Martin West, conductor

“Martin West’s conducting of the five orchestral scores was always good, with a balance between strings and horns in the Mozart that beautifully demonstrated this score’s ravishing sonorities.”
The New York Times

Martin West is acknowledged as one of the foremost conductors of ballet, garnering critical acclaim throughout the world. Born in Bolton, England, he studied math at St. Catharine’s College, Cambridge University, before studying at the St. Petersburg Conservatory of Music and London’s Royal Academy of Music.

In fall 2005, West joined the San Francisco Ballet as music director having been a frequent guest since his debut two years earlier. He was previously principal conductor of English National Ballet and has worked with many of the top companies in North America such as the New York City Ballet, Houston Ballet, The National Ballet of Canada, and The Royal Ballet in England.

Martin West
Helgi Tomasson. (© Erik Tomasson)

West has worked with the Hallé Orchestra, Holland Symfonia, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and the Odense Symphony Orchestra in Denmark. He made his U.S. symphonic conducting debut with the Silicon Valley Symphony, resulting in an immediate re-invitation.

In his years as music director he has been credited with raising the standard and profile of the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra and has made a number of critically acclaimed recordings with them, including the complete scores of Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker, excerpts from Delibes’ Coppélia and Sylvia, and a CD of Shostakovich and Tchaikovsky cello music. He and the Orchestra have also made many world premiere recordings; including music by composers such as Bizet, Moszkowski, Shinji Eshima, and Maury Yeston whose full-length ballet Tom Sawyer was recorded in 2013. His recording of C.F. Kip Winger’s Conversations With Nijinksy was recently nominated for a Grammy. In addition, Maestro West conducted on the award-winning DVD of John Neumeier’s The Little Mermaid as well as Helgi Tomasson’s productions of the Nutcracker for PBS and Romeo and Juliet for Lincoln Center at the Movies: Great American Dance.

“Martin West conducted [the three premieres] with remarkable sensitivity to the dancers’ sensual needs”
— San Francisco Chronicle

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