this one is obscure. He talks about the "brainstorm of youth" being a strange aberration. Perhaps the meaning of the song is now that he's older, reflecting upon his youth has helped him to see things that he couldn't see now that he's older without taking that into account.

Point of Know Return is an excellent album, from start to finish. With Leftoverture, it was one of their best-selling albums which didn't focus so much on familiar lyrical territory and instead had a bit more lyrical diversity, even finding inspiration in real life people.

Album: Point of Know Return (1977)
Band: Kansas

Phil Ehart -- drums, chimes, chain-driven gong, timpani, percussion
Dave Hope -- bass, autogyro
Kerry Livgren -- electric and acoustic guitars, piano, clavinet, synthesizers, Rinaldo whistling machine, percussion
Robby Steinhardt -- violin, viola, Faucen lap cello, vocals
Steve Walsh -- organ, piano, celeste, vibes, Peabody chromatic inverter, synthesizers, vocals, percussion
Rich Williams -- electric and acoustic guitars, Benis bow pedal

Track list:

01. *Point of Know Return (3:11) --Walsh, Ehart, Steinhardt
02. Paradox (3:51) -- Livgren, Walsh
03. The Spider (2:05) -- Walsh
04. *Portrait (He Knew) (4:37) -- Livgren, Walsh
05. Closet Chronicles (6:30) -- Walsh, Livgren
06. Lightning's Hand (4:24) -- Walsh, Livgren
07. *Dust in the Wind (3:26) -- Livgren
08. Sparks of the Tempest (4:15) -- Livgren, Walsh
09. Nobody's Home (4:40) -- Livgren, Walsh
10. Hopelessly Human (7:08) -- Livgren

* denotes a single

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