The CSO at Wheaton series resumes in March

Mitsuko Uchida performs Beethoven's Third Piano Concerto with Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra at Wheaton College's Edman Memorial Chapel in March 2017.

© Todd Rosenberg Photography

After a missed season due to the pandemic, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra will return to Wheaton College's Edman Memorial Chapel in 2022. The dates are March 18 and April 29, with the latter featuring a world-premiere work.

This season’s CSO at Wheaton series consists of two concerts instead of the usual three. The three-concert series will resume in 2022-23.

The CSO decided to introduce an annual series at Wheaton College in 2016-17, after performing summer concerts in the western suburbs over the last decade. “We learned while looking through our database that a relatively small number of people travel from DuPage County to downtown Chicago to hear the CSO," said Jeff Alexander, president of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association. "So we felt that if we repeated a concert there that we’re presenting downtown, we could do so and present it to an almost completely new audience.”

The origins of the Wheaton go back a few years, when CSO officials began looking for ways to reach the growing population in Chicago’s western suburbs. From 2013 to 2015, the CSO experimented with a week of June concerts on a temporary stage at Lisle’s Morton Arboretum, and the response was enthusiastic. “The community really supported it, both philanthropically and by attendance,” Alexander said. “It was clear that the desire was there to have the orchestra perform in the community.” The CSO considered building a permanent amphitheater in the area, but that proved cost-prohibitive, so it began to study other alternatives.

Shortly after Alexander’s arrival in 2015, someone mentioned the Edman Memorial Chapel; he learned that the CSO had performed there on more than 10 occasions. So he set up a meeting with Tony Payne, general manager of the Wheaton College Artist Series and the college’s director of special programs. Alexander proposed the idea of the CSO presenting a concert series at Wheaton, and Payne immediately embraced the possibility. A test concert in March 2016 drew more than 1,600 attendees. “The reaction was once again wonderful from the community, so with that, we said, ‘Let’s take the plunge and create a subscription series there,’” Alexander said.

Payne believes the CSO concerts complement the college's long-running Artist Series, as well as the college's strong music conservatory. “It’s one of the greatest orchestras in the world,” Payne said of the CSO. “It’s at a level of eminence that only strengthens the values that we already embrace in regards to great music and great music training here in this conservatory.”

Built in 1960, the neo-classical Edman Memorial Chapel is used for many other events, including concerts. At 40 by 70 feet, the stage is large enough to seat the orchestra comfortably; there are dressing rooms for soloists and backstage space to accommodate musicians.

Alexander knew immediately that the venue's acoustics were up to the task when he heard a college choir rehearsing in the space during a visit to the campus. “When you’re sitting in the audience there, and you hear the massive Chicago Symphony, it’s a wonderful experience, because the sound comes off the stage and envelops the listener," he said. A bonus for attendees is plenty of free parking within easy walking distance. “It really is in many ways," he said, "an ideal situation for us."

A version of this article appeared previously on Sounds and Stories, the predecessor site of Experience CSO.