Dire Straits are better than Steely Dan as a radio act, possibly also as an albums band.
-- The stickman from the hilarious "xkcd" comics, Thursday, 31 July 2008 14:44
Really? Well i need me some edumacation.
I wanted to revive a thread, but there isn't a c or d type thread.
― Frogman Henry, Thursday, 31 July 2008 17:51 (seventeen years ago)
There doesn't seem to be much good Dire Straits talk on ILM, for obvious reasons, so I figured I'd post here rather than revive one of the (slightly) more active threads.
Classic. I love this band. Really I do, though I've been unaware of the depths of my love for some twenty years. They were an early teenage love of mine, but I left them behind during my drug & art-addled college years and never looked back. Today, though, I picked up a copy of Dire Straits after listening to copies of the first 4 albums in the rekkid store (all priced to move at like two buck apiece). Liked em all, but the self-titled debut is the most consistent and most mesmerizing. Maybe tomorrow I'll go back for Communique, Making Movies and Love Over Gold.
There's a strange quality of distance to their music, especially on the debut. It feels as though it's coming at you from a great distance away, through heat-shimmers, all blurred and indistinct -- something they'd make explicit on Communique with Once Upon a Time In the West. At the same time, the guitar playing is incredibly sharp, distinct and emotionally subtle. Knopfler doesn't have an enormous range by any conventional standard, he does one thing and does it very well, but few pop musicians manage to finesse so many communicative shades and variations from such understated playing.
That's part of what appeals to me, but I don't think it's the entire package. At their best, they've got a quality of weary, almost arcane-seeming melancholy, and an attention to the pure beauty of their sound that rivals the likes of Giorgio Moroder and Vangelis (weird comparisons, I know). They're soothing, lovely, sad and strange, but they take a big step back from all these things, presenting them in with a sidelong diffidence that almost entirely obscures just how remarkable and evocative the music is. I like that. I like the smoky reticence and soft-focus grit.
In spite of this, they're awful damn hard to like. They trashed their legacy in the 80s with miserable crap like Money for Nothing, they've at least flirted with homophobia on more than one occasion, they seem to prize comfort as the only meaningful musical virtue, and Knopfler's lyrics are marked by a sometimes annoying conservatism. Even their best records slack off terribly on side two. None of which will endear them to discerning ears, I suppose, but I love them still. Love them like Thin Lizzy, who they sometimes remind me of, in a nappy-time sort of way. Like Thin Lizzy falling asleep in a nice, soft chair.
The first four records are all worth hearing, but I think they're a band that would be best served by a compilation of some sort. Suggestions:
Down to the WaterlineSetting Me UpSix Blade KnifeSultans of SwingLionsOnce Upon a Time In the WestCommuniqueLady WriterPortobello BelleTunnel of LoveRomeo and JulietSkatewayRomeo and JulietTelegraph RoadPrivate InvestigationsIndustrial Disease
― my full five minutes of iguana time (contenderizer), Wednesday, 18 November 2009 09:36 (sixteen years ago)
an extended family member was a huge fan of DS so i heard most of it when i was a kid.. some of it made a reasonably positive impression. i think brothers in arms onwards is a complete snore but there are some great moments in the early stuff. i only have to see the word industrial for 'industrial disease' to be in my head.. and i don't think i've heard it in over 20 years
― indie spare (electricsound), Wednesday, 18 November 2009 09:40 (sixteen years ago)
an extended family member was a huge fan of DS so i heard most of it when i was a kid.. some of it made a reasonably positive impression.
― indie spare (electricsound), Wednesday, November 18, 2009 1:40 AM (1 minute ago) Bookmark
I think maybe that's why they're so often taken for granted. They don't surprise. The capacity to surprise just isn't in them. At best, they coddle. Some wool-clad tobacco-smelling uncle used to listen to them and they were alright. So it's hard to find reason to reconsider them, and easy to assume that you've heard or will hear what you need to - even if it's just Sultans on the radio every once in a while.
Industrial Disease is seriously fucking great though, clunky working-class poetry and all.
― my full five minutes of iguana time (contenderizer), Wednesday, 18 November 2009 09:48 (sixteen years ago)
The whole of Love Over Gold is terrific, especially "Telegraph Road". Rarely have I heard so much drama and incident in a rock song.
― anagram, Wednesday, 18 November 2009 11:24 (sixteen years ago)
Yeah, Telegraph Road was the song that first won me over when I was a kid. Not just unique in its drama & incident, but also in how those qualities enact and even constitute the narrative. The final five-minute stretch is almost overwhelmingly powerful. Dunno that it's my favorite Dire Straits song, but it's up there.
Wanted to mention yesterday how appropriate the cover art to the 1st LP is. A vague, blurred and nearly monochromatic painting of a woman on a porch of some kind, depicted as a abstract collection of softened planes of light and shadow. It's cool, detached and decidedly modern, but at the same time, it communicates a kind of romantic wistfulness. Describes the music very well, both in its modernist abstraction and minimalism, but also in its understated romance.
― my full five minutes of iguana time (contenderizer), Wednesday, 18 November 2009 19:18 (sixteen years ago)
Love them like Thin Lizzy, who they sometimes remind me of
Actually, Knopfler guests on a song on one of Phil Lynott's solo LPs (and they may have deeper connections beyond that, for all I know. Seems like both bands were somehow on the fringe of the UK's pub rock scene in the mid '70s -- even despite how big Lizzy were -- though maybe that's just my imagination. "Sultans of Swing" was basically about a pub rock band, as far as I can tell.)
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 18 November 2009 19:41 (sixteen years ago)
s/t does seem to be unjustly ignored by nerds on the internet. It's likely to make my top 20 on any given day, even though I can basically take or leave the rest of their catalogue (that I've heard) - particularly after BIA. They were really hitting on something special that first go round.
― feed them to the (Linden Ave) lions (will), Wednesday, 18 November 2009 20:14 (sixteen years ago)
I haven't had their albums for a long time, but I used to think the second one was too similar to the first (which had just charted, in the U.S. anyway, only five months before), though I always liked "Lady Writer" and "Once Upon A Time In The West." Making Movies in 1980 was their big critics' record -- #18 Pazz & Jop; I think Greil Marcus liked it a lot. But somehow Knopfler seemed to get less artistically ambitious and literary after that; maybe he worried he was getting too pretentious? So by '83 they were tossing off sillinesss like "Twistin' By The Pool" (I actually bought the 12-inch EP), and then a who-cares live album (which might actually be good, who knows), and then they exploded. Brothers In Arms was #9 in the U.S. for nine weeks! Really, that has to count as one of the big comebacks in rock history -- a #2 album, then five middling ones, then a huge #1. I wonder to what extent their early fans considered them sellouts then, when they suddenly became the biggest dumbass sports-bar band around.And then they never came close to that again; no charting albums for six years after their big one -- did they basically break up then, or what? And were they big in England, at all? They seemed to really go against the grain of the foppiness of '80s UK pop (which they clearly set themselves in opposition to.) I always hated "Walk Of Life," though.
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 18 November 2009 20:37 (sixteen years ago)
Oops,I meant #1 in the U.S. for nine weeks (though #9 for nine weeks might be an even rarer accomplishment, for all I know.)
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 18 November 2009 20:39 (sixteen years ago)
I love that knopfler didn't really let his virtuosity get the best of him in DS (haven't heard any of his post-DS stuff). He could have easily wanked off into the stratosphere and ruined out all those awesome minimal grooves.
