"These are quite the grimmest lyrics I have ever heard ... Each song is a catalogue of despair ... The music is strong, somehow, beneath all this misery, beautifully played, but despite the mellow woodwind and delicate marimba, it is bleak. As I listened to each sad song in turn, I heard resonances of Shostakovich's Baba Yar, and Prokofiev's Alexander Nevsky. There is repetition, in the manner of Michael Nyman ... At other times I thought of Kurt Weill (at his most bitter - there is no Hollywood ending possible here) ... There is beauty, however, in all this bleakness. I liked two songs, "Commerce" - about the arms business - and "Hiver" (...) which is written from the point of view of someone living in the middle of a war. [Himiko] Paganotti sings with dignity and poignancy, there is no melodrama, anywhere, no matter how grim the words. Mantler's trumpet solos are exquisite, and so distinctive, immediately calling to mind his contributions to the Haden/Bley masterpiece of1982,Ballad of the Fallen, which was never off my turntable for most of the '80s. This is a fine record, if you can bear it".