Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Craig Armstrong

 
Artist: Craig Armstrong

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Worked With:

John Thirkell, Mark "Spike" Stent, Nellee Hooper, Marius de Vries, Andy Bradfield

Formal Connection With:

See Craig Armstrong Lyrics
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: String Arrangements
  • Representative Albums: "The Space Between Us," "Piano Works," "Film Works: 1995-2005"
  • Representative Songs: "Weather Storm," "This Love," "Rise"

Biography

Scottish producer Craig Armstrong scored countless soundtracks to much acclaim during the '90s and into the 2000s. His soundtrack work was in fact so successful that many big-name artists, such as U2 and Madonna, began courting him, while he simultaneously pursued a solo career as a down-tempo electronica producer beginning with The Space Between Us in 1998. Though his collaborations are too numerous to list, Armstrong's most successfully paired with film director Baz Luhrman, producing big-selling soundtracks for Romeo + Juliet (1998) and Moulin Rouge (2001).

Born in Scotland, Armstrong began his production career in the early '90s. He composed music for several BBC and STV productions during this time, but his big break came with the Scottish pop trio Big Dish. Armstrong co-wrote three songs on the trio's Satellites album, released in 1991, and also provided string arrangements for the album. Three years later, in 1994, Armstrong worked with renowned trip-hop group Massive Attack on its genre-defining Protection album. This association with Massive Attack would pay dividends a few years later when the group released Armstrong's debut full-length album on its Melankolic label. By the end of the '90s, Armstrong had collaborated with such big-name artists as U2, Madonna, Hole, the Spice Girls, the London Suede, and Tina Turner, in addition to many other lesser-known artists.

As mentioned, Massive Attack released Armstrong's solo debut, The Space Between Us, in 1998. The album didn't prove to be as popular as expected, but it nonetheless increased Armstrong's reputation as a noteworthy producer. During this same late-'90s era, Armstrong continued working on soundtrack projects, which remained his most acclaimed work. His work for Jake Scott's debut film, Plunkett & Macleane, was perhaps his most visible work, being released by Astralwerks in the States (as had The Space Between Us a year earlier). However, he worked on soundtracks for much more successful films such as Mission: Impossible (1996), Romeo + Juliet (1998), Cruel Intentions (1999), and -- perhaps his most celebrated soundtrack work -- Moulin Rouge (2001). Following the success of Moulin Rouge, and its second volume, Armstrong returned in 2002 with his second non-soundtrack full-length effort, As if to Nothing, which boasted a new version of U2's "Stay (Faraway, So Close)." In 2004, he provided the score for the Ray Charles biopic Ray, and in 2005, an anthology of his film work was released. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Craig Armstrong (composer)
Top
Craig Armstrong
Born 1959
Origin Glasgow, Scotland
Occupations Composer
Instruments Violin
Piano
Associated acts The Dolls
Website Official site

Craig Armstrong (born 1959) is a Scottish composer of modern orchestral music, electronica and film scores.

Contents

Life and career

Armstrong was born in Glasgow, Scotland in 1959.[1] He studied musical composition, violin and piano at the Royal Academy of Music from 1977 to 1981, where he was awarded the Charles Lucas prize and the Harvey Lohr scholarship for composition. He was also awarded the FTCL Fellowship in composition, and won the GLAA Young Jazz Musician of the Year in 1982. Upon graduation he became resident student composer for the London Contemporary Dance School. Upon completing his studies, Armstrong served as music and dance specialist at the Strathclyde Regional Council in 1984.

Arts Council

During the 1980s, Armstrong's composition work included commissions from the Arts Council for various classical ensembles in Scotland, and he also served as resident composer at the Tron Theatre in Glasgow. During this time he also received a Composer's Award to study electronic music, and maintained a parallel career in the Scottish Pop music scene, as a member of bands Hipsway, Texas and The Big Dish.