― guammls (QE II), Wednesday, 18 November 2009 20:53 (sixteen years ago)
These guys are masters of badass build-up intros
― guammls (QE II), Wednesday, 18 November 2009 20:54 (sixteen years ago)
I used to think the second one was too similar to the first... Making Movies in 1980 was their big critics' record -- #18 Pazz & Jop; I think Greil Marcus liked it a lot. But somehow Knopfler seemed to get less artistically ambitious and literary after that; maybe he worried he was getting too pretentious? So by '83 they were tossing off sillinesss like "Twistin' By The Pool" (I actually bought the 12-inch EP), and then a who-cares live album (which might actually be good, who knows), and then they exploded. Brothers In Arms was #9 in the U.S. for nine weeks! ― xhuxk, Wednesday, November 18, 2009 12:37 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark
― xhuxk, Wednesday, November 18, 2009 12:37 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark
Agree that Communique feels rushed and indistinct. You get a several fine songs, but it's basically a less-inspired retread of the debut. Making Movies is at least half great (I mean REALLY great) and does seem to be the critic's favorite, but it looses steam in its second half. And "Les Boys" is just horrid. Agree, too, that the Twistin' EP was their turning point. It seems to reflect a conscious decision to lighten, brighten and streamline their sound - and to take in influences that might broaden it in various ways. So you get explicit pop pastiche stuff like the title track and "Two Young Lovers", as well as a loose, jokey feel overall. They retained this optimism and stylistic openness/economy for Brothers In Arms, though dialing back the humor, and I guess it served them well commercially - perhaps even artistically. But it drained away everything I liked about the group: the mystery, romance and quiet tension - their hypnotic, abstractly beautiful attention to pure sound. Maybe they did it because "Industrial Disease" made a bigger impression than "Telegraph Road", suggesting that the 80s weren't gonna be friendly to epic, ambitious guitar hero stuff. I dunno. I suppose I can't fault them for making one of the most popular albums of its era...
― my full five minutes of iguana time (contenderizer), Wednesday, 18 November 2009 23:13 (sixteen years ago)
nice piece up there, contenderizer
― Michael B, Wednesday, 18 November 2009 23:28 (sixteen years ago)
LOL all this talk about 'from Brothers In Arms onwards' but I didn't even realize they'd DONE anything after Brothers In Arms.
Man, that was an album tailor made for Musician Magazine to write 8 zillion articles about...
― five minutes of iguana time (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 18 November 2009 23:37 (sixteen years ago)
Well, the second half of Brothers in Arms is pretty dark, FWIW: "The Man's Too Big", "Ride Across the River", and the title track.
Years ago I was a huge fan of the Alchemy; at the very least, the live version of "Sultan's of Swing" is fucking great.
― Mark, Thursday, 19 November 2009 01:20 (sixteen years ago)
'the man comes around' by johnny cash owes a little something to 'the man's too big' imo. kinda hate that album though and the steely dan assertion at top is wrong (rip big man) but their earlier stuff is pretty tight.
― jØrdån (omar little), Thursday, 19 November 2009 01:23 (sixteen years ago)
Probably haven't listened to Brothers in Arms since the 80s but I sure listened to it a lot back then. Should keep an eye out for Love Over Gold on vinyl. I had a poster of the LOG cover on the wall in my college dorm-- no wonder I never had a girlfriend.
― Mark, Thursday, 19 November 2009 01:28 (sixteen years ago)
Also love Knopfler's theme to Local Hero.
― anagram, Thursday, 19 November 2009 09:10 (sixteen years ago)
Yeah, Local Hero soundtrack is great overall, though better in context than as something to listen to on its own. Main theme ("Wild Theme" or whatever) is AMAZING though, and I would listen to it anytime anyplace, basically for free. Saw Real Estate tonite (thread connections) and their excellent "Pool Swimmers" reminds me A LOT of that song. I mean a lot a lot.
Plus appreciate kind words from Michael B xpost, but wish I'd like taken a second to read that that first long ramble before hitting submit. So many awkwardness.
― my full five minutes of iguana time (contenderizer), Thursday, 19 November 2009 09:22 (sixteen years ago)
Shit, I mean "FAKE BLUES"! Again with the read before post thing gddmit! Suggestion to people is to listen to FAKE BLUES and the Local Hero theme.
― my full five minutes of iguana time (contenderizer), Thursday, 19 November 2009 09:24 (sixteen years ago)
helpfully:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EyoXb4DtHA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AePShfa66LU
I dunno, maybe it's just me...
― my full five minutes of iguana time (contenderizer), Thursday, 19 November 2009 09:36 (sixteen years ago)
l accidentally started liking "sultans of swing" cause I thought it was dylan
― lukevalentine, Friday, 20 November 2009 23:40 (sixteen years ago)
to my ears that real state track sounds blatantly like egyptian reggae without the fun.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gg7WG6tCbrw
― alex in mainhattan, Saturday, 21 November 2009 12:26 (sixteen years ago)
These guys are masters of badass build-up intros― guammls (QE II), Wednesday, November 18, 2009 8:54 PM (3 days ago) Bookmark
― guammls (QE II), Wednesday, November 18, 2009 8:54 PM (3 days ago) Bookmark
you need to search out Otterman Empire - Private Land for a dubbed out re-edit of Private Investigations.
it's one long badass build up intro
― my opinionation (Hamildan), Saturday, 21 November 2009 17:21 (sixteen years ago)
making movies is one of those albums where i probably played the first side 4,000,000 times and the second side, um, maybe 5 times.
― scott seward, Saturday, 21 November 2009 17:35 (sixteen years ago)
am i the only one down with "expresso love"? (yeah it's kind of a re-write of "lady writer)
― oh (skeletor), Saturday, 21 November 2009 19:13 (sixteen years ago)
There's a bit in Sultans of Swing where the drummer goes into a double-time jazz beat for about five seconds which is amazing. Great track all round.
― Communi-Bear Silo State (chap), Saturday, 21 November 2009 19:15 (sixteen years ago)
xpost nope, not just you. the "she was made in heaven" part's a little wack but the riff is pretty damn muscular imo
― all yoga attacks are fire based (rogermexico.), Saturday, 21 November 2009 19:18 (sixteen years ago)
yeah, it's not like the first three songs on side 2 are bad or anything, they just don't quite compare. I used to play Skateaway on my parents' copy all the time when I was 11 or 12.
― clotpoll, Sunday, 22 November 2009 20:43 (sixteen years ago)
also Knopfler's solo tune "Vic and Ray" is awesome - it has this great ominous atmosphere and doesn't really sound like anything else he's done.
― clotpoll, Sunday, 22 November 2009 20:58 (sixteen years ago)
So I'm thinking that Dire Straits' debut LP is similar to Rickie Lee Jones' debut LP (same label Warner Bros., same year 1979 -- well, Dire Straits technically late '78 I guess, but didn't chart in the U.S. 'til January) in that both tease you by putting their only two non-slow songs with hooks and lyrics you'll actually remember when the songs are over at the beginnings of each side, then they get all drowsy and mumbly for the rest. Which I don't totally hate -- in DS' case, "Down The Waterline" and "Sultans of Swing" are very good and great songs respectively, and Knopfler's guitar has no problem carrying the rest of the LP as background atmosphere -- but it kind of pisses me off, since Knopfler was obviously a real writerly guy and you'd think he might be concerned with putting songs like "In The Gallery" (which might well prove him a homophobic asshole with no use for modern art, whatever) and "Wild West End" over. He probably does better with less arty blues-shuffle stuff like "Setting Me Up" and "Southbound Again," but I'm really not buying the schtick of those; just can't see him as the Delta blues codger he's pretending to be. Even Clapton did that way more convincingly. Still, guitar's great all over. And "Sultans" has to be one of the few songs in rock history (maybe any-music history) to deal expressly with audiences disagreeing about the definition of a musical genre. (As in "They don't give a damn 'bout any trumpet-playing band/It ain't what they call rock'n'roll"; pretty sure Knopfler disagrees, but at least he lets the pub-rocking-hating trendies in their brown baggies and platform soles have their say.) (Fwiw, I think "Wild West End" got some very brief AOR play in Detroit in '79, after "Sultans" and "Waterline" fell off -- like I heard it twice maybe -- but I might be conflating my memory of that with "Once Upon A Time In The West" off the second album, which definitely got airplay.)
