Music for David Mossman

[1][2][3][4] In a review for DownBeat, Martin Longley wrote: "Even though these players all are hovering around age 70, they each play with the tempestuousness of younger men, adding expansive layers, resulting from years of experience.

"[5] John Sharpe of All About Jazz called the album "a dazzling account from a superlative threesome revealing a hitherto underappreciated emotional dimension to the richly-detailed tapestry they weave.

"[7] Writing for Jazzwise, Daniel Spicer stated: "the three of them trade in a dense, information-rich music through which they seem to achieve the holy grail of free-improvisation: the group mind.

"[10] Derek Taylor of Dusted Magazine wrote that the album is "affirmation that free isn't just a face value signifier, but something deeper and more elemental.

"[11] In a review for The Whole Note, Stuart Broomer noted that the album's "dominant texture is that of philosophical dialogue, a rapid conversation in which participants discourse while responding to the simultaneous intrusions of partners in the fray, who may quibble or launch counter-offensives, sending the first speaker to submit background material or new support for his previous theses.