John Kelman, Nic Jones and Mark Corroto wrote favorable reviews of Ragged Atlas at All About Jazz, whereas Beppe Colli at Clouds and Clocks had mixed feeling about the album. Kelman described Cosa Brava as "the perfect nexus between more accessible yet still left-leaning music for dance, and the more challenging structures of his 1970s work with Henry Cow". He said that Ragged Atlas "transcends time and genre" and has "road dynamics, a blend of acoustic and electric instrumentation, fine compositional detail, and surprisingly memorable melodies". Kelman said that it "stands as one of 2010's most auspicious debuts". Corroto called the album a "classic 1970s rock opera", and described the music as a mixture of "folk, Celtic, modern chamber, Latin, funk, Eastern, and prog-rock". He said that Frith "never stray far from joyous music making". Jones wrote that there is an "impishness about the music, a sense of fun that stems from the joy of discovery". As an example he said that the "arguably banal lyric" in the track "Falling Up " is elevated to another level by the supple music of Carla Kihlstedt's violin". Jones said that "Tall Story" works because of the musicianship of the group, and that in lesser hands it "might come off as so much fluff". Colli was critical of the album, saying that the volume is "deafening", and that the music is "often tacky, bombastic, as if looking for an applause". He did like some of the tracks, for example "Lucky Thirteen", which he said has a "meditative mood, fine unison from vocals and violin", and "Tall Story", with its "light, fine theme". Overall, however, Colli described the album as "kitsch".
Track listing
Track notes
Source: CD liner notes written by Frith; all quotes by Frith.
"Pour Albert" – Frith called Marcoeur one of his "favorite" songwriters and musicians, and a "warm and generous friend and teacher".
"R. D. Burman" – Burman was an Indian film score composer who "fearlessly mixed genres, styles, cultures, and instruments" to create a "unique body of work" spanning a 30-year career.
"Falling Up " – Frith described Miller as an "extraordinary dancer, inspiring choreographer, and uncompromising philosopher"; Miller and Frith once led a workshop at the Edinburgh Festival where Miller taught dancers how to "fall up".
"Out on the Town with Rusty, 1967" – Frith met Rusty while performing at the York Folk Club in mid-1967; they became friends that summer, played at local Working Men's Clubs, and attended a Jimi Hendrix concert in Woburn, Bedfordshire; a few months later, after Frith had returned to university, Rusty was killed in a motorbike accident.