― xhuxk, Monday, 26 April 2010 16:00 (sixteen years ago)
"Down To The Waterline" I meant.
Also kinda neat how "Water Of Love" starts out exactly like something off Roxy Music's Manifesto ("Dance Away" I think), also from '79.
― xhuxk, Monday, 26 April 2010 16:03 (sixteen years ago)
And "Sultans" has to be one of the few songs in rock history (maybe any-music history) to deal expressly with audiences disagreeing about the definition of a musical genre. (As in "They don't give a damn 'bout any trumpet-playing band/It ain't what they call rock'n'roll"; pretty sure Knopfler disagrees, but at least he lets the pub-rocking-hating trendies in their brown baggies and platform soles have their say.)
But the band is much more jazz than rock'n'roll, isn't it? I thought those lines were just to show that they're at the bar to get drunk, and will ignore anything outside of their chosen genre, even if the music is far superior to whatever they listen to.
― itchy rainbolt (clotpoll), Monday, 26 April 2010 17:41 (sixteen years ago)
Guess you could read it that way -- They're called the Sultans of Swing, after all, and they obviously have trumpets -- but I've always thought of them as more of an eclectic roots band, if anything. Harry with the daytime job "can play honky-tonk like anything"; "The Sultans played Creole"; the whole verse about George knowing all the chords but just wanting to play rhythm on his old guitar, which is all he can afford. So yeah, it's possible I've always read too much into it -- but it's more interesiting my way, so I'm gonna stick with it.
Didn't Dire Straits come up through the British pub-rock scene, though? Seems to me roots bands are would've played in those places, maybe often in front of glammy trendy drunk kids. But I could be wrong (and just because those bands played those places doesn't mean that's who he's singing about. But Knopfler obviously has a thing -- see "In The Gallery," "Money For Nothing" -- about pitting the salt of the earth against what he seems to see as the artsy hipster phonies of the world. The Harry in "In The Gallery," who crafts bareback riders and coal miners out of clay and stone but can't get into museums where abstract art gets shown, might even be the same Harry who plays in the Sultans!)
― xhuxk, Monday, 26 April 2010 18:23 (sixteen years ago)
So now I've pretty much decided that, even without a song as great as "Sultans Of Swing," and even though it's sort of a rehash in some ways, Communique is a more consistent LP than the debut -- easier to attend to all the way through, thanks to more songs that stick and Knopfler frequently pushing his tasty guitar atmosphere to the forefront. Very sweet solos in "Where Do You Think You're Going?" and "Portobello Belle," and I also like his Latin stuff in "Angel Of Mercy" and country boogie in the otherwise kinda draggy title track and especially the spaghetti western with which he appropriately opens "Once Upon A Time In The West" -- the latter also being one of the two catchiest tracks along with "Lady Writer", which once again are both side openers and the ones that I think got AOR airplay back then. On the second side he seems obsessed with Catholic girls, not that he he seems all that incisive about the issue -- lady on TV talking about Virgin Mary while hair falls down upon her face as he remembers his fall from grace in "Lady Writer," angel who's gonna save his soul in "Angel Of Mercy," Irish girl taking part with a blind guy (bluesman maybe?) in what seems like it might be a halfway decent short story if I listened closer in "Portobello Belle." Also haven't figured out yet whether the sailor in "Single Handed Sailor" has one hand because he's jerking off or he has a hook or what. Mostly like the words of "Once Upon A Time In The West," which I gather is about L.A. rather than the Wild West End, though it seems peevish how Knopfler opens the album whining about people scaring pedestrians by exceeding the speed limit when his music's main problem is that it frequently could afford to go faster. Still, tempos do pick up some in general here, which helps.
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 19 May 2010 14:14 (sixteen years ago)
Actually, guess I mean he seems defensive. And come to think of it, it might not be so much that BPMS increase a little ("Sultans of Swing" still feels like their most propulsive song by far) as that, in the non-single/filler tracks, he's enunciating more, and his writing and playing come off less perfunctory than on the first album.
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 19 May 2010 14:21 (sixteen years ago)
He probably does better with less arty blues-shuffle stuff like "Setting Me Up" and "Southbound Again," but I'm really not buying the schtick of those; just can't see him as the Delta blues codger he's pretending to be
i always thought he was going for more of a j.j. cale, "tulsa sound" kind of thing...
― you hippies can keep yr gay socialist jesus (will), Wednesday, 19 May 2010 14:30 (sixteen years ago)
Also haven't figured out yet whether the sailor in "Single Handed Sailor" has one hand because he's jerking off or he has a hook or what.
That made me laugh. Don't really know who or what the song is about, but the whole thing is set around this boat, which is in dry dock in Greenwich in London.
― Vision Creation Mansun (NickB), Wednesday, 19 May 2010 14:32 (sixteen years ago)
Agree with yr overall assessment of this album's worth btw.
― Vision Creation Mansun (NickB), Wednesday, 19 May 2010 14:34 (sixteen years ago)
(which i think he does rather brilliantly)
i should re-listen to Communique and Making Movies; i suspect they would stick to my ribs a little better now than they did 12-13 years ago when i was obsessing over s/t
xx-post
― you hippies can keep yr gay socialist jesus (will), Wednesday, 19 May 2010 14:34 (sixteen years ago)
I've got 'Single Handed Sailor' stuck in my head now and I'm thinking that the tune is a lot like Dylan's 'Oh Sister'.
― Vision Creation Mansun (NickB), Wednesday, 19 May 2010 14:47 (sixteen years ago)
So okay, what's the deal with the Twisting By The Pool EP, from 1983? (Or, as my copy says on the cover, ExtendedDanc"EP"lay -- not sure what its official name is supposed to be; Joel Whitburn's book lists it as the former.) Contractual obligation, frustrated sellout move, record label pressure to go more "pop," bid for the European market, or what? Title track might be the lightest, most frivolous thing they ever did, and it didn't chart Hot 100 at all in the States (EP went to #53 on the album chart), but I remember it being pretty ubiquitous in Germany when I lived there. (Actually, just checked Wiki -- only #31 Germany, but #14 UK, #1 New Zealand, #2 Australia, #11 Italy; apparently got "rock" airplay in the States, but only reached #105 pop.) And I guess, yeah, a dance song, though who would actually be "twisting" in 1983? Stray Cats fans? Except the lyrics says they're on holiday at the beach, dancing to "the Eurobeat" (first time I ever heard that word, I think, but living in Germany I thought it was a perfect genre name.) Song doesn't sound cynical, but knowing Knopfler, it's gotta be right? Maybe a template for Brothers In Arms (which I haven't listened to in entirety for decades so this could be way off), as in: moving away from uppity literary aspirations toward putting out dumb records the masses will buy. Three other songs on the EP, most substantial being a talked-not-sung five-minute diddy-bebop quasi-jazz (as in Steely Dan maybe) workout called "Badges, Posters, T-Shirts," about fans looking for merch and (I think) claiming they could drum better than the drummer. The B-side songs really do sound like B-sides, pleasant but forgettable, one sax based and maybe very slightly jump-bluesy ("Two Young Lovers"), the other piano based and possibly an attempt at Blonde On Blonde era Dylan. Did anymore care?
― xhuxk, Tuesday, 15 June 2010 16:12 (fifteen years ago)
"Did anybody care?," I mean. (Actually, I was thinking they were on a career downswing by that point, and just fishing for whatever they could get, but I just noticed in Wiki that Love Over Gold from 1982 -- which I know basically nothing about -- apparently went #1 all over Europe, their first album to do so, but peaked at #19 in the States just like Making Movies before it had. So it's possible that, by this point, they figured the Euromarket was their future.)
― xhuxk, Tuesday, 15 June 2010 16:23 (fifteen years ago)
"Two Young Lovers" - haha, that's the yakety sax song right?
