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Informal Biography

"Cheryl’s music is so varied, but it always has the performer at the core. She adores giving people parts to play that they enjoy playing, so that they can take them and run with them, and that really effects the mood in the room…it really brings out the best in humans."

Yshani Perinpanayagam, BBC Radio 3​

"...unafraid even to sprinkle a little cheese over it all." 5:4

"Cheryl Frances-Hoad['s Love Song for Dusty] is an endearing oddity." Paul Driver, The Sunday Times

"...doom-and-gloom-mongering tinged with elements of self-flagellating piety." 5:4

“voluptuous and biting" The Guardian

 

“that immense climax gets me every time” 5:4

Cheryl's music has been described as "like a declaration of faith in the eternal verities of composition" (The Sunday Times), with "a voice overflowing not only with ideas, but also with the discipline and artistry necessary to harness them" (The Scotsman). Classical tradition, along with diverse contemporary inspirations including literature, painting, and dance have contributed to a creative presence provocatively her own. Her works include From the Beginning of the World, a setting of Tycho Brahe's remarkably prescient thesis on the Great Comet of 1577 (BBC Proms, 2015), Pay Close Attention, a homage to electronic music gods The Prodigy, The Whole Earth Dances, a quintet influenced by the local landscape and the poetry of Ted Hughes (Spitalfields Festival, 2016) and Game On, a duet for piano and Commodore 64 inspired by Game Theory and the crimes of bankers (NonClassical at the Dalston Victoria, 2016). 

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Cheryl wrote her first piece within weeks of taking up the cello aged 7, and despite some early disasters (her first string orchestra piece was thrown out by the school conductor due to mistakes in her hand-copied parts) Cheryl's desire to compensate for her chronic shyness through composing remained unquashed. At 15 she won the BBC Young Composer of the Year Competition, and it was during the first performance of her Concertino for Cello, Piano, Percussion and Orchestra, by cellist Peter Dixon and the BBC Philharmonic that she became convinced that her life had to be in composition. 

Twenty-nine years on, Cheryl's obsessive dedication, imperviousness to rejection, inherent thriftiness, and endless stamina for filling in funding applications has resulted in her working full time as a composer. She has a Double First from Cambridge University, a PhD from Kings College London, Grade 5 Theory, a Merit in Grade 3 Piano, a GU13 from Anglia Ruskin and a Certificate from the Worship Company of Woolmen for driving sheep over the River Thames. Her output addresses all genres from opera, ballet and concerto to song, chamber and solo music, reaching audiences from the Proms to outreach workshops. 

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Cheryl's music is published by Chester Music.

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