“Barson’s music brings together a world of divergent sounds, seamlessly casting something even beyond what Ho referred to as Afro-Asian music. Jazz, particularly of the Free variety, is ever present but scored with an orchestral vision informed by the far reaches of Mingus and Gil Evans. Mixing three outstanding lead vocalists, two voice actors, a four-part chorus, four saxophones (including Barson’s) with one doubling bass clarinet, a string quartet that unites the Chinese pipa lute and ancient Kazakh bowed kobyz with standard violin and cello. These instruments are most apparent within the strains of “The Four-Mirrored Butterfly,” an almost hypnotic segment culminating in a behind-the-beat waltz with the soaring operatic voice (at points more Brecht/Weill opera) of Gizelxanath Rodriguez and a riveting obbligato by bari sax. Rodriguez really comes to the fore on “Sisters Unite” which bridges spoken word to several voice stylings.” — John Pietaro, People’s World