As an original member of 
Chick Corea's group 
Return to Forever, 
Purim subsequently drew praise as a solo act. Recording for the jazz label Milestone since 1973, 
Purim's sensual and strong voice was singular enough to withstand the pitfalls that hampered the work of many Latin jazz fusion artists. 
Open Your Eyes You Can Fly represents a commercial breakthrough, and has the artist again supplemented by adventurous players and top-notch songwriting. The best of the three 
Chick Corea tracks is the title song. With it's emotive and stinging guitar solo from 
David Amaro, it features 
Purim at her most accessible and charming. The remake of "Sometime Ago" has one of 
Corea's more accessible melodies, as 
Purim turns in one of her more sweet and fulfilling vocals. The melodic and soothing "San Francisco River" has the artist writing solely with frequent 
Corea collaborator 
Neville Potter on the evocative track. Despite the great work here, 
Open Your Eyes You Can Fly, lacks consistency. But with the great talents assembled and great voice, it's easy to overlook that fact. 
Hermeto Pascoal's "Andei (I Walked)" has a great synthesizer solo from 
George Duke and a flute solo from 
Pascoal. "Ina's Song (Trip to Bahia)" features 
Purim singing in Portuguese, starting off slow but then enlivened by her passion filled vocalizations. Produced by jazz producer 
Orrin Keepnews, this features the artist more lucid and joyful than some of her other work. For the reason it is recommended. ~ Jason Elias