Reviewing the world premiere,
Anthony Tommasini of
The New York Times described
Fire in my mouth as "ambitious, heartfelt, [and] often compelling," adding, "The big things are right in this tautly structured 60-minute piece in four parts." He described Wolfe's selection of texts as showing "great sensitivity" and her use of girls' and women's chorus as adding an "affecting touch." Nevertheless, Tommasini was somewhat critical of the work's multimedia elements, observing, "There are stretches in which the music of
Fire in my mouth assumes its place in the multimedia whole a little too well. I liked it most when Ms. Wolfe went for something musically visceral or extreme, as in the climactic episode of 'Protest.'" David Hajdu of
The Nation described the work as "an accomplishment on a level unmatched in [Wolfe's] previous work," writing, "
Fire in my mouth is a monumental achievement in high musical drama, among the most commandingly imaginative and emotively potent works of any kind that I've ever experienced." David Wright of the
New York Classical Review also praised Wolfe's music, despite criticizing its narrative and some of the work's visual elements, which he described as "
Ken Burns-style pan-and-scan of old photos, plus some rather obvious effects (ocean waves for the immigrants' trip, smoke tendrils for the fire)." He wrote, "Indeed, if anything about the experience transcended documentary, it was Wolfe's resourceful use of the enormous musical forces at her disposal." Wright concluded, "As an evocation of these young women's aspirations and the terrible thing that happened to them,
Fire in my mouth was powerful and effective. One just wished this capable composer had set her sights higher than a good feel-bad piece." ==References==