― Vision Creation Mansun (NickB), Tuesday, 15 June 2010 23:29 (fifteen years ago)
Sax is by Mel Collins of King Crimson btw iirc
― Vision Creation Mansun (NickB), Tuesday, 15 June 2010 23:31 (fifteen years ago)
Contractual obligation, frustrated sellout move, record label pressure to go more "pop,"
A little of everything perhaps? The video for the title track was in pretty heavy MTV rotation and I recall that Rolling Stone had a very prominent review (I'm sure paid for). Love Over Gold was a complete non-entity in the US (despite the charts).
― Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 16 June 2010 00:51 (fifteen years ago)
http://www.theage.com.au/entertainment/music/faggot-to-be-removed-from-dire-straits-song-20110114-19q9m.html
― karajan camping (electricsound), Thursday, 13 January 2011 22:53 (fifteen years ago)
i never even knew that word was in the song until i read about that this morning!
― got electrolytes (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Friday, 14 January 2011 03:26 (fifteen years ago)
http://www.theage.com.au/entertainment/music/faggot-to-be-removed-from-dire-straits-song-20110114-to-be-replaced- with-leftover-nigger-from-huck-finn-19q9m.html
― Hideous Lump, Friday, 14 January 2011 03:54 (fifteen years ago)
guilty lol
― normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 14 January 2011 04:23 (fifteen years ago)
guilty post
― Hideous Lump, Friday, 14 January 2011 04:28 (fifteen years ago)
I think "Twisting by the Pool" EP is mostly an example of how they liked to play with American idioms. One interesting thing about Dire Straits, which connects w/ what someone said about Thin Lizzy, is how at their best they interpret and put their own spin on very "American" sounding rock'n'roll. Dire Straits did this a few different ways-- from proggy Springsteen-style epics to "yackety sax" kind of stuff-- and their fortunes in the U.S. really hinged on where their sound was at any given point and how well if fit with emerging, early-80s ideas of what "classic rock" meant.
"Twisting by the Pool" was also a harbinger for the boomer nostalgia of the 80s. For people of a certain age, it sounded like the music they heard as kids.
― Mark, Friday, 14 January 2011 05:18 (fifteen years ago)
I've always suspected that "Twisting by the Pool" came about partly because they had just hired ex-Rockpile drummer Terry Williams, who was born to wail frantically on songs like this.
― Hideous Lump, Friday, 14 January 2011 05:52 (fifteen years ago)
Sarcasm and irony is inappropriate in 2011?
― You're Twistin' My Melody Man! (Geir Hongro), Friday, 14 January 2011 13:35 (fifteen years ago)
Me on Love Over Gold: http://nobilliards.blogspot.co.uk/2013/10/dire-straits-love-over-gold.html
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 3 October 2013 17:40 (twelve years ago)
Very good review. This is one of my father's favourite albums and "Telegraph Road" one of his favourite songs.
I was particularly interested in your comparisons with Steely Dan; I'd never made that connection before, but in retrospect, it's easy to see with Knopfler's style of playing and early adoption of digital technology.
― arctic mindbath (President of the People's Republic of Antarctica), Thursday, 3 October 2013 18:38 (twelve years ago)
Nice job. But why skip over It Never Rains? That's one of the best Dire Straits songs.
― kornrulez6969, Friday, 4 October 2013 00:03 (twelve years ago)
Never mind, I take that back.
― kornrulez6969, Friday, 4 October 2013 00:04 (twelve years ago)
been diggin 'Beryl' today
― It's strange to me too. But we're talking about praxis, man. (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 11 February 2015 22:29 (eleven years ago)
Posted this on the "World" music 2015 thread, but it also kinda belongs here
http://www.afropop.org/22260/accounting-for-taste/
On air this week is “Accounting for Taste.” We’ll find out how the fluid guitar playing of ’70s rock band Dire Straits became massively popular in the Sahel, influencing Tuareg rockers like Tinariwen and Tamikrest. We’ll hear about the American country superstar Jim Reeves’ African career, and the unlikely story of how the pedal steel made it from Hawaii to Lagos, Nigeria. Finally, we’ll travel to Angola to explore that nation’s death metal scene. Produced by Sam Backer with help from Jesse Brent.
Mauritanian Noura Mint Seymali's guitarist husband told me he listened to Dire Straits. But his guitar playing is such edgier and funkier (than I recall from Dire Straits).
― curmudgeon, Saturday, February 28, 2015 7:34 PM (0 seconds
― curmudgeon, Saturday, 28 February 2015 19:37 (eleven years ago)
http://africasacountry.com/the-unexpected-popularity-of-dire-straits-in-north-african-tuareg-communities
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 31 March 2015 14:36 (eleven years ago)
The guy who did the afropop.org radio story from February, wrote the later blog item. As I noted on the "world" music thread, when I interviewed Noura Mint Seymali's guitarist from Mauritania, he also noted that he listened to Dire Straits. But as the article notes, younger Tuaregs do not seem to listen to Dire Straits anymore because there are so many desert blues bands around. I wonder if Dire Straits are awarwe of their audience there?
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 31 March 2015 16:17 (eleven years ago)
Rep for "Six Blade Knife":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHIIivQnIsU
― ... (Eazy), Wednesday, 17 February 2016 06:12 (ten years ago)
rep for the whole first album!
― lute bro (brimstead), Wednesday, 17 February 2016 06:15 (ten years ago)
ber neh ber-neh ber-neh ber-ner-neh-nurUR
HA!
― Toof Seteltha (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 17 February 2016 06:18 (ten years ago)
good jj cale vibes on six blade knife
― François Pitchforkian (NickB), Wednesday, 17 February 2016 06:55 (ten years ago)
btw it's fun to listen to 'lady writer' and pretend it's actually tom verlaine you're hearing
― François Pitchforkian (NickB), Wednesday, 17 February 2016 07:00 (ten years ago)
Love Over Gold fucking rules.
― more Allegro-like (Turrican), Saturday, 2 September 2017 22:14 (eight years ago)
and 'Twisting By The Pool' is shite.
Love Over Gold is a good record indeed, I kept that and the debut in my collection
― niels, Sunday, 3 September 2017 11:16 (eight years ago)
although Telegraph Road is a... well, stupid is not the right word, but it's a weird song that's too ambitious for its own good and really doesn't deliver at all lyrically
sounds pristine tho
― niels, Sunday, 3 September 2017 11:19 (eight years ago)
It's strange - if people ever speak about this band these days, it's usually about the Brothers in Arms period or 'Sultans of Swing', and even then they seem to be one of those formerly huge bands that generally hardly ever crop up in musical discussions anymore.
Making Movies and Love Over Gold come across as the bands peak now, and both are very underrated these days.
― more Allegro-like (Turrican), Sunday, 3 September 2017 12:42 (eight years ago)
Making Movies, short a song maybe, is their masterpiece. Roy Bittan really livens things up, especially on "Tunnel of Love," which is also their peak.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 3 September 2017 13:27 (eight years ago)
Brothers in Arms was actually the end, IMO... I don't like the one LP they put out after, I'm not a fan of Knopfler's solo work at all and I fucking detest 'Walk of Life' more than 'Twisting by the Pool' ...
― more Allegro-like (Turrican), Sunday, 3 September 2017 13:42 (eight years ago)
Will never miss a chance to repost this:
http://www.wolproject.com
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 3 September 2017 13:43 (eight years ago)
Communique is good too
― brimstead, Sunday, 3 September 2017 15:15 (eight years ago)
really good, dare I say
― brimstead, Sunday, 3 September 2017 15:16 (eight years ago)
Most of the self-titled first album too. "Six Blade Knife" and "Water of Love"...
― Eazy, Sunday, 3 September 2017 15:22 (eight years ago)
I don't like the one LP they put out after
The title track of On Every Street has the greatest guitar part Knopfler ever wrote, tho.
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Sunday, 3 September 2017 15:40 (eight years ago)
Communiqué is far better than many would have you believe, yeah!
