Tonight's performance of Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 4 will continue as scheduled. Check back here for more updates throughout the evening. Last updated: 3:30 PM CT

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June 11 - August 16, 2025

Welcome

The Grant Park Music Festival is a ten-week classical music concert series held annually in Chicago, Illinois’ Millennium Park.

It features the Grant Park Orchestra and Chorus, along with guest performers and conductors, and is one of the only free outdoor classical-music concert series in the US.

Paul Winberg

Paul Winberg

President and CEO

As President and CEO of the Grant Park Music Festival, Paul Winberg leads one of the country’s premiere summer music festivals distinguished by a 91-year history of outstanding artistic leadership, eclectic programming, and housed in one of the most stunning outdoor concert facilities in the world—the Jay Pritzker Pavilion designed by Frank Gehry. During its 10-week season, the Festival, featuring the critically acclaimed Grant Park Orchestra and Chorus, now produces more than 200 free concerts and events serving over 500,000 Chicagoan’s and visitors worldwide.

Since joining the Festival in November, 2011, Winberg has initiated numerous projects that have transformed the Festival’s profile and expanded its reach into the Chicago community. He spearheaded a series of Festival performances in neighborhood parks, led efforts to attract new artistic leadership, created an annual commissioning program, a composer residency initiative, a pre-concert conversation series, and in 2013 launched one of the country’s first fellowship programs designed to support the careers of young musicians underrepresented in the symphonic and choral fields. He also directed the development of multi-disciplinary performances in partnership with KV265, Chicago’s Adler Planetarium, the MacArthur Foundation and the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events. More recently, Winberg further expanded the Festival’s programming footprint with the launch of Festival Next, a series of masterclasses, chamber music performances, and multimedia performance projects.

In addition to launching these and other programmatic initiatives, Winberg has ushered in a new era of fiscal stability for the Festival nearly tripling philanthropic support, establishing a $25+ million-dollar investment-endowment fund and leading the creation of “Festival for a New Century,” the organization’s first community-wide long range planning project.

Winberg re-joined the Festival after a successful tenure with the Eugene Symphony (Eugene, Oregon) where he expanded the symphony’s subscription season, launched a series of high-profile artistic projects including a Distinguished Guest Artist Initiative bringing such musical luminaries as Yo-Yo Ma, Itzhak Perlman, Sir James Galway, and Renee Fleming (in her Oregon debut) to symphony audiences; creating American Encounters, an NEA funded program engaging some of America’s most prominent composers including John Corigliano, Aaron Jay Kernis, Roberto Sierra, Jennifer Higdon, John Adams and Steven Stuckey in weeklong residencies.

Winberg is an alumnus of the League of American Orchestras’ inaugural Executive Leadership Program and also served as chair of the League’s Group Three Executive Director Leadership Team. He currently serves as vice chair for the University of Michigan School of Music, Theater and Dance Alumni Board, and is a member of the Economic Club of Chicago. Previously Winberg served as treasurer of the Oregon Cultural Advocacy Coalition, a board member of Chicago’s About Face Theater Company, and a member of the Program Planning and Outreach Committee of Pegasus Player’s Young Playwrights Festival.

He is a graduate of the University of Michigan School of Music, Theater and Dance and holds a graduate degree from the University of Illinois Chicago in Public Administration.