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Published: Saturday, 12 October 2024 at 09:00 AM


Read on to discover how facing a terminal illness has given leading theatre composer Adrian Sutton a new outlook on life and work…

Who is composer Adrian Sutton?

If you’ve seen War Horse or The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time at the theatre then you’ll have heard the music of Adrian Sutton. Emerging from a career composing for adverts, Sutton found himself creatively entangled with the Morris brothers. Music for Chris Morris’s Radio 1 show Blue Jam brought the composer to the attention of director Tom Morris, who roped Sutton in to contribute to his brilliantly satirical Newsnight: The Opera in 2003, followed by the 2005 play Coram Boy. The rest is theatre history.

Composer Adrian Sutton

A terminal diagnosis and a new ‘laser focus’

With a new album of Sutton’s Orchestral Works performed by the BBC Philharmonic, we’re invited to discover another side of the composer, who was diagnosed with terminal cancer in 2022. At the heart of it is a Violin Concerto written for Fenella Humphreys, something he felt he just had to deliver, as he explained to me over Zoom earlier this year.

‘I dithered about for many years, wanting to write one and never quite getting off my arse, because various other projects came into view,’ Sutton tells me. ‘Then the diagnosis happened. The thing about that – and it’s one of the things that people who are in this situation pretty much all say – is you get a massive laser focus on what it is that you should and shouldn’t be spending your time doing.’