Arturo Toscannini once quipped that it takes ten years to make a conductor... and another ten to make a good one. Kensho Watanabe demonstrated that he is well along that second decade of development as he took the reins of Montreal's Orchestre Métropolitain, sharing the spotlight with another emerging artist, Québécoise pianist Élisabeth Pion.
Watanabe launched the concert with Dukas' The Sorcerer's Apprentice. It was immediately evident that effective rehearsing had occurred, as the tuning in the woodwind section was even better than usual. Tempo transitions had been well thought out and the overall balance of the orchestra was judiciously controlled, resulting in a secure and satisfying rendition. This piece's devilish technical challenges were well handled by the OM, in no small part due to the Watanabe's prudent tempo choices. Kudos to contrabassoonist Joelle Amar for her noteworthy contribution as well as to the string section for the sumptuous sonorities generated in their tutti passages. In general, more could have been done to lift the music off the page, particularly in the tranquil sections; nonetheless the OM delighted its audience.
Subsequent to the success of The Sorcerer's Apprentice, Dukas accepted a teaching position at L'École Normale de Musique de Paris where he tutored the Latvian pianist Lūcija Garūta. Her Piano Concerto, although composed in the middle of the 20th century, is unabashedly romantic in style and reminiscent of Rachmaninov's rhapsodic panache. Élisabeth Pion proved she was up to the pianistic challenges, as evidenced by her effortless handling of the extended virtuosic cadenza passages. Pion's extensive chamber music background served her well in a sublime duet with principal clarinetist Simon Aldrich. The OM could have been more responsive to their soloist's initiations with respect to greater use of rubato and more elastic phrasing. Watanabe should have ensured that the heavier orchestral passages did not bury the piano. Although Garūta's Piano Concerto is at times trite, Pion's luxuriant musicality undeniably exhilarated.