Craig Armstrong
Craig Armstrong, OBE is a Scottish composer of modern orchestral music, electronica and film scores.
Craig Armstrong’s music is as varied as it is successful. Born in 1959 in the east end of Glasgow, the musician and composer headed to London in 1977 to train at the Royal Academy of Music. Under the tutelage of such greats as Cornelius Cardew and Malcolm MacDonald, he developed an approach that evokes the most delicate shifts in atmosphere and emotion.
On his return to Glasgow, Armstrong became in-house composer at the influential Tron Theatre, working for the first time with director Michael Boyd (now at the Royal Shakespeare Company). It was also at the Tron that Armstrong met actor/director Peter Mullan, whose films (including The Magdalene Sisters and Neds) he continues to provide the music for today.
Hollywood greats
Armstrong’s early work, scoring for theatrical productions such as Boyd’s radical 1993 interpretation of Macbeth, laid the foundations for a spectacular career in film.
Since the mid-nineties, he has created scores for both Hollywood and independent films, from Mullan’s directorial debut The Close Trilogy to Bafta, Golden Globe and Novello award-winning soundtracks for Baz Luhrmann’s William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet and Moulin Rouge! Many more films have benefited from Armstrong’s expert touch, including Richard Curtis’ Love Actually and Taylor Hackford’s Oscar-winning biopic Ray. Most recently Armstrong has composed two scores for Oliver Stone; World Trade Centre and this year, Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps.
Classic and modern
Running alongside his scoring work, Armstrong has built an impressive repertoire of both popular and classical music; a distinction of genres that he would prefer not to make, focusing simply on the excitement and integrity of the music itself.
Shared inspiration with Bristol trip-hop outfit Massive Attack led to the platinum-selling album Protection, and Armstrong’s talents for arranging, remixing and composition have also been called upon by names as diverse as the London Sinfonietta, Yoko Ono, the Barbican and Sakamoto.
Collaborative energy
He has nurtured a long-time collaboration with Berlin-based poet and electronic artist AGF, working with her on various pieces as well as forming three-way collective The Dolls with Finnish musician Vladislav Delay.
Armstrong’s influence extends to the world of visual arts, too, with pieces such as One Minute: 15 Pieces for Orchestra seeing him work with Scottish artists Dalziel + Scullion to mark the unveiling of the new Perth Concert Hall. Other orchestral works include Gesualdo, an operetta with words from author Ian Rankin commissioned by Scottish Opera, as well as acclaimed pieces for the BBC Symphony Orchestra, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, choral ensemble Cappella Nova and award-winning violinist Clio Gould.