Sun On You Craig Armstrong
Album info
Album-Release:
2018
HRA-Release:
07.09.2018
Label: Decca
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Chamber Music
Artist: Craig Armstrong
Composer: Craig Armstrong (1959)
Album including Album cover
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- 1 Sun On You 01:34
- 2 If You Should Fall 03:33
- 3 Restart 03:15
- 4 Marelle 03:20
- 5 Mono 00:46
- 6 Shifted 02:11
- 7 Somewhere 03:36
- 8 Alti 02:23
- 9 For Emma 03:01
- 10 Half Light 03:23
- 11 Sleep 02:39
- 12 Hanami 03:39
- 13 Ondine 04:28
- 14 Soft Patterns 01:53
- 15 In A Remote Place 04:51
- 16 Saudade 04:28
Info for Sun On You
Neues Kapitel – Filmkomponist Craig Armstrong präsentiert neues Studioalbum "Sun on you". Der vielfach mit Preisen ausgezeichnete Filmkomponist Craig Armstrong kündigt für September 2018 ein neues Studioalbum für Decca Records an. Schon jetzt bietet der Titel "If you should fall" erste Einblicke.
Die Musik Craig Armstrongs dürfte jedermann bekannt sein: aus Filmen wie "Tatsächlich Liebe", "Romeo und Julia" und "Der große Gatsby". Für seine Kompositionen erhielt er unter anderem Preise wie den BAFTA, Golden Globe, Ivor Novello und Grammy Awards. Nun schlägt Armstrong mit seinem für den 07. September angekündigten Album "Sun on you" mit Werken für Klavier und Streicher einen neuen Weg seiner kompositorischen Karriere ein. Begleitet wird er dabei vom Scottish Ensemble, das als Großbritanniens führendes Streicherensemble gilt.
Innehalten und Durchatmen: "‘Sun on you‘ ist ein Album, das ich für Klavier und Streicher komponiert habe. Ich wollte eine Aufnahme kreieren, die viel Raum hat und mit Raum meine ich etwas, das die Welt vielleicht ein wenig entschleunigt und einen Moment zum Durchatmen bietet.", so Craig Armstrong. Gekonnt spielt der Künstler mit den Genre-Grenzen: "Einige der Titel sind bewusst filmisch und andere Titel sind eher klassischer Natur. Ich hoffe, die Leute genießen es."
Scottish Ensemble
Craig Armstrong, Klavier
Craig Armstrong
A Royal Academy of Music graduate, Craig Armstrong passed through the ranks of his native city's band culture (a band member of Hipsway, Texas and The Big Dish) to become one of the world's most sought-after and respected composers and arrangers. In the contemporary field, Madonna, U2, Björk and Massive Attack are among the acts to have benefited from his talents, but he is also a skilled and experienced writer for theatre and film. Amongst his many credits are the scores for the Baz Luhrmann hits, William Shakespeare's 'Romeo + Juliet' (for which he received the Anthony Asquith BAFTA Award and an Ivor Novello for Best Original Score) and 'Moulin Rouge' (for which he received a Golden Globe Award and the American Film Institute Award).
Despite these achievements, Craig is a modest and pragmatic man. "I don't subscribe to the 'Artist as God' school of thought," he says, "I see musicians just as part of the workforce, no more or less valid than the practitioners of any other trade. Obviously, there's a spiritual element to music, but then there's a spiritual element to many things. If you can do it - whatever 'it' is - then do it, and try to do it well." Which, clearly, he does. Perhaps director Baz Luhrmann puts it as concisely as is possible: "What I love about your work is the way in which it's like a movie in itself, but without any pictures," he told Craig. Listening, you will know just what he meant.
Following his early, post-Royal Academy dalliances with melodic Scottish pop, the man himself made a leap of both faith and imagination. "When The Big Dish disintegrated, I took time to reassess," he says. "I was by then a husband and the father of a two-year-old child and had become aware that my time was not infinite. Life isn't such a long thing, and I realised that it was madness to spend it doing things that I didn't really want to do." Happily, two avenues of opportunity then opened up to him that provided the launching pads for the parallel careers he now follows with such success.
On the one hand he began to work extensively as an in-house composer with Glasgow's highly-respected Tron Theatre Company. "That proved to be fantastic experience for my subsequent film work," he says. It also helped develop the skills that have led to a variety of classical commissions; Craig has written for the Northern Sinfonietta, the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, the BT Ensemble and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, who premiered his concert work 'When Morning Turns To Light' in December 2002.
On the other hand, his involvement with the short-lived band, The Kindness of Strangers, facilitated a working triumvirate that, for some five years, became one of the most influential and definitive in contemporary music. "They'd all but run out of money and hadn't enough left to hire a string arranger," Craig recalls. "Nellee Hooper was producing, and I said to him, 'Don't worry. I can do that for you'. He just laughed, 'Yeah. Sure you can.'" But, of course, Craig could, and did, and Nellee loved the results. With Marius De Vries as the other element to their trinity, this combination of talents ruled the pop airwaves in the late '90s. "For a time, it seemed like we were responsible for some of the most major tracks by some of the most major artistes in the world. We had a pretty amazing run of it, looking back." Subsequently, Craig's work with the Bristol collective Massive Attack (he scored the tracks 'Weatherstorm' and 'Heat Miser' for the 'Protection' album) led to him being signed to their record label, Melankolic. In 1998 they released his first solo album, 'The Space Between Us', which for the first time united the two separate strands of his work. "Now I'd say that it functions as a series of snapshots of who I was and what I'd been doing up until then. There was some original material there, and some examples of the film music I'd done ... I'm still proud and very fond of it.”
Whereas he describes his classical and film work as being 'pretty much the result of me having sat alone in a room', his second album, 'As If To Nothing', is very much a collaborative project. "I've had a lot of help from a lot of people and, I hope, have given them a lot of freedom. When you don't control every last detail, when you give someone the space in which to be themselves, then I think that you can get some really amazing results." His own vision, meanwhile, was for an album which, though not conceptual, had certain key musical and harmonic threads running through it, so providing cohesion.
In 2004 Craig Armstrong won his second Ivor Novello award for his score to Phillip Noyce's remake of 'The Quiet American', produced by Anthony Minghella and Sidney Pollack and starring Michael Caine. This award joins a long list of accolades and nominations which include 'The Bone Collector' (for which he received the 1999 ASCAP Award), 'Plunkett and Macleane', 'Best Laid Plans' and the Oscar-winning 'One Day In September'. Craig has also enjoyed a long relationship with the director Peter Mullan and has scored a number of his works; the 'Close' trilogy, 'Fridge', 'A Good Day For The Bad Guys' and 'Orphans' (which was voted Best Film at 1999's Venice Film Festival).
2004 also saw the release of Piano Works and the film scores to The Clearing and the Ray Charles' biopic 'Ray'.
2005 saw the release of Film Works, a new collection of Craig's past film scores and the release of The Dolls a collaborative effort featuring AGF and Delay.
This album contains no booklet.