― more Allegro-like (Turrican), Sunday, 3 September 2017 17:47 (eight years ago)
well yeah self titled is a total classic xxp
― brimstead, Sunday, 3 September 2017 18:38 (eight years ago)
communique may not be as tight or well written as the debut but the production is really nice and i love hearing those guy play
― brimstead, Sunday, 3 September 2017 18:39 (eight years ago)
Had heard the story that Tuaregs in exile in Libya had heard Dire Straits and been influenced by it, and now there’s 90s video evidence of Libyans playing "Sultans of Swing"
http://sahelsounds.com/2018/03/dire-straits-in-the-sahara/
― curmudgeon, Friday, 23 March 2018 04:42 (eight years ago)
Richard Thompson is convinced that Knopfler ripped off his guitar sound. He's very serious about it, I heard him discussing it in a recent interview...
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Friday, 23 March 2018 05:06 (eight years ago)
interesting, have a link?
Thompson's sound seems a lot more powerful to my ears
― niels, Friday, 23 March 2018 08:01 (eight years ago)
RTs soloing has an emotional violence to it that you just don’t find in Knopfler imo. I guess you could compare eg Walk Of Life with Tear Stained Letter, but that similarity would be down to shared influences
― i'm surprised to see your screwface at the door (NickB), Friday, 23 March 2018 08:24 (eight years ago)
Oh man, the audience watching that Libyan band doing SOS look bored as shit
― i'm surprised to see your screwface at the door (NickB), Friday, 23 March 2018 08:35 (eight years ago)
Niels – it was this podcast: http://www.wtfpod.com/podcast/episodes/episode_634_-_richard_thompson_lemmy_kilmister
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Friday, 23 March 2018 13:09 (eight years ago)
I don’t remember if it was Maron who brought the topic up (think so?); but I recall RT was definitely “salty” about it (as the kids say).
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Friday, 23 March 2018 13:11 (eight years ago)
I never really thought of them as similar guitarists. I guess they both play Strats and sort of apply folk techniques? Regardless, I say hats off to anyone able to ape Richard Thompson, there's more than mimicry involved there. And besides, Knopfler can write songs, too.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 23 March 2018 14:11 (eight years ago)
Good Knopfler interview(s) here: http://ds.mk-guitar.com/knopfler-interviews.htm
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 23 March 2018 14:17 (eight years ago)
I was in my 20s in the 80s and i cherishes this band at the time. But when the smiths came dire straits turned into pleasant mainstream without interest.
― Ich bin kein Berliner (alex in mainhattan), Saturday, 24 March 2018 22:36 (eight years ago)
I think at this point I'd probably rather listen to Dire Straits than The Smiths.
― Full of bile and Blue Nile denial (Turrican), Saturday, 24 March 2018 22:47 (eight years ago)
I remember seeing Richard Thompson live, maybe 20 years ago. He was quite funny, talking about movie soundtracks. He said "Here's how it goes with soundtracks. They always start out asking for Mark Knopfler. Then when he asks for too much money, they come looking for me."
― kornrulez6969, Saturday, 24 March 2018 23:13 (eight years ago)
Weird one-way rivalry. Not sure how Thompson’s grudge (whatever merit it may have) exactly squares with “avoiding ego” or what I understand to be other aspects of his adopted faith, but that’s none of my business....
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Saturday, 24 March 2018 23:36 (eight years ago)
Hmm, both these guys are accomplished English musicians born in ’49 and have been awarded “OBE”. Maybe they’ve bumped against each other in other ways over time, or it’s one of those “too close for comfort” rivalries.
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Saturday, 24 March 2018 23:42 (eight years ago)
Tried recently to sell a friend on Dire Straits. Wasn't interested. I then played some Richard Thompson. She said it sounded like Dire Straits.
QED
― not quite as cool as seeing damo's wang but (contenderizer), Sunday, 25 March 2018 02:56 (eight years ago)
My children used to watch the show "Dinosaur Train."
If you are familiar with this show there are occasional appearances from a paleontologist, Scott Sampson.
His main fossil discovery was named after Mark Knopfler, apparently because the crew listened to his music a lot and found it inspiring.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masiakasaurus
(insert lazy joke about classic rock / dinosaurs here)
― bone thugs & prosody (Ye Mad Puffin), Sunday, 25 March 2018 03:07 (eight years ago)
Weird:
Classic rock fans rejoice, the music of roots rock icons Dire Straits will soon return to stages in the United States. For the first time in decades, all of the band’s hits and more can be experienced live, on-stage via the world-class contingent that is DSL Dire Straits Legacy. A celebration of the music of Grammy-Award-winning, multi-platinum-selling British rockers Dire Straits, DSL Dire Straits Legacy features four Dire Straits band members – Alan Clark (piano/keyboards), Danny Cummings (percussion), Mel Collins (saxophone) and Phil Palmer (guitar/musical director) – along with revered musicians, drummer Steve Ferrone (Tom Petty) and producer Trevor Horn of The Buggles and Yes (ABC, Tom Jones, John Legend, Cher, more) on bass, as well as Italian musicians Marco Caviglia (vocals/guitar) and Primiano DiBiase (keyboards).
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 10 September 2018 21:50 (seven years ago)
Kinda wish Knopfler had shown up at the RnR Hall Of Fame, played Les Boys and then cleared off again
― PaulTMA, Tuesday, 11 September 2018 00:11 (seven years ago)
As one of the few bands to break up and stay broken up, Dire Straits has sort of gotten brushed into the dustbin. Which, combined with the punchline ubiquity of their blockbuster years, kind of leaves them ... underrated? I just listened to Communique and Love Over Gold for the first time in ages and I think I enjoyed every minute. Some great mood, lovely playing.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 24 November 2019 16:44 (six years ago)
I have mixed feelings about Dire Straits, but I love this version of Portobello Belle.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6sQO-CDV_LA
― Lily Dale, Sunday, 24 November 2019 17:26 (six years ago)
I still like Making Movies and Love Over Gold a lot, as well as the live album Alchemy. But as far as ongoing presence, it's pretty much reduced to "Sultans of Swing" and "Walk of Life" on oldies radio as far as I can tell.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 24 November 2019 17:39 (six years ago)
after a night on the booze, my goto 'end of session' album is now 'love over gold'.i used to actively hate this band due to their omnipresence when i was a teenager.clearly i have got old.that said, it is a bloody cracking late night album.
― mark e, Sunday, 24 November 2019 17:41 (six years ago)
Trying to remember how the song ‘Love Over Gold’ goes, but every time I sing it in my head it turns into ‘Private Dancer’
― Wee Bloabby (NickB), Sunday, 24 November 2019 17:47 (six years ago)
I think they're an easy band to overplay. I listened to them a lot as a kid and never listen to them now as a result, although there are a lot of things I like about them.
I do love Mark Knopfler's guitar playing. I don't play any instruments or know anything about music at all, so I can't really comment on these things in any kind of meaningful way, but Knopfler's guitar always sounds to me like it's speaking a language that I'm just on the verge of understanding. And I don't think the lyrics are great, but I don't think they're terrible either. But somehow the actual songs usually seem to me like less than the sum of their parts. I'm not totally sure why. Maybe they just feel too comfortable.
― Lily Dale, Sunday, 24 November 2019 18:10 (six years ago)
The language his guitar speaks is Strat.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 24 November 2019 18:15 (six years ago)
Well, I did know that, if only because Douglas Adams felt the need to include that information in an awkward sex scene in one of the Hitchhiker's books.
― Lily Dale, Sunday, 24 November 2019 18:45 (six years ago)
One of the more interesting attributes of the band is the length of the songs. They are almost like a jam band, moody platforms for his playing.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 24 November 2019 18:51 (six years ago)
The 1st Dire Straits album is superb. Knopfler writes some great lyrics too - "in the gallery", " telegraph road"
― The World According To.... (Michael B), Sunday, 24 November 2019 19:28 (six years ago)
I recently had to work up a mandolin arrangement of "Romeo and Juliet," and realized that the version in my head was not the Making Movies version, nor the (pretty ubiquitous) Indigo Girls cover, but rather a live version that for some reason I can't find anymore.
