Monolith - the last great Kansas album? |
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BasedProgger
Forum Newbie Joined: January 26 2025 Location: Cyberia Status: Offline Points: 27 |
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Posted: January 30 2025 at 09:45 |
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What does everyone here think of Kansas's sixth album by Monolith?
Generally the first five Kansas albums (debut, Song for America, Masque, Leftoverture, and Point of Know Return) are considered the best but some fans, myself included, include Monolith up there as one of the best Kansas albums, even if it's the worst "classic" album. Yes the album is more commercial than previous efforts and inconsistent in quality, and the two singles are both forgettable, "People of the South Wind" being the most pop song they ever wrote at that time and "Reason to Be" being a worse "Dust in the Wind" with too many synthesizers. But there's also some good stuff on here like "On the Other Side" and "A Glimpse of Home" comparable to the songs from their first five albums. Personally I see Monolith as a planned change in direction while Audio-Visions is when everything fell apart. And something else to discuss: Should "No One Together" (a song written for this album but ended up on Audio-Visions instead) have been included on this album? |
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verslibre
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 01 2004 Location: CA Status: Offline Points: 18281 |
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Monolith is good, but not great. It may have been released too soon (though it went halfway between gold and platinum upon release) to capitalize on the momentum of Point of Know Return and Two for the Show. But it's a keeper, nonetheless.
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Steve Wyzard
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The last great Kansas album is Somewhere to Elsewhere. From time to time, I've even been tempted to consider it "The Very Best" Kansas album, but at other times, not so much.
Monolith is a fabulous, wonderful album. Its only problem is that it's just not as good as Leftoverture and Point of Know Return. "Stay Out of Trouble" is the only "slightly" weak-link for this long-time listener. I'd take Monolith over Masque every time. I'm very glad "No One Together" did not appear on Monolith, because like everything else on Audio-Visions, it seems very rushed and hastily thrown-together.
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BasedProgger
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I agree "Stay Out of Trouble" is the weakest song on Monolith. It feels like an obligatory bluesy hard rock track that doesn't fit with the rest of the album. I do like "No One Together" and I think it would have improved Monolith if it was included but then there wouldn't have been a song on Audio-Visions to make that album worth owning (well, maybe "Curtain of Iron").
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verslibre
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Masque, the same album that contains a few of the band's very best offerings: "Icarus," "Mysteries and Mayhem," "The Pinnacle"...!? |
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Steve Wyzard
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I'm one of those fans who believe the band was finding their footing and discovering their sound on the first 3 albums. Which is in no way to imply that they do not have any good material - far from it. There are good reasons why "Song for America" is as popular as it is. Yet there is also a feeling with most of the early songs that the band is simply trying too hard to impress and showing off. Leftoverture was the first album where they were confident enough to no longer be "Lynyrd Skynyrd meets King Crimson" and just be themselves without sacrificing their virtuosity or experimentalism. Not to mention the first 3 albums were recorded with extremely low budgets, so the songs sounded much better on Two for the Show, which includes the best songs from those albums.
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mellotronwave
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For sure Monolith is their last good LP.
Angels have fallen is my fav song. |
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Hector Enrique
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 26 2019 Location: Lima, Peru Status: Offline Points: 808 |
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I was expecting a much better album after the successful “Lefoverture” and “PoKR”, and with the cover art of the proud Native American I even assumed a vindicatory conceptual theme and intense progressive developments. But except for "Angels Have Fallen" and "Away From You", and the occasional scattered spark of lucidity, the album fails to take off, at least for my taste, and especially for the expectations I personally had.
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Héctor Enrique
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 29116 |
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I would second Somewhere To Elsewhere. I had the pleasure of seeing them playing live (still with Steve Walsh) around that time and they were brilliant. Fantastic band for sure. Always loved the first couple of albums where there is a fluidity to the style and the music feels more 'real' to me. You do get a sense of how good they are and I actually love the boogie tracks! I may be a contrarian but I never warmed that much to Masque and albums after that were just too over produced to my ears. You can hear the noose of 'corporate Americana' tightening its grip. They feel constricted to me. I enjoy the recent Absence of Presence and Prelude Implicit albums a lot more. Shoot me.
