That’s The Way You Do It: The Very Best Of Dire Straits
The biggest singles and most memorable album landmarks of the mighty British band inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on April 14, 2018.
You get a shiver in the dark, it’s raining in the park, but meantime…in a small London club circa 1977, a band of hopefuls called Dire Straits are whipping up a storm. The sultans of swing themselves are about to emerge. The song containing those lyrics simply has to feature on the playlist with which we present 20 of the best Dire Straits songs by the group inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on April 14, 2018.
“Sultans Of Swing” was one of the Mark Knopfler compositions on the Dire Straits demo tape that found its way to revered broadcaster and journalist Charlie Gillett. It led, ultimately, to their record deal with Vertigo Records. At that division of Phonogram, they became labelmates of Graham Parker and the Rumour, Thin Lizzy and Status Quo, not to mention Black Sabbath, Nazareth, and even Fairport Convention.
Their first, self-titled album, produced by Muff Winwood, was released early in 1978, featuring that flagship single which would become a UK hit as a reissue. The LP also contained early signature pieces such as “Water Of Love,” “Down To The Waterline” and the Glasgow-born, Newcastle-raised Knopfler’s documentation of his own increasingly frequent journeys to London, “Southbound Again.”
By the time of the band’s second album Communiqué, they were already such big news that they were recording in the Bahamas and working with no less an industry legend than production overlord Jerry Wexler. The LP’s one single, and radio favorite, was the incisive “Lady Writer,” a hit in several countries, notably Holland. “Once Upon A Time In The West,” meanwhile, was a taste of the wide-screen dimensions to come.
The release of 1980’s Makin’ Movies saw the band as a three-piece of Knopfler, John Illsley and Pick Withers, after the departure during the sessions of Mark’s brother David. But they were scaling ever-more ambitious peaks such as the Rodgers and Hammerstein-quoting “Tunnel Of Love” (said to be inspired by Knopfler’s childhood visits to the fairground at Whitley Bay) and the equally filmic, not to mention anthemic, “Romeo and Juliet.” Mark took his first co-production credit on the album, alongside in-demand rock producer and future Apple Music executive Jimmy Iovine.
Knopfler’s ambition and scale
The 14-minute “Telegraph Road,’ from 1982’s Love Over Gold and one of many songs inspired by Knopfler’s extensive travels around America, typified the ambition and scale of his writing. So did the atmospheric “Private Investigations,” a No.2 UK hit held off the top only by Survivor’s “Eye Of The Tiger.” In another significant change of personnel, Pick Withers left the group soon after the album sessions were completed, to be replaced by Terry Williams.
After the live LP Alchemy came the phenomenon that was Brothers In Arms. The record-smashing behemoth, in addition to worldwide sales of 30 million-plus, practically became a greatest hits album in its own right. Five songs from the set make the cut for us: the gently persuasive opening single “So Far Away,” the iconic “Money For Nothing” and deeply evocative title track, the goodtime shuffle “Walk Of Life,” and the soothing “Why Worry.” That hinted at the soundtrack-friendly reflection that Knopfler would develop in his solo career.
Little did we know it, but Dire Straits would last only one more studio album after the bittersweet challenge of that globe-conquering release. 1991’s On Every Street gave us one more opportunity to experience Knopfler as a rock guitar figurehead in this band context; highlights included “My Parties” and the title track.
Listen to the best of Dire Straits on Apple Music and Spotify.
This affectionate leaf through the pages of the Hall of Fame inductees also features the live version of “Local Hero”/“Wild Theme” that adorned the 1998 compilation Sultans Of Swing. It nodded to the solo career to which Knopfler was, by then, deeply committed.
Buy the 2021 half-speed vinyl master of Mark Knopfler’s Local Hero soundtrack.
François
April 18, 2018 at 4:30 pm
If Sultans of Swing Alchemy Live 1983 is not in the list, there is no list 😛 The studio version is of course very very good, but this live one is epic. AND the most listened song of Dire Straits on YouTube EVER, studio and live. By a wide margin. Come on 🙂
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Pa9x9fZBtY
Douglas
April 18, 2018 at 5:45 pm
How about the flipside of Sultans… Eastbound Train!
Tony Tillett
April 19, 2018 at 3:28 am
Can’t get anything on here.
Mikael N
April 19, 2018 at 10:15 am
Honestly, to choose to list the crappy hit songs Solid Rock, Walk of of Life, the Bug, and Heavy Fuel, at the expense of much more representative, or simply much better and well written, tracks like Once Upon the Time in the West, Iron Hand, or Planet of New Orleans (and the list goes on) is an epic fail.
Also, no mention of Pick Withers or how his departure after Love Over Gold affected the band’s sound.
Mark Pearce
April 15, 2019 at 8:54 pm
Telegraph Road should be number 1 and Love Over Gold 2. Not even on the list. Pathetic.
martin peters
September 3, 2019 at 8:31 am
What about badges, posters, stickers or t shirts. A jazz/rock classic from the straits. There is a couple of songs on this list that are not worthy…
nathaniel
April 16, 2021 at 8:33 pm
Aw, C’mon!. Whatsc wrong with you?? Wild West End??
Steve Kravcik
January 13, 2022 at 3:25 pm
No Telegraph Road? No Indistrial Disease? Really?