― they see me lollin' (Ye Mad Puffin), Sunday, 24 November 2019 19:42 (six years ago)
They are almost like a jam band
That's the aspect I actually like about Alchemy, 10-minute version of Sultans of Swing, 14-minute Tunnel of Love, 13-minute Telegraph Road.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 24 November 2019 19:48 (six years ago)
I'd rather listen to Chris Rea play and sing.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 24 November 2019 19:53 (six years ago)
For the longest time I thought Rea's "Working On It" <was> Dire Straits.
― a bevy of supermodels, musicians and Lena Dunham (C. Grisso/McCain), Sunday, 24 November 2019 20:28 (six years ago)
he no doubt got his Poppy Bush Interzone-era stateside push by emphasizing the comparison.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 24 November 2019 20:29 (six years ago)
is there anybody who doesn't recognise the guitar on this? http://play.publicradio.org/mprstory/d/podcast/minnesota/the_current/song_of_the_day/2019/09/24/20190924_pieta_brown_the_hard_way_128.mp3
― walking towards the sun since 2007 (alex in mainhattan), Sunday, 24 November 2019 21:46 (six years ago)
I’m very suspicious of Chris Rae for some reason. I should check him out.1st DS album is really solid, great production too. I like their sound as a “unit”.Communique is really good too. Maybe it does depend on how much you like Knopfler’s playing? Again, really great group interplayI haven’t actually listened to Love Over Gold apart from “industrial disease”, I need to correct thatMaking Movies - first two tracks are dopeBrothers In Arms - fascinating from the perspective of taking a band with a pretty distinct sound and feeding them into the corporate pop machine so as to make them almost unrecognizable
― brimstead, Sunday, 24 November 2019 22:17 (six years ago)
I adore the first 5 tracks on Making Movies.
― kraudive, Sunday, 24 November 2019 22:40 (six years ago)
The sax on Your Latest Trick is my Proust Madeleine
― Chuck_Tatum, Sunday, 24 November 2019 23:49 (six years ago)
I was about 10 when Brothers in Arms came out and it was still huge during my first year of (Australian) high school. Everyone I knew was into it, and the local family who had the first CD player in our neighborhood used to attract kids specifically for the purpose of listening to it at insane volumes in Perfect Sound. They played like 15 nights at the biggest venue in town. It was in the Proper Pop Phenomenon space for us, one of those things that is hard to convey after the event.
Now I can't stand Money For Nothing and Walk of Life but still enjoy the rest very much. Partly nostalgia and partly appreciating the insane production values. It feels like a good vehicle for appreciating the bands latter strengths - creating a sense of atmosphere and crafting a sympathetic platform for Knopfler's guitar playing, which I still find emotionally affecting despite having very little time for guitar solos elsewhere in my life. It feels like it has reasonable continuity with what they were doing on Love Over Gold? A bit more bloodless, sure, but recognisably the same band who did Private Investigations & Industrial Disease. And the extended outtro to Why Worry is a huge peak for me, immaculately played and recorded corporate rock shooting for a weird kind of new age serenity. Love it.
― umsworth (emsworth), Monday, 25 November 2019 00:27 (six years ago)
"Walk Of Life" is funny and dumb
― billstevejim, Monday, 25 November 2019 00:51 (six years ago)
Sorry, I will never not post this:
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 25 November 2019 01:48 (six years ago)
Giving On Every Street a listen this morning for the first time ever, it's a very good album.
― akm, Monday, 16 November 2020 17:29 (five years ago)
Yet another band that has gone from massive to ... underrated? The Knopfler solo albums I've heard have been really good, too.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 16 November 2020 19:47 (five years ago)
if i was a completist these are 2 groups i would consider as they are what i would consider intelligent rock music!
― xzanfar, Monday, 16 November 2020 19:49 (five years ago)
I don't know about underrated as the catalog still sells very well by today's standards. I like them, but there's a lot of stuff that I don't like on all of their albums. Making Movies is probably the most extreme example of this - side one's awesome, but side two quickly goes to hell. I usually just listen to a compilation that boils everything down to their best stuff.
― birdistheword, Monday, 16 November 2020 20:15 (five years ago)
I recently realized that the "Telegraph Road" of that lengthy song is the same one I grew up on, in the Detroit area. Never made that connection because people in that region never verbally identify streets with "road", "street", "avenue", etc. 8 Mile instead of 8 Mile Road, like. We just knew/know it as "Telegraph."
― henry s, Monday, 16 November 2020 20:31 (five years ago)
Never heard On Every Street. They were my favourite band when I was 9 or 10 then by the time of that last album I'd moved on. There is great stuff on every record, yes and despite Making Movies being their best, it does indeed descend into hell.
― kraudive, Monday, 16 November 2020 20:52 (five years ago)
I don't know, side two has "Expresso Love" and "Solid Rock," which are both driven by great riffs and licks. "Hand in Hand" is an OK ballad that sounds a bit like Graham Parker. "Les Boys" is pretty stupid, but it's the last song. But man, side one (three songs!) of that album ...
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 16 November 2020 21:03 (five years ago)
I like Hand In Hand very much.
― kraudive, Monday, 16 November 2020 21:09 (five years ago)
it’s not as good as side A but it’s not bad or anything (Les Boys aside)
― brimstead, Monday, 16 November 2020 21:09 (five years ago)
"Hand In Hand" is used very well in Everybody Wants Some!!!.
― "what are you DOING to fleetwood mac??" (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 16 November 2020 21:19 (five years ago)
I heard the title track of On Every Street on a compilation. It's touching and much more low-key than most of their latter-day stuff, with an actually cathartic guitar coda.
Communique must win a prize for most blatant attempt to carbon copy a successful debut album. Another nominee: King Crimson's In the Wake of Poseidon.
― Halfway there but for you, Monday, 16 November 2020 23:25 (five years ago)
side one of making movies is indeed peak straits
― la table sur la table (voodoo chili), Monday, 16 November 2020 23:35 (five years ago)
There's a vinyl copy of Love Over Gold somewhere here. Need to pull it out.
― kraudive, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 01:18 (five years ago)
Love Over Gold is primo Floyd not Floyd.
― earlnash, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 01:37 (five years ago)
I occasionally feel actual human emotions when listening to Knopfler guitar solos
some of the best are on his solo LPs IMO - there's one on a song called I think 'prairie wedding' that actually took my breath away the first time I heard it (YMMV naturally)
I don't know exactly what his trick is - but it really does a number on me
― the least famous person you were surprised to discover (emsworth), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 01:39 (five years ago)
ha totally. it’s an amazing sounding album xp
― brimstead, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 01:40 (five years ago)
back when I was a kid (in the 80s) I viewed Dire Straits as the exact midway point between Floyd and Springsteen
the solo (solos?) on “brothers in arms” is/are really moving
― brimstead, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 01:41 (five years ago)
no pick!
Is it me, or is like Knopfler like really popular in Eastern Europe? That is a vibe I get from the videos and comments on Youtube vids about Knopfler and Dire Straits.
