About
Maxime Tortelier is currently Head of Ensembles at the Nancy Conservatoire and was until recently Music Director of the Orchestres Démos – Lyon Métropole, in partnership with the Orchestre National de Lyon. An exciting talent emerging onto the international conducting scene, he made his mark as the Leverhulme Young Conductor in Association with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. Holding the post for two years, he appeared regularly across the South and South West of England and was reviewed as “outstanding” and “charismatic”.
Since then, Maxime has enjoyed invitations with other leading British ensembles, among which the Ulster Orchestra; the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra; and the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, which led to an immediate re-invitation at the BBC Proms. A Londoner at heart, Maxime now lives in Paris where he has had several collaborations with the Orchestre National de France. Other engagements in France have included the Orchestre de Bretagne, Orchestre de Normandie, Orchestre de Chambre Nouvelle-Aquitaine and the Orchestre National de Lyon. The Operas of Montpellier, Toulon, Saint-Etienne and Tours have also invited him for symphony concerts. Elsewhere, he has made debuts with the Iceland Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestre Philharmonique de Luxembourg, and the Orchestre Philharmonique de Monte-Carlo.
Ever eager to share his passion with the next generation of concertgoers and instrumentalists, Maxime frequently works with youngsters: alongside his long-standing Music Directorship in Lyon of Démos – a nationwide music education project – he also serves as Head of Conducted Ensembles at the Nancy Conservatoire. Before that, he held residencies with the South West Youth Orchestra (2013-2014) as well as the National Youth Orchestras of Scotland (2017). In Portugal, he is a frequent guest conductor of the Orquestra Artave. In London he regularly works with the young professionals of the Southbank Sinfonia with whom he has built a warm relationship. His contributions to their experimental “concertlab” series – most recently THE ORCHESTRAL FOREST – drew particular attention from critics and audiences alike, gaining a nomination at the Royal Philharmonic Society awards.
Maxime’s first steps on the rostrum were in 2009 with the Sofia Festival Orchestra, at the Accademia Chigiana in Siena where he studied with Gianluigi Gelmetti. Back then he was in Colin Metters’s conducting class at the Royal Academy of Music, where he received the additional guidance of such figures as David Zinman and Leif Segerstam. In 2012 he was a semi-finalist at the Donatella Flick Conducting Competition and was singled out as the “outstanding participant” of a masterclass with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and Marin Alsop.
Born into a musical family – he is the son of conductor Yan Pascal Tortelier and the grandson of cellist Paul Tortelier – Maxime studied the piano from the age of five. Before picking up the baton, he graduated in literature and languages at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Lyon and was Teaching Assistant at Harvard University. He taught musicology at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales after completing his MA there, and studied theory and composition at the Paris Conservatoire where he received several prizes.