Reissue with the latest 24bit remastering. Features original cover artwork. Comes with a descripton in Japanese. It is strange to realize that drummer Pete La Roca only led two albums during the prime years of his career, for this CD reissue of his initial date is a classic. La Roca's three originals ("Basra," which holds one's interest despite staying on one chord throughout, the blues "Candu," and the complex "Tears Come From Heaven") are stimulating but it is the other three songs that really bring out the best playing in the quartet (which is comprised of tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson, pianist Steve Kuhn, and bassist Steve Swallow in addition to La Roca). "Malaguena" is given a great deal of passion, Swallow's "Eiderdown" (heard in its initial recording) receives definitive treatment, and the ballad "Lazy Afternoon" is both haunting and very memorable; Henderson's tone perfectly fits that piece.
Hishâm est passionné par les manuscrits anciens et a fait de leur commerce son métier. Il est habité par un rêve étrange dans lequel il voit des anges cueillir tout le jasmin de Basra. Or ce rêve est répertorié et interprété dans un très vieux livre qu'il affectionne : ce serait le signe prémonitoire de la disparition de tous les penseurs de la ville. En proie aux fantasmes, il ne cesse de naviguer entre deux mondes : Le Caire contemporain où il vit et la Basra de la fin du VIIIe siècle, ville fascinante où la pensée islamique est en gestation. …