This recording was 
                set down a fortnight after Tilson Thomas's 
                inaugural concert with the SFSO. It 
                makes for an outstanding representation 
                of the ballet for collectors who would 
                rather have a very generous sampling 
                (29 tracks) instead of the whole thing. 
              
 
              
MTT has a great feeling 
                for aggressive movement without scouting 
                over emotional messages. The upward-floating 
                moonlight of Balcony Scene (tr. 15) 
                is portrayed in breathtaking tenderness. 
                This is not an isolated instance either; 
                try Madrigal (tr. 13) and 'Romeo And 
                Juliet' (tr. 24). 
              
 
              
The spurs are applied 
                in the pummelling wave-beat of Interlude 
                at 26 as the brass tier call out in 
                indomitably stentorian tones. The recording 
                quality is exceptional with The Quarrel 
                (tr. 4) a good demonstration track. 
                Its antiphonal effects, darting backwards 
                and forwards, are memorable. Delicacy 
                is on call as well with the orchestra’s 
                account of Juliet’s speeding tiptoes 
                likely to impress even the most stolid 
                listener. The spatial sense is well 
                conveyed with the brass dazzlingly caught 
                over a wide soundstage as in the Introduction 
                to Act III. 
              
 
              
The success of the 
                score depends also on the ability to 
                juxtapose cordite and peaches. This 
                is unflinchingly captured in ‘The Duke’s 
                Command’ (tr. 6). The paranoia inherent 
                in the ‘Mandolin Dance’ is caught with 
                a manic wildness as never before not 
                even by Rozhdestvensky or Algis Zuraitis 
                (both complete sets); the latter well 
                worth tracking down on CFP provided 
                you are not allergic to the Soviet performing 
                tradition. 
              
 
              
The music goes for 
                little unless there is blaze and blare 
                in ‘The Death of Tybalt’ and that 
                it gets though the effect is not quite 
                as monumental as it can be. A healthy 
                string glow is in evidence throughout: 
                neither over-plush nor starveling. This 
                is exemplified in ‘Juliet's Death’ where, 
                even at high pressure, the strings keep 
                their lustre and yield rather than taking 
                on an iron harshness. 
              
 
              
The conductor is to 
                be congratulated for ending what amounts 
                to an extended Romeo and Juliet ‘symphony’ 
                in such repose rather than in clamour. 
              
Rob Barnett