How to Turn the Moon

"[3] Mike Hobart, writing for the Financial Times, stated: "Sanchez and Crispell navigate the boundaries between improvisation and composition with narrative rigour and technical expertise...

The result is an emotionally focused set laden with vivid contrasts and intricate interplay that makes the freely improvised sound pre-composed and the written seem created on the fly.

"[4] In an article for Jazz Times, Martin Johnson commented: "Instead of searching for middle ground on each tune, the pianists use their commonalities as a basis for immediate improvisational flights...

"[7] In a review for Jazz Views, Ken Cheetham wrote: "The pieces are enigmatic, intensely poetic, yet depend on brevity, allowing space for extensive invention in which each musician is completely free to grow and extemporise as she may wish.

"[9] Peter Thelen of Exposé Online remarked: "put on the headphones and drop the lights down low and hear what's really going on between these two as their expressive playing reaches in and touches your soul.