Review by ProgShine — Erik Norlander is a Progressive Rock keyboardist, composer and producer from California,
the USA. He's quite prolific in his area of work and has over 30 albums recorded since
1993. He was involved in many different projects e.g. with Lana Lane (who is also his wife),
his band Rocket Scientists, his own solo albums and numerous guest appearances.
Erik is an old-fashioned keyboard man with a passion for the Moog Synths. He has also
personally led sound design efforts on several major brand synthesizers.
In the year 2010 he decided to take the best instrumental material he had written so far for
all the albums he had made and re-recorded them in a great style. Then the original The
Galactic Collective (2010) was born, but only a preview of the whole work was released in
CD-R format.
Erik was not that happy with that release and 2 years later, on August 6th, he decided to go
full on that trip field again with The Galactic Collective: Definitive Edition (2012), a 2 CD/DVD
box with all the material from the 2010 album but now with everything in video as well. He
also released a live version called The Galactic Collective: Live in Gettysburg.
Both releases came to life by Erik's own company, the Think Tank Media, with distribution of
Gonzo Multimidia. Each box contains deluxe, full-color 5x7" booklets with extensive liner
notes written by those directly involved with the project and 2CD/DVD combo.
Back in the year of 2009 Erik entered the Studio to re-record some of his favorite
instrumental compositions. He joined forces with Mark Matthews (bass), Nick LePar (drums
and percussion) and Freddy DeMarco (guitars) and in 2010 he released a CD-R of this
work. In 2011/2012 he tried again, this time with video and guest members in some tracks
like John Payne (guitars and vocals), Mitch Perry (guitar), Ron Redfield (guitar), Mark McCrite
(acoustic guitars) and his wife Lana Lane (vocals).
The Galactic Collective: Definitive Edition (2012), the audio, is a very polished work. Well
played and with a very good production.
Many good tracks are included in this Box. 'Arrival/Neurossaur', 'Sky Full Of Stars', 'Trantor
Station', 'The Dark Water' (now transformed in one single epic track, more than 20 minutes
long) are full of Erik's trade mark, his synths. And great heavy guitar-driven riffs.
I cannot say the same about the video. On the DVD we have a kind of documentary, where
Erik himself presents all the songs with details, technical or not, including lots of stories
about the tracks.
If on the one hand it is very nice to see the band's recordings, on the other hand the quality
of the interviews is kinda amateurish, with Erik always looking to anyplace, except for the
camera, which is very weird.
In general, both releases are worthy, a lot. There are some great moments with great
musicianship and will be just right for an audience that like Emerson, Lake & Palmer or
Rick Wakeman but with a modern approach.
You just have to decide what's your favorite format: Studio or Live.