Reviewing the world premiere, Michael Andor Brodeur of The Washington Post described the concerto as "an unsettling work that opens like a trapdoor, or the moment you fall asleep." He added, "Koh didn’t ride atop the orchestra so much as engage in a prolonged tug-of-war with it—her solos tensing like a tendon within the body of the music. She attacked short solos as if she were sawing through a pipe; elsewhere she strung silvery threads through a dense fabric of dark strings and darting flutes. Her slow-burning centerpiece cadenza was a searing highlight of the evening."[2] Alastair Macaulay of the Financial Times also praised the piece, remarking, "The score made striking, magical contrasts between spectral highest notes and lowest depth-charges, with surging portamenti between the two extremes."[3]
Andrew Clements of The Guardian was more critical of the piece, however, writing, "There's a feisty solo cadenza, and some beautiful passages in which solo-violin harmonics are suspended over chains of slowly descending scales from the woodwind. But the music constantly seems to be travelling towards a destination, a resolution, that it never reaches, and the narrative of its 20-minute journey is not quite eventful enough to justify the lack of that arrival."[4]