The Scotsman

CHRISTOPHE­R GOUGH

- KEN WALTON

Christophe­r Gough has all the necessary credential­s and more to be principal horn of the RSNO, the high-pressure post he secured immediatel­y after graduating from the Royal Conservato­ire of Scotland five years ago. For not only is the 30-year-old Londoner a highly-skilled horn player from an extensive musical family with solid Scots roots, he is also multitalen­ted, with an unquestion­able flair for compositio­n that has only recently come to wider public notice.

“I dabbled in my teens as a junior student at the Royal College of Music,” he says. Later at the RCS he continued studies with composer Rory Boyle, but getting the RSNO job gave him little time to take things further.

The opportunit­y for a sabbatical last year let him pursue a masters degree in scoring for film, TV and videogames run by Boston-based Berklee College of Music at its Spanish campus in Valencia. Though partly disrupted by the pandemic, Gough competed the course, receiving its Outstandin­g Student Award. His studies paid off instantly, with two quick-firecommis­sionsfor the RSNO: the world premiere last December of his Three Belarusian Folk Songs; and more recently, his movingly cinematic score, Clydebank ’41, for the orchestra’s 80th anniversar­y commemorat­ion of the Clydebank Blitz.

“I don’t write original stuff,” he modestly insists. “I’m better writing to a script or extra musical idea, taking music I’ve heard and mixing it with my own style.” Which is exactly what he’s done with his solo horn work, Monuments, written for a fellow student in 2012.

“I used to wander through Kelvingrov­e Park on Sundays admiring the beautiful statues. This piece is based on one that commemorat­es soldiers lost in the Boer War. Although outwardly beautiful, statues can have a darker symbolism. This is the first time I’ve actually played it myself.”

www.rsno.org.uk/info/christophe­r-gough/

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0 Christophe­r Gough

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