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Sean Trane
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Joined: April 29 2004 Location: Heart of Europe Status: Offline Points: 20386 |
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Yeah, that great gatefold sleeve (that inspired me to write SF novelas, long lost nowadays) was certainly very promising (outside), but fairly disappointing once played (inside). Not that I was ever all that convinced with their previous albums (IMHO, they never bettered their debut), but clearly, despite the imaginative imagery, their inspiration had waned after Leftoverture. Monolith was certainly the last album I bought from the band (back then) and isn't present in my shelves (only the debut and a CDr comp of the next 5), but yes, I'd say that it is the last of their classics, but also the least of their classics (though Masque is fighting for that last place as well) .
Edited by Sean Trane - 20 hours 60 minutes ago at 01:44 |
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let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter keep our sand-castle virtues content to be a doer as well as a thinker, prefer lifting our pen rather than un-sheath our sword |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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I think it's very good but it's spotty in some places. For example "stay out of trouble" is a total throw away track and makes typical filler look great by comparsion. One of those what were they thinking moments. There was at least one other not so good song on there but I don't remember what it was. "Reason to Be" however is probably a better song than "dust in the wind."
Edited by AFlowerKingCrimson - January 31 2025 at 05:47 |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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The RIAA website just says gold. Where are you getting this halfway information from?
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BasedProgger
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I think Masque was when Kansas started to move towards a more commercial direction as evident in songs like "It Takes a Woman's Love (To Make a Man)", not that it's a bad thing because Leftoverture and PoKR are both classics where they figured out their sound, balanced progressive rock with arena rock in a way that worked, and didn't have any weak songs. I agree it has some of their best offerings like the ones verslibre mentioned (I'd add "Child of Innocence" to that).
In my opinion, Masque > Monlith but probably only because of "Mysteries and Mayhem" and "The Pinnacle" (should have been one song or at least segued into each other like "Apercu" and "Death of Mother Nature Suite"). |
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BasedProgger
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I actually prefer "Reason to Be" but objectively speaking, it seems like a worse sequel that didn't do as well on the charts. I agree "Stay out of Trouble" is throwaway though ("Away from You" too but not as much).
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verslibre
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It eventually went Platinum. Where are you getting your information? "The platinum record featured here was awarded to Kerry Livgren as a member of Kansas when the album Monolith (1979) reached the 1,000,000 sale mark. The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) awards gold and platinum albums after a long and rigorous process of record sales certification. The tradition of awarding gold records to artists who achieve extraordinary success began in 1958, but by the mid-1970s the distribution of records had reached such a mass audience that the platinum record award was introduced to recognize the sale of one million albums." |
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verslibre
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I don't get that feeling from those albums, particularly the debut, which is wall-to-wall greatness.
Am I glad I don't hear anything Skynyrdy about their music! |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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I go by the RIAA website. https://www.riaa.com/ Edited by AFlowerKingCrimson - January 31 2025 at 11:02 |
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IncogNeato
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I like 'Monolith', but it's not on my list of "classic" Kansas albums.
I like 'Masque' more than 'Monolith'. I don't think Kansas ever made a bad album. But I have zero interest in any new material beyond 'Somewhere To Elsewhere'.
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verslibre
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They need to update it. As you can see right there, it states the Gold certification date is June 20, 1980. More than enough copies shipped upon Monolith's release for it to ship Gold. They had around ¾ of a million units out the door. |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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Wouldn't you think that Going for the One would be close to platinum also (or maybe even platinum by now). It went gold less than a month after being released. Tormato even went platinum less than two months after it was released. Weird. Yes, they need to update lots of stuff on there. They have David Bowies ziggy stardust album as only going gold. Seriously.
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