Dan Grigore was born in 1943 in
Bucharest,
Romania. His father, Nicolae Grigore, was a fighter pilot in the Romanian Air Force and a World War II hero (subsequently promoted to general); one street in Bucharest is named after him. His mother, Polixenia (née Cosîmbescu) was a housewife. Grigore took his first music lessons with his mother, who had studied violin in her teens. At the age of three, he began to play his own compositions. In 1949, at six, he started private piano lessons with Eugenia Ionescu, a famous teacher of her time who had studied at Leipzig with
Robert Teichmüller and
Max Reger. She immediately realized that the child had
absolute pitch. Eugenia Ionescu used to hold musical soirees in her home, where she would invite famous pianists and teachers of the time to listen to him, including
Florica Musicescu,
Cella Delavrancea,
Constanța Erbiceanu, Muza Ciomac,
Silvia Șerbescu, Nadia Chebap, and Madeleine Cocorăscu, among others. It soon became clear that Grigore was a child prodigy. It was during these musical soirees that Dan Grigore was discovered by the famous composer and professor
Mihail Jora (member of the
Romanian Academy), a close friend of
George Enescu and former teacher of
Dinu Lipatti. Around 1955, Grigore's family was in deep financial trouble following the
Soviet occupation of Romania (August 23, 1944). After the
Romanian Communist Party's rise to power (by frauding the
1946 general elections) and the forced abdication at gunpoint of
King Michael I of Romania, Grigore's father had been stripped of all his military decorations and dismissed from the army during the great Communist purge of the 1950s. Also, Grigore's maternal grandfather had been sent to prison and lost his pension for sending a letter to the American Embassy in which he had described the abuses of the Communist regime. Given the family's hardship and the child's unusual talent, Mihail Jora (although in financial trouble himself due to similar political reasons) generously offered to give Grigore private lessons free of charge, which he did for the next seven years (between 1955-1962). Jora had great admiration for his young student. In a reference sent to the Ministry of Culture, he stated, "Dan Grigore is an exceptional talent which all the so-called 'great Romanian talents' bear no comparison to". This resulted in a special scholarship (1955-1958) awarded by the Romanian Composers' Association. In 1957, the fourteen-year-old Grigore made his first appearance on stage with three recently discovered works of George Enescu in first world audition (
Chorale,
Burlesque, and
Carillon nocturne from the
Piano Suite no. 3 Pièces impromptues, Op. 18). Between 1958-1962 Dan Grigore also studied with the famous professor Florica Musicescu, former teacher of Dinu Lipatti. During this time, he received a special scholarship from George Enescu's widow,
Princess Maria Cantacuzino, who granted him personal use of the great composer's piano for five years. ==Education and career==