Having played together off and on for over 40 years, 
Steve Lacy and 
Roswell Rudd are hardly strangers to each other. In the early 1960s, when they led a quartet devoted to 
Thelonious Monk's music, they could barely find anyone to record them (the exception being the Emanem LP School Days, reissued on CD as Hat Art 6140); today a 
Monk tribute album is a much more salable item. But despite its title and the presence of two 
Monk compositions, the title work and "Pannonica," that's not what this is. Rather, it is a kind of newly recorded 
Lacy sampler, adding to the 
Monk tunes: one by 
Duke Ellington ("Koko"), three 
Lacy works that have been recorded previously ("The Door," "The Bath," "The Rent"), and three new 
Lacy numbers ("A Bright Pearl," "Traces," "Grey Blue"). The familiarity of the players -- who, in addition to 
Lacy and 
Rudd, include 
Lacy's regular rhythm section of 
Jean-Jacques Avenel and 
John Bestsch -- is both good news and bad news. Certainly, they sound comfortable with each other, but also, given their long association and the mostly familiar material, they don't seem to have been greatly challenged. They sound most comfortable with the 
Monk tunes and take some chances with the 
Ellington, but on 
Lacy's tunes they sometimes stretch out pointlessly. This is particularly the case on the nearly 12-minute "The Bath," which 
Lacy wrote for a film about a bum who gets to take a bath for the first time in years. The song begins playfully, but it runs on and on until you'd think 
Rudd was trying to play every possible note on the trombone. Monk's Dream is a warm reunion of old friends, but those friends could have tried a little harder to come up with something fresh. ~ William Ruhlmann