And then a dam burst. With Orozco-Estrada essentially dancing in front of the Philharmonic, the musicians responded with kinetic, swaying ensemble playing — crisp and full of jousting fervor. All this, before the first appearance of the work’s famous love theme, which under Orozco-Estrada’s baton was never rote in execution.

Less famous is Haydn’s First Cello Concerto, which was discovered only in 1961. On a 2015 recording of the piece, Moreau relishes in athleticism, teasing a Baroque sensibility. (It’s clear, after Wednesday, that this is his regular preference.) Trickier still is that, when pushing his limits in finger-busting ways, he seems to sacrifice nothing in the singing gracefulness of his intonation and phrasing.

In some higher-range passages, taken speedily, Moreau’s pushing of his limits resulted in stray, subtle infelicities; one bow stroke in the first movement produced a rare trace of unlovely sound. In the third movement, he looked displeased at the tail end of one brisk figure, shaking his head before recovering.

Most transporting was the middle-movement Adagio. Orozco-Estrada and the Philharmonic, game partners throughout, seemed to be on tenterhooks, listened attentively to Moreau’s beautiful playing. And, yes, there was some flash here, too: Moreau’s appoggiatura playing provided a stretch of incredible yearning directly before an exposed aria.

As the crowd cheered Moreau warmly, he was intent on steering the applause to Orozco-Estrada, and did not offer an encore. Maybe next time. After intermission, the focus was solely on the conductor and the orchestra, which got loud, and fun, in the Bartok — particularly among the brasses, a section that excelled throughout the night. As with another recent Philharmonic podium debut — that of Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla — there was the sense, a year later, of the ensemble having found its footing inside the acoustics of its renovated hall. During the “Miraculous Mandarin” Suite, there was admirable transparency, even amid heaving, dense writing.

Seth Colter Walls

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