A lot of results are available for the following chain-rule problem:
(CRP1) Let $f\colon \mathbb R \to \mathbb R$ be a $C^1$/Lipschitz function and let $g \colon \mathbb R^d \to \mathbb R$ be a weakly differentiable function (e.g. $W_{\rm loc}^{1,p}$ or $BV_{\rm loc}$). Then the function $f \circ g$ is weakly differentiable as well and explicit chain rule formulas hold, like for instance in the Sobolev setting $$ (f \circ g)'(x) = f'(g(x)) g'(x) $$ a.e. with respect to Lebesgue measure (with some standards caveat when $f$ is Lipschitz).
I am wondering for the other way round, i.e.
(CRP2) Let $f\colon \mathbb R \to \mathbb R^d$ be a $C^1$/Lipschitz function and let $g \colon \mathbb R^d \to \mathbb R$ be a weakly differentiable function (e.g. $W_{\rm loc}^{1,p}$ or $BV_{\rm loc}$). What can we say about the function $g \circ f \colon \mathbb R \to \mathbb R$? For instance in the Sobolev setting it seems to me that the formula $$ (g \circ f)'(x) = \nabla g(f(x)) \cdot f'(x) $$ (a.e. with respect to Lebesgue measure) makes sense, doesn't it? Are there any references about this topic?
Thanks.