Glasgow Metfest

In 1990, his Music Theatre Group Performance performed at the Glasgow Mayfest, and he composed a number of works for film, television, and stage productions by the Traverse Theatre, the BBC, and the Royal Shakespeare Company, among others. By the late 1990s he had gained critical acclaim for his work on the Baz Luhrmann films Romeo + Juliet and Moulin Rouge! (which won him a Golden Globe for Best Original Score in 2001). He has also done orchestrations with artists such as Hole, Massive Attack, Madonna, Spice Girls, U2, Suede, Shola Ama, Pet Shop Boys and The Future Sound of London.[1] During this time he also released his first album of his own orchestral work, The Space Between Us, in 1998; a song from the album, "Let's Go Out Tonight", was featured in season one, episode six of "Six Feet Under".

Recomposing

Armstrong wrote the newer theme for the popular Swiss children's TV series Pingu which he made it into a rap since Season 4 and Season 5. He also recomposed the first two seasons.

2000s

During the early 2000s Armstrong continued to produce film and orchestral work, including commissions for the Barbican Centre and the Scottish Ensemble. His most recent film scores are for Richard Curtis's 2003 film Love Actually, the Academy Award winning Taylor Hackford film, Ray (for which Armstrong won a Grammy Award) and Oliver Stone's 2006 film World Trade Center. In 2008, Armstrong composed his first action film score since 2001's Kiss of the Dragon which was The Incredible Hulk. Armstrong is not known well for his action scores, but revealed his reason to do the project in an interview. "As a kid I was a big Marvel fan and it’s a wee bit different for me because obviously I’m not very well known for my action movies, but because as a kid I was such a fan of The Incredible Hulk I decided to do it."[2]

Escape

His track called "Escape" from the film Plunkett & Macleane is frequently used, since it is a rising crescendo type of music, on the BBC Television program Top Gear as the music which usually plays at the end of the "epic challenges" (for example, when Jeremy Clarkson completed a lap of the Nürburgring in 9 minutes, 59 seconds). Armstrong lists the songs Top Gear have used on his web site.[3] "Escape" is also used by the professional wrestling stable Team Vision as their entrance music. The track is also used as the entrance music for premier league football team Aston Villa when playing at their home ground, Villa Park, and for the England Rugby Union team as they enter Twickenham stadium.

Ball

Starting in 2006 and continuing to this day, Armstrong's "Ball" track is used as the music in the filler/preview for test channel BBC HD in two edited forms and normally receives up to 10 airings a day.

Scottish Opera

In 2008, he wrote a fifteen minute opera for Scottish Opera, collaborating with popular author, Ian Rankin. The opera, titled 'Gesualdo', was one of five operas commissioned and clips from all five were shown as part of a programme about the future of opera on BBC1 Scotland. One of the other five operas was written by popular new composer, Gareth Williams.

New releases

Releases from new Craig Armstrong band 'Winona':

  • September 2009: "Without You (Deal Soul Brothers Remix)" - Format: 12" Vinyl single

Career highlights

  • 1994–2002: Commissions from Royal Shakespeare Company Music for Broken Heart and The Tempest, both directed by Michael Boyd.
  • 2002: Visconti commissioned by Barbican Centre Elektronika festival for the London Sinfonietta.
  • 2004: Collaboration with visual artists Dalziel + Scullion on One Minute to celebrate the opening of Perth's Horsecross Hall.

Key works

  • 1994: Slow Movement (strings)
  • 1998: 20 Movements (orchestra)
  • 1999: If Time Must Pass (violin, strings)
  • 1999: Escape (orchestra, vocal)
  • 2000: When Morning Turns to Light (mezzo-soprano, orchestra)
  • 2002: Northern Sounds ... Islands (orchestra)
  • 2005: One Minute (orchestra)
  • 2007: Immer (violin concerto no. 1) (violin, orchestra)

Discography

Independent work

Film scores

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Craig Armstrong (composer)" Read more

 

Mentioned in