[1][2][3] The authors of the Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings wrote: "The interplay between Bang and Sirone is as fascinating as you'd expect given their shared and several experience and the closeness of their instruments."
"[6] On TomHull.com, he commented: "the pairing of the Revolutionary Ensemble bassist with violinist Bang was meant to generate lots of friction, and for good measure they brought along Charles Gayle, who for once blows within the limits of his name, as opposed to his usual hurricane force.
"[5] Dan Warburton, writing for Paris Transatlantic, remarked: "from the sound of it all four gents are happy to be down on the Bowery... 'Freedom Flexibility' swings wickedly..., and Sirone's 'We Are Not Alone, But We Are Few' joins a line of melancholy free jazz ballads stretching back to Ornette's Town Hall Concert.
"[7] In a review for One Final Note, Matthew Sumera wrote: "On Configuration, three veterans of free jazz... join together for a romp through freebop, the blues, funk, and Ayleresque balladry full of distinct pathos.
"[8] All About Jazz writer Germein Linares called "Jupiter's Future" "fun and unexpected," stating that it "allows individual powers to shine on a loosely structured template."