Performing the intricate music of 
Carla Bley is no mean feat, but if anyone is up for the challenge, it would be vibraphonist 
Gary Burton. Signifying a high watermark in his career in the mid-'70s, 
Dreams So Real teams 
Burton with his fellow professor at the Berklee College of Music 
Mick Goodrick, along with recently graduated student 
Pat Metheny. Add the peerless electric bass guitarist 
Steve Swallow and always proficient drummer 
Bob Moses, and you have the makings of a short-lived supergroup capable of playing 
Bley's memorable, melancholy music. While generally regarded as one of many 
Burton/
Metheny pairings, it is 
Goodrick's individualism (it was he who primarily tutored 
Metheny) that needs more recognition. With 
Goodrick on electric six-string and 
Metheny on electric 12-string guitar, the sonorities they establish allow 
Burton to freely discourse on 
Bley's prickly angular melodies. The brittle and fractured combo track "Ictus/Syndrome" -- closer to a three-piece suite -- goes from a frantic neo-bop meter to straight-ahead swing with a clearly inspired 
Burton rambling into the bright signature rondo sound that 
Metheny and 
Swallow have always owned. "Syndrome" might also be familiar to 
Bley's fans as "Wrong Key Donkey." "Doctor" merges the vibes and guitars into a guided prognosis of hypertension within slowly elevated blood pressure levels. "Intermission Music," inspired by golden age films, is a beautiful waltz vehicle for the guitars rhythmically, and for 
Swallow and 
Moses melodically. With the bandmembers at their most passionate, the title track is a lighthearted but cerebral ballad, "Vox Humana" a simplified tango, while "Jesus Maria" evokes the delicate epic strains of 
Bley's personalized sound with 
Burton playing it alone. While the singing sound of 
Metheny is in its infant stages, it is easily recognizable and clearly realized. Generally regarded as one of 
Burton's top three recorded dates, it has stood the test of time. Perhaps some day, a complete collection of the vibist playing 
Carla Bley's many other compositions can be compiled to complement this surface-scratching but very important album. ~ Michael G. Nastos