"I’m new to the forum and I’m not a pianist nor a musician. I’m a writer and I’m currently writing a novel whose plot is about a love story between a pianist and a conductor. They meet as they perform together Grieg Piano Concerto op. 16 in A minor. I would be grateful if you could help me with some insights about this piece, from the pianist point of view.
In particular:
1) please identify 2 tricky spots in 1st movement and 2 tricky spots in 3rd movement (refer to bar numbers)
2) please identify 3 main challenges of the piece
3) please identify 3 problems the pianist could have in his rehearsals with the orchestra
4) please identify 3 suggestions the conductor may have for the pianist"
I think the Grieg Concerto is a perfect backdrop for a romance novel. It is melodic and passionate and it could definitely incite some intense physical contact.

I played it many years ago and since I do not have the score in front of me at the moment, I cannot give you a bar number. However, there is a difficult passage to not only play but that is also tricky to coordinate with the orchestra right after the orchestra and the piano play the opening theme. It involves a series of quick fourths or fifths descending down the keyboard in the right hand. In the third movement there are two themes; the second is very beautiful. At the conclusion of the movement the orchestra plays it while the pianist complements with a series of scales. This must come off perfectly to end the piece well.
Although this concerto is one of the easier concertos to learn and perform, it requires much passion and intuitiveness to pull it off and elicit a strong response from the audience. I remember when Van Cliburn played it with the NY Philharmonic back in the 70s on PBS television. I was studying in the Juilliard Pre-college at the time and the faculty ridiculed the performance to the students. I thought Cliburn was just great. (My teacher studied with him at Juilliard and never got over Cliburn being chosen to play in the Tchaikovsky competition over him.) The piece fit Cliburn well. He wasn't that good at playing Baroque and Classical era music. It was the Romantics that Cliburn dominated, including Grieg. His height and good looks and intense feeling suited the music well. Concert performance is much more than just playing the music the way the composer intended. Cliburn connected with the audience.
Possible issues with the concerto could include timing (concertos are a pain when it comes to the piano and orchestra entering together exactly on time), disagreement between the pianist and conductor over dynamics (the pianist wants a bigger crescendo, the conductor says no; the conductor wants to push the temp, the pianist says no; the pianist wants to use more rubato, which is a pulling back on timing and the conductor says no way...these issues must be worked out), and of course the clash of egos. Conductors can offer their musical expertise but the pianist is the soloist and in my opinion should determine what it is going to happen on that stage. He or she should call the shots when it comes to tempo and interpretation. This conflict of wills could give your novel the tension that helps make a good read.
I hope this helps.
