Of all
Pinhas' solo releases, this is probably the one which has worn least well. Some listeners at the time accused
Pinhas of selling out, but regardless of his motivation, it is true enough that the pieces on this release are generally shorter than the norm for
Pinhas, and a few of them have vocals in English. Thematically, the recording attempts to represent various cities musically, e.g., Houston, Kyoto, Paris, New York, Paris, although only the New York and Houston pieces have vocals which relate them in any way to the actual cities. Five of the nine pieces on the CD are mellow electronic ambience and could be described as early new age. They were definitely ahead of the curve, but as more and more musicians began to explore the capabilities of synthesizers, this sort of drifting ambience soon became quite commonplace. The best pieces of this group are those which combine the rather anonymous electronic keyboards with
Pinhas' more personalized and emotive electric guitar. The two vocal pieces are a departure for
Pinhas, and not entirely successful. "New York-'West Side'" was released as a single, and apparently represents
Pinhas' attempt to give his record company a hit. Unfortunately, it sounds like a stiff, declamatory reject from
Leonard Bernstein's West Side Story. "Houston 69" (in two parts) includes
Heldon personnel and is the only piece on the CD which captures the old
Heldon energy, but it is marred by a rather silly repeated vocal refrain -- "Houston 69, your wings are on fire, your tail is aflame, we are not to blame." The idea here is presumably to invoke some of the cosmic fear occasioned by an accident in space, inspired perhaps by
David Bowie's "Space Oddity." Curiously enough, this piece prefigures the terrible Challenger mishap which took place in 1986, but the lyrics are too silly to encourage any legitimate sense of suspense or horror. ~ Bill Tilland