― earlnash, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 01:41 (five years ago)
I have no idea why but that makes total sense
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 01:54 (five years ago)
eastern europe, africa, dire straits is truly global
― la table sur la table (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 02:11 (five years ago)
the tone is amazing for sure! but there's also something about his melodic choices, and (crucially IMO) the way the songs are structured to create a sympathetic bed for the solos
― the least famous person you were surprised to discover (emsworth), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 02:17 (five years ago)
I love how lyrical his playing is without getting bogged down in big, bent notes. He sort of skirts along the edges of country and jazz and blues without quite landing on any of them. Possibly in this thread but certainly elsewhere people have compared his playing to Richard Thompson, which never really occurred to me, though when I think about it I can see the occasional resemblances. Imo Thompson is more clearly the untouchable virtuoso, yet while I love every minute of his guitar playing it's just so ... playful and alive ... and eerily perfect, no matter the context. Thompson may write better melancholy, mournful songs, but Knopfler's playing actually captures that vibe better. He often sounds like he's searching for something.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 03:09 (five years ago)
Vocals aside, "Hand in Hand" used to remind me of Springsteen in spots, and sure enough Roy Bittan's on piano (with Iovine producing, fresh off of Darkness on the Edge of Town). It can be pleasant enough, otherwise it would never work the way it did in Everybody Wants Some!! "Solid Rock" always sounded like rote stuff to me, like throwaway lyrics applied to a band warm-up. "Expresso Love" never really goes anywhere, and it's probably the best cut on side B. Every time I put on that side, it felt like I was listening to B-sides or outtakes.
― birdistheword, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 03:24 (five years ago)
I recently realized that the "Telegraph Road" of that lengthy song is the same one I grew up on, in the Detroit area. Never made that connection because people in that region never verbally identify streets with "road", "street", "avenue", etc. 8 Mile instead of 8 Mile Road, like. We just knew/know it as "Telegraph."Interesting... can confirm this (I also grew up around there).
― it's AG in your faaaace.... (morrisp), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 04:57 (five years ago)
― brimstead, Tuesday, November 17, 2020 1:40 AM (eight hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
Their strength and their weakness IMO....
― my opinionation (Hamildan), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 10:14 (five years ago)
xp from one of many links:
The Telegraph Road is a major north-south 70 mile thoroughfare in Michigan. Mark Knopfler was inspired to write this song while riding in the front of the tour bus, which made the journey down Telegraph Road. At the time, Knopfler was reading the novel The Growth Of the Soil by the Nobel Prize winning Norwegian author Knut Hamsun and he was inspired to put the 2 together and write a song about the beginning of the development along Telegraph Road and the changes over the ensuing decades. This was a metaphor for the development of America and the ruining of one man's dreams in the wake of its decline, in particular focusing on unemployment.
Guessing the bus was on its way to Pine Knob, and they took Telegraph to Square Lake to 75.
― henry s, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 13:09 (five years ago)
Bittan is all over "Making Movies." His playing on "Tunnel of Love" is as important to the song as the guitar.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 13:28 (five years ago)
His father was Hungarian, maybe that's in there somewhere.
― Boring blighters bloaters (Tom D.), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 13:30 (five years ago)
Also I don't think I knew, till recently, that he was born in Glasgow and lived there till he was 7.
― Boring blighters bloaters (Tom D.), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 13:31 (five years ago)
I’ll probably end up getting cancelled but I’ve never got why ‘Les Boys’ gets such a bad rap...sure it’s a bit dated and gauche but fundamentally it’s quite sweet and for a pretty huge rock band to write a LGBQT seems fairly progressive...I say fairly
― X-Prince Protégé (sonnyboy), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 15:12 (five years ago)
Thompson may write better melancholy, mournful songs, but Knopfler's playing actually captures that vibe better. He often sounds like he's searching for something.
I like that way of putting it. His guitar often sounds to me like it's thinking. I think I said this upthread somewhere, but as a kid I used to listen to Knopfler's guitar and feel like I was [this close] to being able to decode what it was saying and put it into words. There's something in his solos that - to me - has the rhythms of human speech, like someone half-articulating a thought, pausing, saying "but on the other hand," and following the thought off through tangents that seem like they're going to resolve but never quite do. Idk if it sounds like that to anyone else.
And he never sounds to me like he's showing off, which is also pretty cool. I mean, impressive as his solos are, they always feel like they're central to the mood of the song and he's not just showboating.
― Lily Dale, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 22:28 (five years ago)
this close was supposed to be in italics, obviously. Grr.
― Lily Dale, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 22:29 (five years ago)
i have not really listened to any dire straits or mark knopfler, i tried that "prairie wedding" song someone mentioned above and that solo is definitely something, i would say it's thoughtful, articulate and searching but definitely low-key about it. kind of sells the song imo.
― Amy #Kony Barrett (map), Tuesday, 17 November 2020 22:47 (five years ago)
That whole album is really good, iirc. I'm not sure I've heard any of the albums after it, though, and there have been ... several. But from that album you also get this gem:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fxl2YGDJEAM
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 22:59 (five years ago)
(Album features guest backing vox from James Taylor, Van Morrison, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, and the guys from Squeeze. Knopfler showing off his rolodex there.)
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 23:01 (five years ago)
Wish he'd just turned up at the Hall Of Fame, played Les Boys solo, then left
― PaulTMA, Tuesday, 17 November 2020 23:33 (five years ago)
Checked to see if I posted the live version of Portobello Belle that I really like; looks like I did, about a year ago.
― Lily Dale, Wednesday, 18 November 2020 01:28 (five years ago)
― X-Prince Protégé (sonnyboy),
Don't get defensive -- there's no point.
I don't find it sweet or dated -- it's a dumb heavy-handed attitude toward a slice of gay culture about which a casual Fassbinder fan would've had some insight. I find Rod Stewart's "The Killing of Georgie" awkward, gauche, and often stupid but way more empathetic.
― Patriotic Goiter (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 18 November 2020 01:36 (five years ago)
agreed. the melody is nice, lyrics should be about lying in a field eating grapes or something
― brimstead, Wednesday, 18 November 2020 01:51 (five years ago)
I think Mark Knopfler's lyrics are often dumb and heavy-handed. I think the guitar is really his native language; he has such lyricism in his guitar solos, and such nuance and lightness of touch, but he's much clumsier with words, imo. His choruses are often good, and sometimes he gets a kind of dark ominous vibe going in the lyrics that works for him, but there's a lot of really clunky try-hard stuff in there too.
I think that's one reason his star has fallen lately; the other, imo, is he's just not weird enough. Telegraph Road is a good song, but if you heard it described on paper, you'd think it was a lot stranger and more atmospheric than it is.
― Lily Dale, Wednesday, 18 November 2020 02:00 (five years ago)
otm
― Patriotic Goiter (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 18 November 2020 02:18 (five years ago)
Hate this band but great name
― calstars, Friday, 18 June 2021 19:44 (four years ago)
really? Pre-Brothers in Arms, it’s great bar music imo
― brimstead, Friday, 18 June 2021 20:18 (four years ago)
Example please
― calstars, Friday, 18 June 2021 20:31 (four years ago)
I mean...https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fAQhSRLQnM
― brimstead, Friday, 18 June 2021 21:06 (four years ago)
It's so much better than great bar music! Unless you mean, like, music you don't mind when it comes on in a bar, in which case, sure. But, for example, this song is a beaut:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAirINwjaxE
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 18 June 2021 21:19 (four years ago)
well yeah I just meant cuz calstars likes bars, I wasn’t implying they were a “bar band” I just mean ~vibes~
― brimstead, Friday, 18 June 2021 21:37 (four years ago)
“tunnel of love” is awesome.. lyrics aside it always sounded really... dangerous to me, like some violence is about to pop off idk
― brimstead, Friday, 18 June 2021 21:39 (four years ago)
― calstars, Friday, 18 June 2021 22:17 (four years ago)
wtf is that video for Tunnel of Love
― mark e. smith-moon (f. hazel), Friday, 18 June 2021 22:39 (four years ago)
and the first three Dire Straits albums are bar ambient if there ever was, Knopfler soloing on a Strat is what beer tastes like
― mark e. smith-moon (f. hazel), Friday, 18 June 2021 22:47 (four years ago)
Heh, tell that to Eric "Michelob" Clapton, who basically personified "cheap beer in the '80s." Knopfler soloing is the sound of you getting home, thinking about what you did or didn't do.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 18 June 2021 22:50 (four years ago)
“Bar ambient” ?
