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Lloyd Coleman

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Immensely proud @paraorchestra released our second LP today, 19 April 2024, on @world_circuit_records 💫 

Death Songbook 🥀 features a host of exquisite arrangements by @_ceharding_ of classic and more recent songs inspired by death, longing, loss a
Gorgeous wind section for Trip The Light Fantastic with @paraorchestra @southbankcentre last night 💜 

Superb fun to revisit this brilliant music by @vibransoliver @sinead_surgeonsgirl and Asteryth Sloane 🎶 

Snap taken by @georgehenrywhite (while
Had THE most amazing day at @outtoswimbristol Spring Gala on Saturday 🏊‍♂️ 🌼 

We swam, cheered and laughed with friends old and new. 

Joining this club 18 months ago was one of the best decisions I’ve ever made: it’s given me a re
I still don’t know what the collective term for a group of composers is (anyone?!) but a delightful evening with @ivorsacademy Classical Council colleagues to celebrate the awarding of an Academy fellowship to Sir James MacMillan. Plus a UK pre
Reflecting on three beautiful @paraorchestra shows last weekend at @theatreroyalplymouth

Thanks to all who came and embraced The Nature of Why 🙏 

📸 @ddoommmmoorree
Sunday birthday bowl for the legend that is @harrietrileymusic ❤️ ✨
After a long long hiatus, it was so good to share the joyful thing that is The Nature of Why at @theatreroyalplymouth with @paraorchestra 

Laughter, singing, dancing and play… sustained by food, wine and long jogs in the rain 💪
Bristol Light Festival 2024 - loads of spectacular/quirky sights across the city this year, but a SPECIAL thrill to hear @paraorchestra @hannahpeelmusic soundtrack the gorgeous installation at the Temple Church Redcliffe. I popped by on my way home f
With a whole host of new collaborations, shows, projects and challenges, 2023 has been quite the year! 🤟 (I've written about some of them in my latest blog, link in bio) So looking forward to what the next one brings 😉 

Wishing you all a happy and
An honour to perform with @paraorchestra on Thursday at the historic reopening of @bristol_beacon 🤩

Incredible, beautiful and wondrous music from @sinead_surgeonsgirl @vibransoliver and @asterythsloane, stunning projections from @limbiccinema and t
One week ago at #TheIvorsClassicalAwards

Such a fun night 🥂 🍾 (I’ve realised I should wear a suit more often)

Red carpet shots 📸 by Hogan Media/Shutterstock 

@ivorsacademy
The Ivors Classical Awards 2023 - a beautiful night of revelry and celebration with friends and colleagues old/new/far/near 🎵 

Thank you to the @ivorsacademy for making it all happen - you all make me exceptionally proud to be Chair of the Classica
The Colour of Dinosaurs October 2023 - photo dump pt 2 🦕 

(A few behind the scenes shots)

That’s it… for now! More on this beautiful project next year 😉 

Over and out 👍
The Colour of Dinosaurs October 2023 - photo dump pt 1 🦖 

Making this show has been undoubtedly a career highlight - a perfect symphony of collaborators on and offstage. I’m so touched by the response we had to it by audiences young and old w
Truly humbled to hear @naturally_isaac play my new piece Sgraffito in his recital of music (both brand new and centuries old) for natural horn at my alma mater @royalacademyofmusic this evening 🥹 

Thanks Isaac for your wonderful performance and tir
Throwback to 1 week ago when @paraorchestra visited Weston-super-Mare to perform #SMOOSH 

We danced, we played, we sang, we found joy 🤩 

Thanks to friends Matt, Kaye, Ellen and Rach for the photos and clips ❤️ 

@superculturewsm
Autumn 2023 live dates - in Weston-super-Mare, Bristol and London! 🎵 

Link in bio to my latest blog on this lot, and how/where to get tickets! 🎟 

@naturally_isaac @paraorchestra @weare_otic @bristololdvic1766 @bristol_beacon @balletboyz
British Grand Prix, 7-9 July 2023 🇬🇧 Everything was awesome 🍻 😎 🙌
Breaking in me new hiking boots with a jaunt around some waterfalls 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿
SMOOSH! with Paraorchestra in London and at Glastonbury. A hugely enjoyable week with superb company topped off with a stunning headline set by Elton John ❤️
BBC Three’s adaptation of Sally Rooney’s Normal People

BBC Three’s adaptation of Sally Rooney’s Normal People

Normal People makes for extraordinary telly

May 14, 2020

When I heard Sally Rooney’s novel Normal People was being adapted for the small screen, I felt both excited and nervous. I devoured the book in two days last Christmas – quite an achievement for me as I’ve never been a voracious reader of fiction. I generally prefer a juicy political memoir over a Charles Dickens, and often carry the same Penguin Classic around in my rucksack for months on end. Not so with Normal People – the only reason I had it in my bag at all after the Christmas holidays was to lend it to friends and work colleagues, who enjoyed it just as much.

For the uninitiated – where have you been? Living under a rock? Dealing with a global pandemic? Then I’ll fill you in quickly: Normal People tracks the contemporary love story of Marianne and Connell, who we join in their final year at high school in Sligo. Friendless rebel Marianne is materially privileged but contends with an unhappy and abusive homelife, Connell is the popular poster-boy of the class and star of the school football team. Connell’s mum, Lorraine, is a part-time cleaner for Marianne’s family, a circumstance which allows this unlikely pair of lustful teenagers to grow closer in secret. Later, we follow them to Dublin’s hallowed Trinity College, where Sally Rooney herself studied.

I was stunned by Rooney’s extraordinary ability to encapsulate the bumpy road of young love in all of its obsessive, complex and contradictory messiness. I found it compelling and utterly relatable – a true reflection of human nature.

Which brings me back to why I felt nervous ahead of watching the TV version. Would the text translate well into a screenplay? Would it maintain the introspective intensity of the original, plunging us deep inside the characters’ heads, without resorting to rewriting or inventing new passages of spoken dialogue? Many pages in the book are given over to Marianne and Connell doing or saying very little (this lack of communication is, incidentally, often the cause of their misunderstandings). Would the TV adaptation allow enough space in the drama for their inner thought processes to come across? Especially when many producers might be tempted to take a little too literally Hitchcock’s famous mantra “Drama is life with the boring bits cut out”. For this I wanted what would normally be seen as the ‘boring bits’ left in – a lingering look, a silent tear, the tentative awakenings of sexual desire given the time and space needed to amount to the same effect onscreen. 

I needn’t have worried. The series – now available on BBC iPlayer – is an absolute triumph. Lead actors Daisy Edgar-Jones as Marianne and Paul Mescal as Connell are perfectly cast. They have an irresistible chemistry that feels a million times more authentic than many Hollywood-infected portrayals I’ve seen – no doubt helped by brilliant direction from Lenny Abrahamson and Hettie Macdonald. The intense suffocation felt by the two protagonists is reflected by the style of cinematography – extreme close-ups of their faces throughout, exposing every nuance of emotion. And the 12-part structure, divided into segments between 20-30 minutes long, allows an episodic rhythm to develop that feels neither to slow nor too fast. It really is as perfect as I could have imagined it to be.  

If you haven’t seen it, I can’t recommend it highly enough. If you have seen it, did you like it as much as I did? And your recommendations for what I should binge-watch next, please…

Tags: Television, BBC, Normal People, Books, Sally Rooney
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