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Craig Armstrong

The modern orchestral maestro Craig Armstrong is revered in both classical and popular music circles. He is equally at home with film scores, arrangements and electronica.

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Craig Armstrong - Artist Page
Photo: Mick Hutson/Redferns

The modern orchestral maestro Craig Armstrong is revered in both classical and popular music circles. He is equally at home with film scores, arrangements and electronica. His score for Romeo & Juliet earned him the BAFTA for Achievement in Film Music and a prestigious Ivor Novello. A further collaboration with Baz Luhrmann on the musical Moulin Rouge! gained him the 2001 American Film Institute’s composer of the year, also a Golden Globe for Best Original Score and another BAFTA. Maybe the pinnacle is his Grammy Award in 2004 for Best Original Score for the acclaimed Taylor Hackford biopic Ray, about the life of the incomparable R&B legend Ray Charles. His feature film credits are many and varied and include The Incredible Hulk, Love Actually, World Trade Centre and the historical drama Elizabeth: The Golden Age and recently The Great Gatsby. Still only 54, Armstrong has an OBE but his music is his calling card.

Born in Glasgow in 1959 Armstrong studied musical composition, score and violin (with tutors/mentors including minimalist pioneer Cornelius Cardew, Malcolm MacDonald and Paul Patterson. From 1977 – 1981 he attended the Royal Academy of Music and studied piano. Scholarships and prizes followed, and to accentuate the fact Armstrong is as versatile as they come he even won the GLAA Young Jazz Musician of the Year in 1982. After a spell at the Strathclyde Regional Council in 1984, Craig was commissioned by the Royal Shakespeare Company to write music for The Tempest and The Broken Hearted.

Famously quoted for his belief that trip-hop or Bach can be equally appealing and emotionally fulfilling, Armstrong struck up a relationship with Bristol’s Massive Attack, collaborating on their epic album Protection. In tribute to him, the Massive Attack men initiated their own Melankolic label to release Craig’s opening brace of solo albums.

Never content to stay still Armstrong has released his own classical albums, written violin concerti, and collaborated with an extraordinary range of fellow artist, eager to absorb his expertise. These include U2 (Bono is a huge fan) Madonna and Luciano Pavarotti. In 2007 his first opera 5:15 – Opera’s Made in Scotland was composed with the novelist and fellow-Scot Ian Rankin providing a libretto. Allow us to point you towards a select choice of fine Armstrong music.

His first album for Melankolic is The Space Between Us (1988) one of those discs that should be on everyone’s essential list. It’s a masterpiece. Ever eager and rightly so to push Scottish artist to the forefront when relevant, this set includes marvellous contributions from Elizabeth Fraser of The Cocteau Twins on the ethereal ‘This Love’ and The Blue Nile’s acclaimed vocalist and songwriter Paul Buchanan on the club anthem ‘Let’s Go Out To Tonight’. The Space… opens with ‘Weather Storm’, smartly reworked from the original version that appears on Massive Attack’s album Protection. Craig also revisits ‘Sly’ from that disc, radically altering it however so that the revised title of ‘Sly 11’ is both witty and apposite. Never one to shy clear of using concrete terminology there is also the romantic ‘Balcony Scene’, that takes its template from ‘Time Stands Still’ (co-penned with Nellee Hooper, incidentally) and his work on the Romeo & Juliet soundtrack. Armstrong’s mix and match approach to sampling allows him to get away with a humorous sample of Des’ree’s ‘Kissing You’ and some choice movie dialogue. He does it, well, because he can. It goes without saying that the production is state of the art and sounds even better today in a remastered format. Other goodies to hunt down are an inspired tram up with Marcus de Vries on ‘After the Storm’ and the deeply felt autobiographical pieces ‘My Father’, ‘Glasgow’ and ‘Childhood’. By this time you should be growing aware that this music means an awful lot to Armstrong: conceptually astute and enormously rewarding, by the time you arrive at the closing ‘Hymn’ you should be a convert. No hesitation here, if you missed this first time around, do yourself a favour and rectify that oversight.

Craig’s second independent release As If to Nothing was released in 2002 and won great acclaim although it is ripe for rediscovery today. After the cinematic brushstrokes of his album The Space Between Us showed Armstrong fully immersed and au fait with the film score genre. His successes with Massive Attack included advertisements and movie placements and his star was in the ascendant. The guests include Bono, Evan Dando from the Lemonheads, Mogwai, Photek, the British soul singer David McAlmont and stellar names from great dance acts like Big Dish, Alpha and Laub.

With his strings and zing well upfront, the vocalists are used as instruments but Evan Dando is on top form in the electronic hubbub of ‘Wake up in New York’ and Big Dish vocalist Steve Lindsay enriches ‘Let It Be Love’. There are plenty more pleasures here too like the soaring ‘Miracle’ where fellow Glaswegians Mogwai provide their epic accompaniment alongside the divine Indian singer Swati Natekar. That isn’t the last inspired coupling. Alpha’s Wendy Stubbs rises to the mark for the atmospheric ‘Sea Song’, maybe the key melody here, Bono gets into character on ‘Stay (Faraway, So Close)’ and Laub’s Atye Greie-Fuchs applies ambient shades of subtle techno spoken word tenets to the bubbling ‘Waltz’.

Just to remind one that this is still Armstrong’s baby, the strings on the title track, the radical beats of ‘Inhaler’ and the disc opener and closer cuts ‘Ruthless Gravity’ and ‘Choral Ending’ (a deliberately matter of fact with a sledgehammer title for a delightful finale) simply make you want to hear more and more of the man’s works.

Words: Max Bell

Format: Union Jack flagUK English
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