― calstars, Friday, 18 June 2021 23:01 (four years ago)
Brian wino
― disraeli grinds my gears (NickB), Friday, 18 June 2021 23:02 (four years ago)
Lol
― Champagne Heathernova (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 18 June 2021 23:03 (four years ago)
And "Romeo and Juliet" is neither bar nor ambient.
― Champagne Heathernova (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 18 June 2021 23:05 (four years ago)
bar ambient is equally good if you ignore it or focus drunkenly on it in an attempt to remain upright
― mark e. smith-moon (f. hazel), Friday, 18 June 2021 23:05 (four years ago)
The fuck is bar ambient tho
― calstars, Friday, 18 June 2021 23:06 (four years ago)
That Tunnel of Love clip might be the most Yawnsomely Literal music video I've ever seen.
― enochroot, Friday, 18 June 2021 23:08 (four years ago)
love over gold is basically an ambient album
― brimstead, Friday, 18 June 2021 23:32 (four years ago)
Love over Green World
― mark e. smith-moon (f. hazel), Friday, 18 June 2021 23:33 (four years ago)
My wife: "Dire Straits were dad rock before I knew what dad rock was."
― we only steal from the greatest books (PBKR), Thursday, 14 April 2022 23:16 (four years ago)
https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMYMhS78R/
― Tracer Hand, Saturday, 11 February 2023 14:51 (three years ago)
Thought I'd give the debut LP another try. I knew a few cuts were already favorites, and as the opening cut (one such favorite) was coming to a close, I was already singing "Water of Love" on the inside...or what I thought was "Water of Love" because to my embarrassment and disappointment, I was thinking of the later and better "Tunnel of Love" albeit with the title swapped out.
― birdistheword, Thursday, 10 July 2025 05:07 (ten months ago)
Of the 23 or so students in my mostly 9th grade French class this year, two were separately huge fans of Dire Straits, specifically Love Over Gold. I have no idea if this is random coincidence or represents some generational shift on Dire Straits.
― Lily Dale, Thursday, 10 July 2025 06:26 (ten months ago)
I like the first two albums quite a lot. I felt so vindicated when I learned that Tuareg guitar bands listened to as much Knopfler as they did Hendrix
Also, the late Knopfler solo album Privateering is a bona fide masterpiece!
― TheNuNuNu, Thursday, 10 July 2025 09:55 (ten months ago)
Chuck_Tatum at 11:49 24 Nov 19The sax on Your Latest Trick is my Proust Madeleine
― kinder, Thursday, 10 July 2025 10:06 (ten months ago)
Lotta good stuff on the later Knopfler solo records.
I've been listening to the expanded pre-"Brothers in Arms" Dire Straits live album lately, what used to be called "Alchemy." He's such in many ways an underrated guitar player (despite being without a doubt highly rated, lol). His solos are just so ... searching, never flash without feeling, even when he is stretching out.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 10 July 2025 12:58 (ten months ago)
The practicalities of cross-licensing likely prohibits this, but I wish someone had put together a concise Knopfler anthology covering his best guitar work outside of Dire Straits: Dylan, Mavis Staples, Steely Dan, Van Morrison, Randy Newman, Phil Lynott, the McGarrigles, etc.
― birdistheword, Thursday, 10 July 2025 18:07 (ten months ago)
I love Alchemy, definitely the best showcase for his guitar playing.
― paper plans (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 10 July 2025 18:55 (ten months ago)
This thread is basically the same users coming out and saying the same thing they have before. Pronouncing their love once one of us has a nostalgic listen. Not a bad thing.
― kraudive, Thursday, 10 July 2025 20:13 (ten months ago)
I do need to try 1 and 2 again, having 3 and 4 so close to my heart more recently (recently is post 1990)
― kraudive, Thursday, 10 July 2025 20:14 (ten months ago)
The trio of Brothers in Arms, the Notting Hillbillies project, and On Every Street was such a slide into boredom that I never bothered with the solo career. Maybe I'll reconsider.
― Hideous Lump, Friday, 11 July 2025 04:54 (ten months ago)
Oh, I love the Notting Hillbillies album. Learned so much from the songs covered there, plus the original "Your Own Sweet Way."
― the way out of (Eazy), Friday, 11 July 2025 05:11 (ten months ago)
Brothers in Arms is good
― Cognosc in Tyrol (emsworth), Friday, 11 July 2025 11:40 (ten months ago)
I'm not sure I'd go that far, but "So Far Away" is lovely. There's a great making of I read once, maybe in Tape Op? I'll try to dig it up.
Setting aside his solo soundtrack work, I thought this was a great later sort of comeback solo single:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VCP93emyJ-c
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 11 July 2025 12:49 (ten months ago)
"On Every Street" an underrated Dire Straits tune
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5KpLRWY8sA
― Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Friday, 11 July 2025 12:51 (ten months ago)
it was this interview with Neil Dorfsman:
https://www.soundonsound.com/techniques/classic-tracks-dire-straits-money-nothing
"Mark was a very casual vocalist," Dorfsman remarks. "He'd often be smoking a cigarette while he sang, and we'd probably do six or seven similar passes and I would put something together.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 11 July 2025 13:13 (ten months ago)
This is the other bit that really stuck out, the insult to injury that was replacing Terry Williams with Omar Hakim:
"I'd always had my doubts that we were getting what we needed on the rhythm tracks, and I remember telling Mark early on that the drums weren't really happening," he says. "Initially, he didn't feel the same way, but after several weeks he picked up on my frustration. So, we decided to ditch the drums and bring in a new drummer to overdub onto the existing tracks. I remember Mark talking about maybe getting Roxy Music's Andy Newmark or the jazz drummer Peter Erskine, but eventually we sent for Omar Hakim. On the New York scene he was known more as a jazz-fusion drummer than as a rock drummer, but he was the kind of guy who could play anything and Mark was a big fan of his, so we brought him down to Montserrat and he re-did all of the tracks in about two and a half days. The first day he did about six, the next day he did three or four, and he was out of there by the third day. That was pretty mind-blowing.
So Terry struggles for weeks, then they get Omar, who does it in like two days. But it's Terry Williams doing the intro to "Money for Nothing," so there's that.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 11 July 2025 13:16 (ten months ago)
I've always been very fond of all of the Brothers in Arms singles, with the exception of "So Far Away", which is a great riff in search of a song.
― Vast Halo, Friday, 11 July 2025 14:33 (ten months ago)
Side b >>>>> side a
― brimstead, Friday, 11 July 2025 16:21 (ten months ago)
I like those guitar gremlins on "So Far Away."
― hungover beet poo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 11 July 2025 16:24 (ten months ago)
the guitars on the less rockier material sound gorgeous, it's like knofler's trademark silky tone with added celestial magic or something. really just love the texture of the slower stuff, very watery/humid sounding idk
― brimstead, Friday, 11 July 2025 16:27 (ten months ago)
thanks for the link Josh, keen to read, love the way the album sounds - maybe when the CD revival really kicks in (lol) it will get a new lease on life
(I was talking to some early 20s hip kids at a gig the other week and one of them told me wide-eyed that they’d heard tell CD’s actually had the best sound quality, better even than vinyl!!!)
and brimstead, i am a side 2 fan as well - particularly ride across the river and the title track - but i think Why Worry is my fave
― Cognosc in Tyrol (emsworth), Friday, 11 July 2025 21:52 (ten months ago)
my dad liked to say in the car that they were never as good once pick withers left and terry williams replaced him
― Reggaeton Sax (NickB), Friday, 11 July 2025 22:17 (ten months ago)
Certainly it's hard to find a better name than Pick Withers.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 11 July 2025 22:20 (ten months ago)
In 2021, Withers re-surfaced with a new rhythm and blues band called 'Slim Pickin's', [8] later renamed 'Pick's Pocket'.[9]
― Reggaeton Sax (NickB), Friday, 11 July 2025 22:23 (ten months ago)
Money riff
― calstars, Friday, 22 August 2025 01:43 (nine months ago)