Lana Lane
Return to Japan
Review by Gary Hill
This, the first live album from Lana Lane is a very good two disc set. It features a lot of material from various albums recorded on various tours. Also included here are several cuts that have never before been released by Lane. These include the band's covers of King Crimson's "In The Court of the Crimson King", Aerosmith's "Dream On" and Rainbow's "Long Live Rock N Roll". These covers alone are worth the price of admission here. They also serve to show where the band's influences are. Indeed, they also cover Marillion's "Seasons End" here, and these songs, along with the original material presented on the album show this band to be what they are - a progressive rock outfit with strong hard rock influences. They are amongst the best in that genre, too.
In fact, all of the recordings here are quite strong, the band playing impeccably. The only real complaint I have is that a lot of the mellower material is lumped together on the second disc. It seems that this is a trend in a lot of prog these days, and I am not sure I like it. Really, putting a mellow song directly before a hard rocking one serves to provide a contrast which generates interest and keeps the music from all feeling the same. Admittedly, though, the approach is more understandable here than it is on many other albums. The reason is that the first disc is composed entirely of full band renditions, while most of the second CD are recordings of just Lane and husband/keyboardist Erik Norlander performing as a duo. I still think, though, that interspersing some of those cuts amongst the collection might have made for a stronger release.
If you are a Lana Lane fan, you have probably been waiting for this disc for a long time. If you are not, you probably will still like the first live album from this band that tries very hard to put the rock back in progressive rock.
This review is available in book format (hardcover and paperback) in Music Street Journal: 2004 Year Book Volume 1 at https://garyhillauthor.com/Music-Street-Journal-2003-and-2004/.
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