Residents in the Northeast Corridor know Yannick Nézet-Séguin as the indefatigable Music Director of the Philadelphia Orchestra and Metropolitan Opera. These high-profile associations tend to overshadow his longest-standing creative partnership, as artistic director of the Orchestre Métropolitain de Montréal. Nézet-Séguin first led this outfit in 2000, when he was 25 years old; five years ago they handed him a lifetime contract. When the Kimmel Center revived its visiting orchestra series last year, it seemed a foregone conclusion that the head honcho would bring his hometown band to Philadelphia.
This was the Canadian group’s second visit to the City of Brotherly Love – they debuted locally in 2019, with a concert of Mozart and Bruckner. The program for their return again hewed to the familiar, with a Rachmaninov piano concerto and a Sibelius symphony, alongside a new work by Canadian composer Cris Derksen. Now as then, however, this orchestra’s particular style struck me as not ideally suited for Verizon Hall, a venue meticulously designed to support the acoustic of its resident ensemble.
With fewer players and a leaner, more transparent sound, the Orchestre Métropolitain sometimes seemed undergunned. Their string tone is brighter and more focused, their woodwinds delicate as a whisper. Brass chorales and timpani emerge with a classy nuance rather than overall bombast. Their prevailing sound tends to hurtle forward in a column, rather than envelop the audience from all sides of the hall. There were moments in the performance where this distinction flourished: climaxes in Sibelius’ Symphony no. 2 in D major were explosive and jarring at the same time. Still, you wanted a more heroic sound for this work that glorifies the strength and resilience of the Finnish people.